Oregon
Eviction rates climb as protections for Oregon renters dwindle
It’s been over two months since Oregon closed its emergency hire help program. In that point, security nets for renters have continued to vanish, leaving tons of of renters much more vulnerable to eviction.
Because the starting of the 12 months, the variety of evictions filings have crept nearer to month-to-month averages seen earlier than the pandemic.
Knowledge collected by the Oregon Legislation Middle exhibits that eviction numbers have elevated steadily: 806 in January; 889 in February; 1,122 in March and 1,188 in April. Straus mentioned Could numbers are on monitor to be as excessive because the earlier month.
And people numbers don’t start to inform the total story of evictions, mentioned Becky Straus, the managing legal professional for the middle’s Eviction Protection Mission. That program gives renters with free authorized assist in evictions courtroom.
“Most individuals really feel pressured to depart their unit after they get a discover from their landlord to maneuver or when they’re the sufferer of misinformation or harassment from their landlord,” Straus mentioned. “We usually estimate that the displacement charge is about 5 instances what we see within the eviction filings.”
Straus mentioned the Oregon Legislation Middle doesn’t have month-to-month information for eviction circumstances earlier than the pandemic, as a result of they solely began manually amassing that info for the Eviction Protection Mission in 2021. However she mentioned there have been 18,672 whole filings in 2019. That’s a median of 1,556 eviction filings per thirty days.
The state started distributing emergency rental help in Could 2021, and has paid out greater than $352 million. Though this system’s rollout was marred by delays and logistical errors, the state offered hire and utility help to just about 54,000 candidates.
Oregon Housing and Neighborhood Companies spokesperson Delia Hernández mentioned as of Could 18, the state nonetheless had about $30 million in emergency rental funds that haven’t but been distributed. That features $16 million Oregon not too long ago obtained from the united statesDepartment of the Treasury that was reallocated from different states.
About 15,200 purposes are nonetheless being processed, in keeping with a state dashboard that tracks this system. Almost 54,000 purposes, or about half of these submitted, have been paid out or accepted for funding. One other 28,500, simply over 1 / 4 of these submitted, had been declined or discovered ineligible.
The state can also be within the strategy of “recertifying” present candidates who could not have requested the total 15 months of help permitted by the U.S. Treasury, and may have extra hire. However these funds should not accessible to new candidates.
Between 50 and 66% of the evictions for every of the previous 4 months have been resulting from nonpayment of hire, in keeping with information from the Oregon Legislation Middle. And, Straus mentioned, about half of the nonpayment hire circumstances the Oregon Legislation Middle handles finish in renters getting displaced.
Over the previous a number of months, many landlords mentioned they’ve taken successful as tenants miss hire funds. Some mentioned hiccups within the state’s rental help program made the issue worse, corresponding to a gradual rollout of funds or the state sending checks to the incorrect individuals.
Neighborhood motion companies have distributed funds outdoors of the state emergency rental portal, giving some tenants different avenues for support.
Nkenge Harmon Johnson, the CEO of City League of Portland, mentioned the group distributes hire help by way of a number of sources of funding, together with from the CARES Act. She mentioned she wasn’t conscious of any individuals served by the City League who had been evicted, as these funds offered a security internet even because the state bumped into points with its program.
However Harmon Johnson mentioned there nonetheless aren’t sufficient assets to fulfill everybody’s wants, with excessive hire costs placing much more strain on tenants.
“One factor the state portal did properly was to pay rents a month or two upfront,” Harmon Johnson wrote in an e-mail to The Oregonian/OregonLive. “As soon as these hire credit are exhausted, we expect Oregon will see evictions rise this autumn.”
Tenants take motion
As authorized support and group teams work to maintain up with the tempo of evictions circumstances, a gaggle of tenants can also be engaged on a poll measure marketing campaign that might give all tenants the proper to free eviction illustration in courtroom.
Members of the Eviction Illustration for All marketing campaign started amassing signatures this week and hope to get the measure on November’s poll. It might impose a 0.75% capital beneficial properties tax on residents, and is estimated to generate a median of $15 million a 12 months.
The measure would assure tenants a proper to a lawyer in the event that they’re evicted, in addition to impose stronger protections for tenants all through the courts course of. It might permit tenants to use for grants to get smaller quantities of hire paid whereas they await hire help to kick in, or to get landlord charges paid off in the event that they get evicted.
“In courtroom, if there’s a lawyer, it’s virtually all the time for the owner,” mentioned Colleen Carroll, an organizer with the marketing campaign who helped discovered the renters advocacy group Don’t Evict PDX.
“This isn’t a approach to open a courtroom continuing – one facet will get data and assets the opposite doesn’t have. It’s virtually assured the particular person will get displaced.”
Carroll mentioned funds generated from that measure could be distributed to group motion companies and permit them to rent their very own legal professionals to characterize tenants in eviction courtroom. Carroll mentioned at the moment, tenants must undergo a legislation agency to get eviction illustration, one thing that many discover daunting and prevents them from getting assist.
The poll measure would be certain that anybody who will get an eviction discover is routinely eligible for a lawyer.
Presently, Carroll mentioned, eviction illustration providers find yourself leaving out the people who find themselves most in want and have the fewest assets.
“It may be too exhausting to show you want help. Compound that with immigration standing, and the necessity to struggle to have a lawyer,” Carroll mentioned. “Individuals simply forgo it.”
And, Carroll mentioned, whereas nonpayment of hire makes up round half of evictions filings, landlords had been discovering methods to displace tenants in the course of the eviction moratorium – and lots of tenants didn’t have a approach to push again and not using a lawyer.
“I sat in on some courtroom hearings the place the owner was evicting somebody for issues like vegetation on the balcony or the television being too loud,” Carroll mentioned. “Even when the tenant was saying they owed three months’ again hire and couldn’t be evicted for that, the owner discovered one other approach to evict them.”
Eviction inequities
Harmon Johnson mentioned City League employees have additionally observed a rise in landlords attempting to evict tenants for primary violations. Consequently, she mentioned, the group’s truthful housing enforcement program is busy with calls and referrals from tenants who’re threatened with homelessness for minor lease infractions.
“That could be a ripple impact the place landlords have agreed to just accept hire funds from the City League or the state, and maybe forgive a portion of late hire, however are stepping up their aggressive and sometimes focused bias towards tenants, a lot of whom are Black, with the intention to evict them and lift the hire for the following tenant,” Harmon Johnson wrote. “Renters who’re present on their hire are nonetheless weak on this housing market.”
A number of nationwide research present that renters of shade, particularly Black and Latino renters, disproportionately face eviction filings. A examine by Eviction Lab additionally confirmed that the charges are even larger for Black and Latina girls nationwide. Demographic-specific information about Oregon evictions was not instantly accessible.
Straus mentioned it’s unclear what number of renters face eviction as a result of they’re unable to repay hire that they missed in the course of the eviction moratorium, which ran from April 2020 by way of June 2021.
However she mentioned issues have gotten worse as evictions protections dwindle, such because the so-called “secure harbor protections” the Oregon Legislature handed to offer renters with a buffer from evictions. To qualify, tenants should apply for rental help and present their landlord proof of their software at or earlier than their first courtroom look. That safety expires Sept. 30.
Nonetheless, Straus inspired people who find themselves prone to eviction to hunt authorized assist.
The Oregon Legislation Middle has employed about 20 new legal professionals prior to now 12 months for its Eviction Protection Mission. That has allowed them to assist exponentially extra renters than prior to now, mentioned Straus, the group’s managing legal professional.
However Straus mentioned the evictions course of strikes rapidly and is unforgiving, making it simple for tenants to get displaced inside as little as a month of submitting in evictions courtroom.
“That’s not an issue to be placing on tenants, however on the evictions courtroom system as an entire,” she mentioned. “We’ve realized about what works. Lease help works, getting access to legal professionals works and having a course of the place the wheels of evictions courtroom decelerate and supply alternatives for tenants to get assist works.”
—Jayati Ramakrishnan
Oregon
Oregon moms in the Legislature are driven by a passion for kids • Oregon Capital Chronicle
Children are a top priority for the moms in the Legislature and a big reason why many of them are there.
Take Emerson Levy, a renewable energy attorney in Bend. When she ran for the Legislature for the first time in 2020, she was motivated by her 4-year-old daughter, June. A self-described policy nerd, she wanted to support good policies in Salem, particularly those to protect children.
“I felt this huge obligation to my young daughter,” Levy told the Capital Chronicle.
Levy lost in 2020, but she won in 2022 and now she’s headed back to Salem after winning a second term representing the Bend-based 53th District. She is among several mothers in the Legislature, both Democrat and Republican, who juggle the demands of raising children while representing their communities in Salem. Some even have other jobs as well.
Serving in the Legislature is supposed to be a part time job, with 35-day sessions in even-numbered years and 160-day sessions the others, but the work spills into the rest of the year.
“The Legislature may be part time, but our constituents are not part time,” said state Sen. Sara Gelser Blouin, a mother of four who represents Corvallis in Salem. “Nobody has part-time constituents.”
Being a legislator in Oregon has become a full-time job, with jam-packed “legislative days” in Salem outside sessions to discuss policies and hear from state officials, experts and Oregonians. Lawmakers also serve on task forces and spend time leading up to sessions working on policies. And they need to be available to constituents, to listen and respond to their needs.
Being a mom is also a full-time role. Balancing both is challenging and time-consuming and the legislative job is not well paid.
But Oregon’s legislator moms are passionate about their roles and fighting for issues that impact Oregon kids the most.
School safety
Levy said her daughter drives her policy work and one of her top priorities is school safety.
Her first year in the Oregon House, she championed funding for silent panic alarms that directly call 911 if there is a school shooting. That provision was passed last year as part of House Bill 5014 on school funding. It included $2.5 million for these alarms, which helped avert even more bloodshed at a September shooting at Apalachee High School in Winder, Ga. The provision is a “funded non-mandate,” which means school districts decide whether to install them.
“Then we can learn from them before we bring it fully statewide,” Levy said.
Levy, who’s a Democrat, has also backed bills to improve health insurance, which can be costly for families and others. Levy and Gelser Blouin, also a Democrat, along with Republican Rep. Cyrus Javadi of Tillamook, sponsored the Co-pay Fairness Bill this year to ensure that insurance companies consider financial assistance from pharmaceutical manufacturers towards patient deductibles. The bill, House Bill 4113, unanimously passed the Oregon House and Senate last March.
In states that haven’t passed such legislation, so-called “copay accumulators” do not count towards deductibles, leaving some patients with extremely high medical bills.
“Co-pay accumulators are one of the cruelest programs I’ve ever encountered,” Levy said.
They especially impact people with rare diseases like hemophilia or lupus, who often don’t have a generic drug option. The bill, which was signed by Gov. Tina Kotek, banned the programs on Jan. 1.
Navigating health care bureaucracy is something Levy has personal experience with because her adult brother has Down Syndrome.
“Being June’s mom and being the sister of a disabled brother informs everything I do,” Levy said.
A focus on education
Education is also a big focus for moms in the Legislature.
“Kids are the future,” said Rep. Emily McIntire, an Eagle Point Republican who represents the 56th House District in Jackson County. “And setting up a firm foundation for our children is going to help us exponentially in the long run.”
She is serving on the House education and higher education committees and is a member of the Joint Ways and Means Subcommittee on Education, putting her in a good position to support school spending. An example: She backed a $10.4 billion increase in 2023 to the State School Fund, which funds the state’s secondary schools.
McIntire, whose children are now 16 and 22, is also in legislative leadership, serving as the House Republican assistant leader. McIntire said she was on the Eagle Point school board when local Republicans asked members if they would run to represent the district in the Legislature. She said she felt a calling, ran and won and is now serving her second term on the board while being elected to a second legislative term.
“Everything I look at is through a lens of what’s best for kids,” she said.
Gelser Blouin is also passionate about education. Her oldest son, who has a rare developmental disability called Koolen-de Vries syndrome, is a big influence on her work. She has worked on bills on special education and focused on behavioral health, especially for children with disabilities.
Her Senate Bill 1557, which passed in last year’s session, makes it easier for children with severe emotional or behavioral disturbances to access Medicaid funds to provide extra support at school and at home.
“These kids have really complex needs. They’re struggling to stay at home with their families. They might be struggling to stay in school. Maybe they have a mental illness or have had contact with the juvenile justice system. Right now, many of these families know that they need help before that big crisis happens,” Gelser Blouin said.
Her bill passed both chambers in 2024 with no opposition, and she plans to introduce a related bill in this year’s session.
She said she believes that understanding the issues from the perspective of being a mom is vital.
Representative Annessa Hartman, D-Gladstone, who has two daughters who are almost 11 and 13, agrees.
“I’m constantly thinking about how [each decision] will impact them in their future,” Hartman said.
Hartman works for the Native American Youth and Family Center, a Portland-based nonprofit that supports the Indigenous community, and belongs to the Snipe Clan of the Cayuga Nation, which is part of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy based in New York. Her background has a major influence on her work. In crafting policies, she considers the “Seventh Generation Principle” of considering the impact of a decision on future generations.
“That’s embedded in my personal beliefs and teachings,” she said.
Her focus in the Legislature has been on championing issues around domestic violence and sexual assault, two issues that have had a severe effect on indigenous women in particular.
At home, Hartman often asks her girls what they think about what they’re seeing in school — whether it’s poor handwriting or behavioral issues. She said their insight helps shape better policy.
“When I’m sharing that perspective, whether it’s my own caucus or committee, I say, ‘This is what my kids are seeing.’ It’s a powerful tool,” she said.
McIntire also consults with her children on policy matters.
“When I’m home on the weekend and I have a house full of teenage boys, I’ll ask, ‘What do you guys think of this or of that?’” she said.
Juggling act
Commuting to Salem adds hours to the workday of mom legislators — and other lawmakers. Gelser Blouin has a 45-minute drive from Corvallis to Salem, and she did that every day when her children were young.
As for Levy, she spends 2.5 hours driving from Bend to Salem, while McIntire drives 3.5 hours one way from Eagle Point. Like most lawmakers, they rent apartments in Salem during the session.
Levy said she wouldn’t be a representative if it weren’t for her husband, Sean Levy, who is the general council for St. Charles Health System and manages all the school pick-ups and drop-offs.
“And dinner!” Levy said.
A former stay-at-home-mom, McIntire also relies on her husband for support. When she first joined the House in 2022, she struggled to stay in contact with her kids, who were then 12 and 19.
“The hours of session are so overwhelming,” she said. “I don’t know that I would have been able to do this if my kids were younger.”
Gelser Blouin, who had three under the age of five when she entered the Oregon Senate in 2005, said she paid friends and relied on family for child care. This was especially necessary as her kids entered middle and high school, when they needed to be driven to after-school activities, she said. Gelser Blouin said she focused on quality time with her kids when she was home in the evenings and weekends.
Gelser Blouin also brought her kids to the Capitol. Her son, Sam, has always loved movies and movie production, so she brought him to legislative days when lawmakers discussed a film and video tax credit. Levy and Hartman helped organize a “Kids Caucus” during spring break last year, an idea that came from Hartman’s daughter, Marley, then 12. The event, organized in part by Hartman and Levy, was for all the children of lawmakers so they could meet one another and be on the floor while their parents were working.
Instilling a love for public service
Some children of lawmakers follow a similar path, and many are civically engaged.
Gelser Blouin said all four of her kids are voters and are involved in community activities. Her 24-year-old daughter Nicole is even pursuing a career in politics: She currently works as U.S. Representative Val Hoyle’s legislative aide in Washington D.C.
“That’s the job she’s wanted since middle school!” Gelser-Blouin proudly said.
Though Levy’s daughter, June, is still young at age 9 now, she seems poised to be a politician — or maybe a political strategist. June wisely noted during her mother’s reelection campaign that “it’s gonna be harder this time.” That turned out to be true, with Levy facing a more aggressive campaign with her opponent running negative ads.
June is also Levy’s toughest critic.
“Anytime she sees trash on the street or people that need housing, it’s absolutely my fault,” Levy said. “I should be working harder.”
Low pay
Moms in the Legislature and others say that one of the downfalls of being a legislator in Oregon is the low pay: $43,434 in 2025. That’s not enough to support a family.
“There’s no way you could raise four kids on one legislator’s salary,” Gelser Blouin said.
Two years ago, three female legislators — two of them moms — quit because of the pay. At the time, their salaries were $33,000 a year.
Lawmakers set their salaries and are reluctant to boost them too much out of concerns that voters might consider that self-serving. So legislators referred a measure to November’s ballot to create an independent committee to set the salaries of legislators and other statewide officials but voters opposed that.
McIntire believes the low salary limits the type of person who can serve.
“If you want it to be a citizens’ Legislature, then you should be able to have all citizens able to do it,” McIntire said.
Others, including Sen. Gelser Blouin, agreed.
“Most of us that are in elected positions in state government make less than the staff that reports to us,” Gelser Blouin said.
But the moms have made their jobs work, thanks to help from their husbands and others. And they said the difficulty in trying to make the world better for their children is worth it.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Oregon
Oregon climate assessment highlights need for wildfire preparedness
PORTLAND Ore. (KPTV) – An Oregon Climate Assessment released Wednesday, highlights the need for more wildfire preparedness, how the state’s weather is impacted by rising temperatures, and advises policymakers on steps to take.
The assessment, released by the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute at Oregon State University could serve as a major blueprint for preventing or mitigating wildfire damage in the Pacific Northwest, like those currently burning in Los Angeles.
“The hazards are real, regardless of what people think of some of the reasons why our climate is changing,” said Erica Fleishman, OCCRI Director. “We’re seeing differences in weather and climate, and it’s important to be thinking of ways to protect themselves, and the people, places, and values they have.
The Seventh iteration of the report, which is 300 pages long and meant to inform policymakers and the public alike, indicates the state has increased its average temperature by 2.2 degrees Fahrenheit in the past century and will exceed five degrees by 2074.
In addition, the region has received below-average precipitation for 18 of the past 24 water years. These two facts combined show a reason for caution in future years and the need for preventative action to be taken based on the difficulty of fighting wildfires in both Oregon and California.
SEE ALSO:
“One can’t prevent those fires but can impact lives and structures from being lost,” Fleishman said. “A lot of things can be done to harden structures, homes, businesses. We’ve seen some difficulty and confusion with single evacuation zones and mobility challenges of loved ones and neighbors.”
In many areas across the Portland Metro area, homes are densely constructed close to vegetation, and these recent wildfires have many paying attention to what they can do big or small to keep their communities safe.
“I know there are stark climate differences between Southern California and Northern Oregon but it’s definitely a concern because of how much worse it’s been getting throughout the years,” one resident said. “Really just being mindful in any wooded area such as this.”
“Knowledge of the biological, physical, and social impacts of climate change better informs society’s decisions about how to respond,” Fleishman added.
The state has made the 300-page assessment viewable to the public.
Copyright 2025 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.
Oregon
Oregon State Football Hires New RB Coach
A rising star is orbiting the Valley Football Center.
According to multiple outlets, the Beavers are set to hire Buffalo running backs coach Ray Pickering to their coaching staff, filling the vacant running backs coach role left by new Idaho head coach Thomas Ford Jr.
Pickering coached one season at Buffalo, developing an all-MAC conference selection Al-Jay Henderson, who led the conference in rushing with over 1,000 yards.
Prior to his 2024 campaign in Buffalo, Pickering spent the 2023 season as the offensive coordinator at D1 FCS Norfolk State (VA), and the 2022 season as an analyst and recruiter at Texas for Steve Sarkisian.
Coach Pickering is widely respected by his peers, earning a place on the AFCA’s 35 Under 35, and FootballScoop.com’s Minority Rising Stars List.
It is not known at this time if Pickering will also fill Ford Jr’s recruiting responsibilities, or if another coach on the staff will fill that role.
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