Oregon
Oregon legislature concerned over Trump’s executive orders
SALEM Ore. (KPTV) – Oregon’s legislative session officially kicked off Tuesday, one day after the inauguration of President Donald Trump.
Throughout the state capitol, there were conversations about how decisions made in Washington D.C. could impact state government in Salem.
On day one, President Donald Trump signed nearly 50 executive orders. With so many to review, it will take a few days to see which are enforceable and which will face legal challenges.
But one executive order dealing with electric vehicles caught the attention of Oregon’s Joint Transportation Committee’s Co-Vice Chair.
The executive order is called “Unleashing American Energy.” It rolls back multiple executive orders from the Biden administration addressing climate change and clean energy, but it was specifically written to “Eliminate the electric vehicle (EV) mandate.”
“As soon as I heard it yesterday I reached out to our legislative council to see how that is going to apply to what DEQ has done in this state,” Representative Shelly Boshart Davis said.
Rep. Boshart Davis has served on the Joint Transportation Committee for several years. She opposed the “Advanced Clean Cars II” rule, which was passed in 2021. That rule requires auto manufacturers in Oregon to make all new passenger cars “Battery electric or plug-in hybrid EVs” by 2035. Rep. Boshart Davis hopes Trump’s order might end that rule.
“Those can only exist because they rely on an EPA waiver and if the waivers get rescinded will that apply in states like Oregon, Washington, California New York,” Rep. Boshart Davis said, “But that remains to be seen, we are less than 24 hours into it, but it does put question marks on things that were passed in this state.”
But democratic leaders said these orders might not lead to major changes, pointing out challenges the Oregon legislature has faced before.
SEE ALSO:
“In his first administration, the first Trump presidency we took action when there were rollbacks on clean water or clean air regulations and we said we would like to keep those regulations in place here in Oregon. We also codified Roe v. Wade,” Oregon Speaker of the House Julie Fahey said.
While the state legislature has challenged executive orders coming from the Trump Administration in the past, Speaker Fahey said other executive orders will have to be challenged through the courts instead.
“I would specifically point to the executive order of birthright citizenship which is likely unconstitutional and I was glad to see the Attorney General Rayfield join on to the lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of that order,” Speaker Fahey said.
While the executive orders coming down from the white house may impact future legislation here in Oregon, both Rep. Boshart Davis and Speaker Fahey said the main goal of the 2025 legislative session will be to tackle the cost of living in Oregon.
“I think top of mind for house Republicans and Oregonians is affordability in this state,” Rep. Boshart Davis said.
“We have heard loud and clear that those issues are driving what they want the government to be working on making housing more affordable, health care, utilities, there will be a number of big-ticket items like that the legislature will take up action this year,” Speaker Fahey said
All of President Trump’s executive orders are still very new and their impact is unclear. But there are some aspects that Oregon’s House Republicans are standing firmly behind, while House Democrats plan to challenge their legality.
Copyright 2025 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.
Oregon
Baker County was 1st official jurisdiction in Eastern Oregon – La Grande Observer
Baker County was 1st official jurisdiction in Eastern Oregon
Published 9:00 pm Monday, June 29, 2026
Although Native Americans had lived in what became Northeastern Oregon for millennia, when the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776, the better part of a century would pass before settlers began to start towns in the region.
Tens of thousands of immigrants rolled through the area, following the Oregon Trail, starting in the 1840s.
Although their destination was the trail’s end at Oregon City, and ultimately a farm in the Willamette Valley, eventually some retraced the ruts to the northeast corner of Oregon, which became the nation’s 33rd state on Feb. 14, 1859, while others halted their wagons in the valley of the Powder or Grande Ronde river, or in the Columbia Basin on the west side of the Blue Mountains.
The first post office in Eastern Oregon actually predates the state. The Umatilla post office was established on Sept. 26, 1851, although it was closer to present-day Echo than to the city of Umatilla. The post office closed just a year later.
The region’s first official jurisdiction was Baker County, which the Oregon Legislature carved out of Wasco County on Sept. 22, 1862.
That was prompted by the region’s first gold rush, which followed Henry Griffin’s discovery of gold in a gulch, a few miles southwest of what would become Baker City, on Oct. 23, 1861.
Just five days after designating Baker County, on Sept. 27, 1862, lawmakers shrunk Wasco County even more by creating Umatilla County.
Two years later, on Oct. 14, 1864 — apparently a busy day in Salem — the legislature added two more counties in Grant and Union.
Grant County was made of parts of Umatilla and Wasco counties, while Union County was originally part of Baker County.
On Oct. 14, 1887 — it’s not clear why Oct. 14 seems to have been 19th century lawmakers’ favorite day to create counties — the legislature designated a chunk of eastern Union County as Wallowa County.
In many cases, such as Umatilla, post offices were started before towns were incorporated.
And most cities in the region were settled years, or even decades, before they were incorporated.
People were living in what became Baker City, for instance, in 1863, but the city was platted in 1865 and incorporated in 1874, eight years after the post office was established.
La Grande was already a town when it was incorporated in 1865.
And two cities — Umatilla and Canyon City — were incorporated even earlier, in 1864.
Incorporation dates for other cities in the region:
Pendleton: 1880
Hermiston: 1907
Heppner: 1887
Boardman: 1921
Milton-Freewater: 1950 (Milton, 1873; Freewater, 1890)
Enterprise: 1889
Elgin: 1891
Echo: 1904
Haines: 1909
Halfway: 1909
Huntington: 1891
Imbler: 1922
Ione: 1903
Irrigon: 1957
Island City: 1904
John Day: 1901
Joseph: 1887
La Grande: 1865
Lexington: 1903
Long Creek: 1891
Mount Vernon: 1948
North Powder: 1903
Pilot Rock: 1911
Prairie City: 1891
Richland: 1917
Stanfield: 1910
Sumpter: 1901
Summerville: 1885
Union: 1878
Unity: 1972
Wallowa: 1899
Weston: 1878
Athena: 1904
Oregon
Oregon Supreme Court to hear $1B PacificCorp wildfire case
2020 Labor Day wildfire survivor talks blaze’s five-year anniversary
Hear from 2020 wildfire victim Christine Grom as she talks about the results of a class action lawsuit against PacifiCorp.
The Oregon Supreme Court has agreed to hear arguments in the billion dollar class action lawsuit between survivors of four 2020 Labor Day Fires and PacifiCorp.
The state’s high court will hear arguments at 1:30 p.m. on Nov. 3 in Salem, in a case with billions on the line for thousands of victims impacted by one of the worst disasters in state history.
The review represents a win for wildfire survivors, many of whom live in the Santiam Canyon and lost everything in the fires, and who stood to lose billions in jury awards following an April decision by the Oregon Court of Appeals.
How did we get here?
In June 2023, a Multnomah County jury found PacifiCorp at fault for causing the Santiam, Echo Mountain, 242 and South Obenchain fires and liable to a class of roughly 2,000 victims.
In the years since the verdict, juries have awarded more than $1.2 billion to 189 wildfire survivors, over the course of 18 “mini trials” designed to determine awards to fire victims.
On April 8, the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled the 2023 verdict was flawed, writing that instructions to the jury were “prejudicial to PacifiCorp.”
The appeals court reversed and remanded the case, which would have wiped out all awards and previous legal decisions.
Lawyers for the wildfire victims filed an appeal to the Oregon Supreme Court, also in April, and the high court granted certiorari on June 25.
The timeline for Oregon’s high court hearing the case appears swifter than normal, perhaps representing the need to bring some resolution for a case that’s been ongoing for five years.
“The thousands of Oregonians whose homes PacifiCorp burned are grateful that the Oregon Supreme Court will hear their case quickly,” lead council for the wildfire victims said in a statement.
PacifiCorp issued a statement saying they expected the court of appeals decision to be upheld.
“We respect the Oregon Supreme Court’s decision to review the case and will continue to participate fully in the process, presenting our position through the Court’s established briefing schedule,” a statement from PacifiCorp said. “We look forward to the Court’s consideration of the key issues and to the Court affirming the unanimous Oregon Court of Appeals decision.”
What will the court decide?
In reversing the original verdict, the Court of Appeals ruled that a set of instructions given to the jury, in the 2023 case, was in error and prejudicial to PacifiCorp.
The offending instruction, the ruling said, centered on the trial court telling the jury that it could “assume that the evidence at the trial applies to all class members.”
“We conclude … that instruction was legally erroneous, because certain evidence at trial, particularly related to causation, did not necessarily apply to every class member,” the appeals court wrote.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs argued that “the challenged instruction was appropriate” and that the Court of Appeals ruling “rests on a misinterpretation that no party held at trial and no juror adopted,” they wrote in their appeal to the Supreme Court.
In a news release announcing it would take up the case, the Supreme Court said it would examine the jury instructions and ruling by the appeals court.
Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Oregon for 18 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Podcast. He can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or 503-399-6801. Find him on X at @ZachsORoutdoors and BlueSky at oregonoutdoors.bsky.social
Oregon
National Weather Service says no tsunami threat after 5.5 quake off Oregon coast
The National Weather Service says there is no tsunami threat following a magnitude 5.5 earthquake off the Oregon coast.
The U.S. Geological Survey says the quake struck at 4:35 a.m. about 175 miles southwest of Eugene, Oregon, at a depth of about 6 miles in the Pacific Ocean.
National Weather Service says no tsunami threat after 5.5 quake off Oregon coast (KVAL/SBG)
The earthquake occurred in the Blanco Fracture Zone, a seismically active area where hundreds of earthquakes occur each year.
There have been no reports of residents along the southern Oregon coast feeling the quake.
BE THE FIRST TO COMMENT
This is a developing story.
-
Texas2 minutes agoTexas man admits embezzling $3.2 million to pay student loans, fuel online gambling, prosecutors say
-
Utah9 minutes ago
‘I was duped’: Utah senator apologizes for sharing Kevin O’Leary’s ‘Chinese Communists’ claim
-
Vermont11 minutes agoOutright Vermont calls Supreme Court transgender athlete ruling ‘devastating’
-
Virginia17 minutes agoNew Virginia laws starting July 1: Pay transparency, rent rules and more
-
Washington24 minutes agoConcert News: The Washington Chorus Celebrates 65th Anniversary During 2026-2027 Season
-
Wisconsin26 minutes agoWisconsin Unveils Culver’s Uniform Patch in New Video Ahead of 2026 CFB Season
-
West Virginia32 minutes agoPutnam County man identified as victim in homicide investigation – WV MetroNews
-
Wyoming39 minutes agoFree Crow Culture Program at Fort Phil Kearny