Current:Home > ContactAfter record GOP walkout, Oregon lawmakers set to reconvene for session focused on housing and drugs -EverVision Finance
After record GOP walkout, Oregon lawmakers set to reconvene for session focused on housing and drugs
View
Date:2025-04-12 22:08:28
SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Oregon lawmakers are set to convene Monday for the start of a short legislative session that is expected to be dominated by homelessness, a housing shortage and plans to overhaul the state’s pioneering drug decriminalization law as overdose deaths surge.
Lawmakers will have just 35 days to pass bills. For now, legislative leaders have indicated that bipartisan lines of communication are open as they overcome any partisan tensions still lingering from last year’s Republican walkout over measures related to abortion, transgender care and gun rights, which ground the Legislature to a halt for a record six weeks and disqualified 10 GOP state senators from reelection.
Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek urged lawmakers to concentrate on the most state’s most pressing issues.
“My number-one focus for the legislative session is to put as much as possible into the effort to improve housing production in the state,” Kotek said. “That is the ultimate solution to our housing and homelessness crisis.”
The sole bill introduced by Kotek this session is a sweeping housing measure that would make changes to Oregon’s hallmark land-use law to facilitate the construction of homes, among other things. In place since the 1970s, the law placed growth boundaries on cities in a bid to prevent urban sprawl and preserve farmland and forests.
Kotek’s measure would grant cities a one-time exemption to the rule, allowing the addition of new land for housing in a so-called “urban growth boundary.” It would require 30% of new units in expansion areas to be affordable housing.
The proposal would build on changes made to the land-use law last year, when lawmakers passed a bill to increase available land for semiconductor development. The bill allowed Kotek to designate up to eight sites for urban growth boundary expansion to be used for such purposes.
Kotek’s roughly $500 million housing package this session also would include $20 million in grants she described as “climate-friendly” incentives. The grants would be available for housing projects where cooking appliances, heating and water heaters are powered by electricity instead of natural gas.
Another top priority for the governor is expanding and increasing funding for summer learning programs in a bid to help students overcome learning losses largely stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The more heated debates this session are expected to revolve around proposed changes to the state’s first-in-the-nation drug decriminalization law.
Facing growing public and political pressure and one of the largest national spikes in overdose deaths, Democrats have unveiled a bill that would undo a key part of the law by once again making the possession of small amounts of drugs a low-level misdemeanor. The move would enable police to confiscate drugs and crack down on public use, its authors said.
Measure 110, approved by voters in 2020, directed the state’s cannabis tax revenue toward drug addiction treatment while decriminalizing “personal use” amounts of illicit drugs. Possession of under a gram of heroin, for example, is only subject to a ticket and a maximum fine of $100.
Republicans say Democrats’ proposal doesn’t go far enough. They want “personal use” possession to be a higher-level misdemeanor and treatment to be mandatory.
House leaders from both parties acknowledged there will be policy disagreements and said they were focused on building relationships and adopting a “no surprises approach” to avoid the communication breakdowns that contributed to last year’s GOP walkout in the Senate.
“We have an agenda in front of us that we need to focus on,” said House Minority Leader Jeff Helfrich, a Republican. “If the system breaks down and we don’t produce for Oregonians, that’s a problem.”
While Senate leaders did not tout their working relationships to the same extent, minority leader Tim Knopp, who led last year’s walkout, said he has had “positive” meetings with the chamber’s Democratic president, Rob Wagner.
Wagner said he spent the interim period between sessions traveling across the state to visit Republican senators in their home districts and described having “good and open conversations” with Knopp.
Knopp is among the 10 GOP senators who have been disqualified from seeking reelection after last year’s lengthy walkout. Under a voter-approved constitutional amendment aimed at stopping such boycotts, lawmakers with more than 10 unexcused absences cannot run for reelection. A group of GOP senators, including Knopp, had challenged their disqualification in a lawsuit that was rejected by the Oregon Supreme Court.
The high court ruling upheld an administrative rule implemented by the secretary of state’s office last year stating that lawmakers with at least 10 unexcused absences could not seek office for the immediately following term.
Taking another step to prevent walkouts, Democrats this session have introduced a joint resolution requiring a majority of lawmakers to be present for a quorum, rather than two-thirds.
Republicans’ walkout strategy has been based on denying the two-thirds quorum needed for the House or Senate to conduct legislative business. If passed, the proposed constitutional amendment would be put to voters.
Kotek said she has been in contact with Republican leaders and isn’t concerned about policy differences erupting as they did last session.
“Let’s focus on housing, let’s focus on behavioral health, let’s focus on summer learning,” Kotek said. “This isn’t a fancy session. Let’s stick to the basics.”
veryGood! (297)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Actor David Soul, half of 'Starsky & Hutch' duo, dies at 80
- Hezbollah fires rockets at Israel in ‘initial response’ to killing of top leader from allied Hamas
- I took a cold shower every day for a year. Here's what happened.
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Turkish justice minister says 15 suspects jailed ahead of trial for spying for Israel
- 100 New Jersey firefighters battle blaze at former Singer sewing machine factory
- The new FAFSA is meant to make applying for college aid easier, but not everyone can access it yet
- Average rate on 30
- Vessel loaded with fertilizer sinks in the Danube in Serbia, prompting environmental fears
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- New York governor promises a floating pool in city waterways, reviving a long-stalled urban venture
- Ohio governor signs order barring minors from gender-affirming surgery as veto override looms
- How to watch and stream 'The Prison Confessions of Gypsy Rose Blanchard' Lifetime special
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Ohio State football lands transfer quarterback Will Howard from Kansas State
- How Gypsy Rose Blanchard Feels About Ex Nicholas Godejohn Amid His Life in Prison Sentence
- To plead or not to plead? That is the question for hundreds of Capitol riot defendants
Recommendation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
J.Crew Outerwear, Sweaters & Boots Are an Extra 70% off & It's the Sale I've Been Dreaming About
Suit challenges required minority appointments to Louisiana medical licensing board
From Week 1 to 18, see how NFL power rankings have changed and this weekend's schedule
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
House Republicans ready contempt of Congress charges against Hunter Biden for defying a subpoena
Researchers team up with mental health influencers to reach young people online
Stars converge in Palm Springs to celebrate year’s best films and Emma Stone’s career