Jenny Smith

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Bites for Rights 2012

Our friends over at Basic Rights Oregon have their annual Bites for Rights fundraising event coming up in just a few short weeks.

Show your support for a great cause by eating your favorite foods at a ton of locations around the state! Check out the list of participating businesses here and start deciding which ones you'll eat at on June 21st!

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A recipe for disaster in Josephine County

Following the defeat of a local law enforcement tax levy, officials in Josephine County have begun to dismantle the sheriff's office and public safety operations this week.

Due to lack of funding, the sheriff's office has laid off 19 (of 25) road deputies, reduced its K-9 unit to one dog, and closed several divisions, including its major crimes unit and non-emergency calls department. The list gets worse from there.

How much worse? Yesterday, 39 inmates were released from the county jail. Local news crews were on the scene for the release.
 

 
Undersheriff Don Fasching and other sheriff office staff expressed their concern about recidivism without community support for the released inmates, many of whom have multiple felony convictions.
 
The question is, what happens now? The county’s unemployment rate is 12.4% (nearly 4 points higher than the state average). Funding has been slashed for the support services that could help the former inmates successfully reintegrate, and the devastating public safety cuts mean few officers will be available to respond to emergency calls.
 
In short, it’s a recipe for disaster for everyone involved.
 
From the Oregonian: "...the sheriff's civil division reduced its hours to three hours a day, four days a week. Road patrols diminish on Friday, dropping from 20 hours a day to eight hours a day, five days a week. The number of patrol deputy positions will drop from 24.5 to six. Three of those are contract deputies, specifically assigned to patrol Cave Junction, Bureau of Land Management forests and Oregon State Marine Board waterways. That leaves two deputies and a sergeant for the rest of the county.

With just six patrol deputies for the entire county, this amounts to one deputy for every 13,785 residents -- up dramatically from a ratio of one deputy to 3,308 people before the cuts took place. Or, from a geographical stand point, each remaining deputy is effectively responsible for 273 square miles of the county.

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How Hard is Poverty Hitting Your County?

Slate and the New America Foundation have compiled an incredibly powerful "poverty map" of our country - it details the change in poverty rates from 2007 to 2012.

Oregon is prominently featured in the header paragraph in Slate's piece, only one of two counties nationwide mentioned. -- "While some counties saw their poverty rates increase only slightly, and some even saw them drop, the number of people under the poverty line in Oregon's Malheur County doubled to nearly two-fifths of its population."

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Primary Election: News Clips Roundup

BLOG: The day after: Clackamas strategy pays off for conservatives
Sockeye Blog
"Despite a relatively low turnout rate, the election that wrapped up yesterday featured some results that will have lasting impacts for years to come. One of the most intriguing developments has been the shift in political strategy by the state’s top conservative campaign donors. Last week, we outlined this shift: conservative donors appear to have largely abandoned statewide races, and instead are focusing on local races, starting in Clackamas County."

Turnout 32 percent in Oregon primary election
KGW
"Charlie Hales and Jefferson Smith will face off in the November election for Mayor of Portland. Eileen Brady, one of the front-runners for most of the campaign, finished third. Amanda Fritz and Mary Nolan will also head to the run-off after neither gained the 50 percent vote required to win outright."

Your lobby report on Oregon's 2012 Legislative primary election
Oregonian
"Hey, forget about how the legislative candidates did on Tuesday night.  How about the lobbyists and the special interests behind them?  They like to think of themselves as the permanent government in Salem anyway. Let's start with Mark Nelson, the influential business lobbyist who is the big force behind the Oregon Committee -- a group of like-minded lobbyists who strategize on legislation and political strategy."

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UPSET about School Funding

Last Friday's UPSET rally monopolized the news this week. Missed it?

Check out our video here.

And our photos from the event here.

Why are these students and parents upset?

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Why #ILikeObamacare

There’s quite a hullabaloo this week about the Supreme Court hearings on “Obamacare” as the justices consider their most high-profile case in years. Despite President Obama’s recent appointments to the court – Justices Sotomayor and Kagan, it looks as if the overall conservative makeup might outweigh public opinion.

For many of the young people in my generation, the debate over Obamacare isn’t theoretical — it affects our lives every day.

My friends who will graduate from college this year and be thrown into the frozen employment landscape will have health insurance for only one reason — they are now allowed to be on their parents’ health insurance until age 26. That’s 3-4 extra years with healthcare, years when young people have typically gone without insurance.

The single most important effect of “Obamacare” has been to prohibit insurance companies from denying patients coverage for “pre-existing conditions.” That phrase has been thrown around a lot over the last few years, but it’s incredibly important. It means that if you don’t have health insurance and get diagnosed with cancer, you can buy health insurance and have it be covered. You can be an extremely chubby newborn baby and not be denied health coverage because you have the pre-existing condition of “obesity.”

Also this:

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When Even Affordable Housing is Out of Reach

In one chart:

From the Washington Post

In Oregon, a minimum-wage worker must work 71 hours at minimum wage to afford a “modest, non-luxury, 2 bedroom rental unit.” Remember how we talked about the poverty line last year?

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Today's Oregon News: March 9, 2012

Happy Friday! The Republican Party voted to partially open its primary elections for statewide elections, but they're only running a candidate in one of those races. Nonaffiliated voters will have to request a GOP ballot--the only GOP primary race on that ballot will be Knute Buehler's race for SOS.

The OR GOP is using the scheduled presidential debate, co-sponsored with Oregon Public Broadcasting--to raise political donations. Rep. Carolyn Tomei speaks out in a guest opinion about the breakdown in civility in political discourse, particularly being shouted at to "shut your mouth" on the House floor by Rep. Wayne Krieger (R-Gold Beach).

BLOG: ALEC and the corporate assault on our political system
Sockeye Blog
"Last week, protests erupted around the country targeting the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and its corporate sponsors. The idea for the 'F29' protest began in Portland and spread to the rest of the country to highlight the increasing presence and influence of corporate money and power.  ALEC is a key part of the right-wing infrastructure to abuse the legislative system by pushing corporate-agenda driven policy that adds to wealth disparity, deregulates polluters, and attacks public employees."

Oregon taxpayers stuck with bill for a cumbersome 'open primary' that features just one candidate
Oregonian
"Oregon taxpayers have to spend $200,000 on a cumbersome elections process that will ask the state's nearly 440,000 unaffiliated voters if they want a Republican primary ballot that features just one candidate. Republican and Democratic Party officials are each accusing the other of wasting taxpayer money while in pursuit of a partisan advantage. About the only thing that's clear is that only one Republican has even signed up to run for the three statewide seats that the GOP opened to voters who don't register in any political party."

Oregon GOP's Allen Alley sees fundraising opportunity in Portland presidential debate
Oregonian
"Oregon Republican Party Chairman Allen Alley, remaining hopeful that a March 19 GOP presidential debate planned for Portland will actually occur, has come up with an interesting strategy for making some money off the event. Alley sent out an email saying that people who give at least $25 to the Oregon Republican Party before 5 p.m. Friday, March 16, will get a chance to win a seat at the debate, set to be held inside the studios of Oregon Public Broadcasting."

Teachers throw political weight behind Jefferson Smith
Portland Tribune
"With just two months to go until the Portland primary election for mayor, Jefferson Smith on Thursday announced an endorsement by the Portland Association of Teachers’ political action committee, Teachers Voice in Politics. The PAC, which represents the 3,000-plus members, based their endorsement on interviews and questionnaires with six mayoral candidates."

Attorney General candidate Ellen Rosenblum's 'vested interest' in PERS cited by Willamette Week editor
Oregonian
"Oregon's public employee unions played a pivotal role in getting John Kroger elected Attorney General in 2008. The unions threw thousands of dollars at him in large part because they were still furious with opponent Greg Macpherson, who championed reform of the Public Employees Retirement System as a legislator five years before. It's a lesson Attorney General candidates Ellen Rosenblum and Dwight Holton learned well. Both are arduously courting the unions. The editor and co-owner of Willamette Week, Portland's alternative weekly newspaper, has joined the courtship in an eye-opening way."

More detailed Public Employee Retirement System data to be released
Oregonian
"The Public Employees Retirement System releases a second round of pension data at 5 p.m. Friday of its more than 117,000 beneficiaries; the first was last November and is posted in a searchable database at oregonlive.com. The current release will be more complete, with each retiree's final salary, years of service, retirement date and method to calculate retirement. The Oregonian will post the latest data at 5 p.m. The release follows a decade-long tug of war between government transparency and privacy rights. PERS routinely released benefits until 2002, when it started refusing to release the information except for prominent retirees such as an ex-governor."

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Today's Oregon News: March 8, 2012

It's Thursday--and International Women's Day!

State workers have raised $890,000 for charities through the Charitable Fund Drive, which has raised $22.5 million for charities since 1989. Blue Oregon has a take on what Filing Day portends for the 2012 elections.

Dept. of Corrections: We mistakenly said in yesterday's clips that Republican Herman Baertschiger Jr. was running unopposed to replace Sen. Jason Atkinson (R-Central Point). In fact, Democrat James Diefenderfer filed at the last minute for the race.

With launch of Oregon health care reforms, now comes the hard part
Oregonian
"Thursday, Gov. John Kitzhaber will sign part two of a major package of health reforms, aiming to set an example for the rest of the country. Now comes the tough part: provide better care for less money. Plenty is at stake. The state faces a shortfall of more than $600 million in its health care budget next year and potential drastic cuts if a request for federal funds doesn't come through. And while the reforms will initially affect a fraction of the population --mainly low-income members of the Oregon Health Plan -- over time, few will escape the impact."

Mortgage assistance offered for jobless Oregonians

KTVZ
"Residents of Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties can now apply for the Mortgage Payment Assistance Unemployment Program, NeighborImpact said Wednesday. The program is administered by Oregon Housing and Community Services and can provide up one year in mortgage payment assistance or $20,000, whichever comes first, to approved homeowners. The program is available to homeowners that are receiving Unemployment Insurance to help them avoid foreclosure while they seek work. OHCS expects to serve approximately 3,000 homeowners with the program."

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Today's Oregon News: March 6, 2012

It's Tuesday. The Oregon Legislature brought the first annual session to a close last night, just one day shy of the constitutional deadline. The biggest news of the night was the passage of the foreclosure bills that had long been blocked in the House.

Sine Die

Oregon legislature adjourns 2012 session with final flurry of agreements
Oregonian
"Lawmakers forged agreements on Gov. John Kitzhaber's remaining education overhaul bill, added protections against foreclosures and found money for the flood-ravaged Vernonia schools. Then the 2012 Legislature called it good Monday night and adjourned Oregon's first-ever annual session. It took five days longer than initially billed, a delay that cost taxpayers an extra $55,000 in per diem costs alone and provoked some partisan bickering when Republicans left for a weekend conference at the coast. But the session, which ended shortly before 9 p.m., likely will go down as mostly amiable and productive."

Legislature ends 34-day session with a few final bills
Statesman Journal
"Oregon lawmakers completed a 34-day session Monday night with a range of bills rivaling those they normally would pass in a session five times as long. In addition to rebalancing the state's two-year budget, they also passed follow-up bills to Gov. John Kitzhaber's efforts to overhaul education and health care, resolved some disputes remaining from last year, and approved bills affecting the economy."

Lawmakers adjourn first annual session
NPR
"Oregon lawmakers are leaving town with a balanced budget. The legislature adjourned its first annual session Monday night with a flurry of activity. It had much of the pomp of a full length session. "The 2012 regular session of the 76th legislative assembly is hereby adjourned sine die," declared Republican Co-Speaker Bruce Hanna."

Oregon's 2012 Legislature: Winners and losers? Most memorable quotes? What bill had no chance?
Oregonian
"WINNERS: Gov. John Kitzhaber: Goes 4 for 4. The Democratic governor had to resort to twisting arms -- both behind closed doors and in high-profile press conferences -- but he did get the two education reform bills and two health care bills that were his priorities."

Oregon House passes foreclosure protection bill addressing mediation, dual track
Oregonian
"Oregon lawmakers reached a last-minute deal Monday on protections for homeowners facing foreclosure, passing legislation that will require lenders to meet face to face with borrowers before initiating foreclosure. The House approved Senate Bill 1552 by a 59-1 vote late Monday as the Legislature approached adjournment. It will require lenders to meet with borrowers in mediation if the borrower requests it, and it will end the "dual track" practice of foreclosing while negotiating a loan modification."

Oregon Legislature passes foreclosure protections
Salem News
"Oregon homeowners win big today with the passage of a bill that will offer long awaited foreclosure protections. The agreement came in the closing hours of this year’s legislative session, and was a direct result of tireless efforts by key legislators, consumer advocates and Oregon residents. The bill, SB 1552 B, will provide an end to the current dual track system in which a homeowner is simultaneously negotiating for a loan modification while in active foreclosure. It will also implement a mandatory mediation program in Oregon, which is already used in 21 other states. Well-established mediation programs result in foreclosure avoidance rates upward of 50%."

Other Headlines

COLUMN: Gap in education funding growing wider
Statesman Journal
"Two state Supreme Courts. Two similar constitutional provisions on school funding. Two similar declarations. But two different approaches on how to handle the failure of state government to live up to its obligations to fund public education. One court, the Washington Supreme Court, decided enough was enough and it was time to hold the state accountable. The other court, the Oregon Supreme Court, decided it couldn't, or shouldn't, do anything."

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