Last Updated: 4/7/25 12:54 AM PST
<CLICK HERE> for this week’s email link
Important Notice: If a bill comes in later than 5PM on Fridays, check here for updates & changes! We will not be sending additional emails!
Clicking the bill number will allow you access to more information on the bill via OLIS.
IMPORTANT: You have up to 48 hours on most bills after the Public Hearing to submit your testimony. Beware, the time could be 24 hours on some, so testify now!
Clicking Submit Testimony Button below each bill in the list will allow you to fill out the testimony form online or upload pre-written testimony to OLIS.
Links are provided for more information, testimonies on various sites, including OLIS as featured testimonies.
The bill text, any submitted amendments and testimony that may have already been submitted is available in the tabs at the top of the OLIS webpage.
By Clicking the “Register to Testify” tab on OLIS, you can fill out the form to sign up to testify remotely through Microsoft Teams for the bill either via Teams Video or on the phone.
The bills below, of course, do not incapsulate all the bills for the coming week. Bills could also be added to committee agendas at any time and after the work to put this list together.
Are we missing bill? SUBMIT A BILL every Friday by 5PM for distribution in the weekly alert!7
Fight for Oregon, Senator David Brock Smith, Representative Virgle Osborne, ODF Wildfire Support Group, Oregon Catalyst, Oregon Citizens Lobby and more for providing the majority of the content of this Alert! Listed below are Bills of Concern and Bills to Support that are coming up for Public Hearings this week and/or need your voice.
Your testimonies are greatly needed in the fight for Oregon! Our goal is to make it easy for you to testify and share! Anyone can subscribe or unsubscribe to these alerts! Encourage folks to subscribe!
Visit FightforOregon.com Weekly Alerts for a more updated version of this week’s bills! We are committed to NOT inundate your email box because these are a moving target and change daily, so the latest news will be on the website!
Please Review the Schedule, bills can be added at any time for Public Hearing
https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/Committees/Meeting/List
Special Message from the Minority Leader:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
As we kick off the first week of the 2025 Legislative Session, I want to remind you that your voice is a vital part of the process. The decisions made in Salem this year will impact families and communities across Oregon, and your engagement can help shape the direction we take. Whether it’s testifying on a bill, contacting your elected officials, or following the latest updates, there are many ways to get involved and ensure your perspective is heard. Together, we can work toward a safer, more affordable, and prosperous Oregon.
–Senate Republican Leader, Daniel Bonham
Did you miss this?
Senator Jeff Golden recently had his “Annual” Town Hall Meeting in Medford, Oregon on 1/16/25 *after* certified letters were received by property/homeowners in High Risk areas according to the Wildfire Risk Map. Residents showed up unexpectedly at this town hall and the following link is a recording of that town hall. We believe it is very important for you to listen to this town hall meeting.
YouTube Video of Senator Golden’s Town Hall Meeting on 1/16/25
We WILL be having a Teams Meeting every Sunday evening at 7:00 PM featuring Representative Virgle Osborne as well as our other Representatives & Senators as they are available to discuss upcoming legislation for the week ahead and answer questions! Please join us!
Recurring Meeting Link: <Click Here>
As a reminder, our Legislative Bills Work Day is proceeding as planned:
- Date: Monday, April 7
- Time: Starts at 11:30 AM
- Location: Republican HQ 827 SE Cass, Roseburg
We’re looking forward to seeing you there and appreciate your continued support. Bring a sack lunch and join us in submitting testimonies as you learn how to participate with us.
Rep. Virgle Osborne is launching a podcast! This new initiative will replace our Sunday Legislative Talks in the future. However, we’ll be sending more details about the podcast soon, so stay tuned for updates.
Bills of Concern:
SB 1177 – Public Hearing * WiLDFIRE FUND*
HB 3372– Public Hearing *WATER RIGHTS*
SB 429 – Public Hearing *GUN BILL*
SB 696 – Public Hearing *GUN BILL*
SB 697 – Public Hearing *GUN BILL*
SB 698 – Public Hearing *GUN BILL*
SB 1187 – Public Hearing *CARBON TAX*
SB 1102 – Public Hearing *CARBON TAX*
Bills to Support:
HB3372 – Public Hearing
SB 587 – Public Hearing
SJR 11 – Public Hearing
SB 964 – Public Hearing
SB 1054 – Public Hearing
HB 3839 – Public Hearing
Bills of Concern:
Bills to Support:
Ways & Means – La Grande
SB 5006 – Public Hearing
Oregon Transportation ReInvestment Package – “TRIP 2025”
HB 3944 – Repeal SB 762! Testify Now!
SB 762 News Releases
SB 762 PRESS RELEASE!
Monday -April 7, 2025
Bills of Concern
Senate Committee On Finance and Revenue 8:00 am
SB 1177 – Digest: The Act changes the kicker estimate to fund help against wildfire. (Flesch Readability Score: 64.9). Increases the amount of the estimate of revenues that will be received from General Fund revenue sources other than corporate income and excise taxes for the biennium beginning July 1, 2023. Requires that the difference between the amount actually collected and the amount estimated after the close of the 2023 regular session be transferred to the Oregon Wildfire Mitigation and Adaptation Fund. Establishes the Oregon Wildfire Mitigation and Adaptation Fund, with interest earned by the fund to be used for wildfire mitigation and community adaptation to wildfire risk. Provides for the return to taxpayers of surplus revenue over the adjusted estimate amount if the constitutional threshold is exceeded. Declares an emergency, effective on passage.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: No to Taking the Kicker!
Bad Bill Alert!
Senate Committee on Finance and Revenue 8:00 am
SB 429 – POSSIBLE THREAT TO 2nd AMENDMENT RIGHTS – Relating to firearms; prescribing an effective date. Digest: The Act requires gun dealers to wait 72 hours from the time of asking for a background check, and to have the approval number from the check, before giving a firearm or certain unfinished firearm parts to a buyer. The Act takes effect on the 91st day after sine die. (Flesch Readability Score: 64.7).
Prohibits a gun dealer from transferring a firearm or unfinished frame or receiver until 72 hours have elapsed from the time the gun dealer requested a criminal background check, and the gun dealer has received the background check approval number from the Department of State Police. Provides that a gun dealer who has the approval number and allows the required time period to elapse before transfer has immunity from civil liability for use of the transferred firearm or unfinished frame or receiver by the purchaser.
Takes effect on the 91st day following sine die
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Patriots who gave their lives protecting our rights deserve better!
Register to Testify in Person or Remotely:
- Go to Overview of Bill Page
- Click on “Register to Testify” Tab on that page
- Fill out the appropriate information and submit the form for that Bill.
- If you are testifying remotely by video or phone, an email address and phone # are required. After registering and seeing a confirmation screen, you will receive an email with meeting details. (check spam folder if not).
Note: Registration ends 30 minutes prior to the start of the meeting. After that time, the registration system will close.
Special Message from an Oregon Citizen:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
VOTE NO ON SB 429!
SB 429, yet another unconstitutional and gun controlling bill this legislative period making Oregon now number 1 all time for state legislative periods nationally in quantity of gun “safety” bills presented in a single session. But let’s not kid ourselves about the slight of hand here, these bills are about control and doesn’t make anybody safer but the criminals who prefer to prey on the weak and unarmed civilians.
People who want to take their lives will find a way so let’s not kid ourselves with the suicide arguments, as gun free Marxist descending societies such as England, Germany, France, Australia, and Canada have suicide rates that parallel America’s. Germany and France have murder rates and weapons related crime rates that are on par with America’s and England’s is higher than ours, and the Europeans are seeing it by way of knives, hammers, and other tools. But i don’t see liberals in those countries or ours making a push to ban and regulate those weapons and tools. No this has always been and always will be about control. And gun control is the issue.
Let’s talk about what a 72 hour wait period will do if liberal law makers force this unconstitutional bill upon us. 72 hours from purchase to possession will make sure that a woman who is a victim of domestic violence and stalking, will be beat again, she will be raped again, and some of these women will be murdered. Or in case of the children, the mothers wont be able to prevent the children from being beat by their bully fathers again or raped by their pedophile fathers or grandafthers. Pick your poisons, these are all actualities in every day society. All because they could not possess the great equalizer in their time of victimhood.
The red coats from the Moms Demand Action Army bring emotions to the table and legislature, but they don’t consider that there are 2 sides to that situation coin.
Let’s talk about us rural folks who have to drive long distances and sometimes hours just to get to a city with a gun shop to purchase and transfer are weapons and do the background checks. Now we will have to drive all the way back to our homes and repeat the process 3 days later to pick up our purchased property? This is not only cumbersome and wrong, it’s unconstitutional and would not past the Bruen test as settled law of the land by the U.S. Supreme Court.
This is just one more step by out of control woke legislatures to regulate our constitutional rights away from us, and it would not survive a court challenge all the way up through the channels, especially once it made it’s way off the west coast and beyond the looney 9th circus appeals court with their 82% fail and return to sender rate.
Please do not burden WE THE PEOPLE and infringe upon our rights and our property. The founding fathers before writing the 2nd amendment stated that “When the people fear the government their is tyranny, but when the government fears the people there is liberty.” This led them to write as forever enshrined law of the land; “The right of the people to KEEP and to BEAR arms shall not be infringed.” Please stay in your lane and zones of control and vote down this bad bill. Thank you. .
–Oregon Citizen Testimony
Bad Bill Alert!
SB 696 – POSSIBLE THREAT TO 2nd AMENDMENT RIGHTS – Relating to rapid fire activators; declaring an emergency.Catchline/Summary: Digest: The Act creates two new crimes concerning rapid fire activators. The Act takes effect when the Governor signs it. (Flesch Readability Score: 72.5).
Creates the crime of unlawful transport, manufacture or transfer of a rapid fire activator. Punishes by a maximum of 10 years’ imprisonment, $250,000 fine, or both. Creates the crime of unlawful possession of a rapid fire activator. Punishes by a maximum of 364 days’ imprisonment, $6,250 fine, or both. Specifies exceptions for both crimes.
Declares an emergency, effective on passage.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Rapid Fire Misnomers!
Special Message from an Oregon Citizens Lobby:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
VOTE NO ON SB 696!
SB 696 Fully automatic firearms are already more strictly regulated than fentanyl. This bill is clearly designed to give cartel the upper hand. If legislators were interested in public safety, they wouldn’t be attacking lawful gun owners so hard and rewriting the 2nd Amendment.
The Law Insider says, “Rapid fire trigger activator” does not include a semiautomatic replacement trigger that improves the performance and functionality over the stock trigger. The bill includes “The rate at which the trigger is activated increases to a faster rate than is possible for the firearm without the device…” which seems to describe a semiautomatic replacement trigger.
–Oregon Citizens Lobby
Bad Bill Alert!
SB 697 – POSSIBLE THREAT TO 2nd AMENDMENT RIGHTS – Relating to firearms. Digest: The Act limits gun possession for people who are under 21 years of age. (Flesch Readability Score: 71.7).
Prohibits a person under 21 years of age from possessing firearms with specified exceptions. Punishes by a maximum of 364 days’ imprisonment, a fine of up to $6,250, or both.
Prohibits a person from transferring certain firearms to a recipient the person knows, or reasonably should know, is under 21 years of age. Punishes by a maximum of 364 days’ imprisonment, a fine of up to $6,250, or both. Specifies exceptions.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Army Veteran questions Adults in everything BUT a rifle?
Special Message from an Oregon Citizens Lobby:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
VOTE NO ON SB 697!
SB 697, Does not apply to or affect police officers, certified reserve officers, reserve officers or active or reserve members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard or Marine Corps of the United States or of the National Guard.
Does the constitution provide for a dual citizens status that forbids ownership of a firearm to a legal citizen unless they are employed by government? Federal court ruled that handgun ban on adults under 21 is unconstitutional. Since the court has already ruled, it should not be allowed as a bill.
Federal appeals court rules handgun ban on adults under 21 is “unconstitutional”
–Oregon Citizens Lobby
Bad Bill Alert!
SB 698– POSSIBLE THREAT TO 2nd AMENDMENT RIGHTS – Relating to the possession of firearms in certain public areas. Digest: The Act changes the public areas where a person with a CHL can possess a gun. (Flesch Readability Score: 79.5).
Authorizes the governing bodies of certain public entities that own or control public buildings to adopt a policy, ordinance or regulation limiting the affirmative defense for concealed handgun licensees for the crime of possessing a firearm in a public building. Provides that in a prosecution for possessing a firearm in a building or on grounds subject to such a policy, ordinance or regulation, the concealed handgun licensee affirmative defense is not a complete defense, but results in a Class A misdemeanor conviction punishable by 364 days’ imprisonment, $6,250 fine, or both.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Statistics DO NOT agree with this bill!
Special Message from an Oregon Citizens Lobby:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
VOTE NO ON SB 698!
SB 698, Inch-by-inch they are taking away our constitutional right to carry as they add more and more places to the gun-free-zones.
The statistics do not back this bill up. People with concealed handgun licenses aren’t the ones committing crimes, but have stopped more crimes than the news reports. The people who are committing crimes don’t stop to read signs and don’t stop because of a potential misdemeanor like carrying a concealed firearm, and won’t stop murders.
This bill only stops the law abiding citizens, who follow the law, from their ability to defend themselves and others in a terrifying situation. If Oregon legislatures truly care about lowering these crimes, then they would introduce legislation to be tougher on criminals and force District Attorneys and judges to stop dropping charges against criminals!
–Oregon Citizens Lobby
Senate Committee on Energy and Environment 3:00 pm
SB 1187 – POSSIBLE CARBON TAX – Relating to greenhouse gas emissions; prescribing an effective date. Digest: This Act creates a program to recover the costs of climate change. (Flesch Readability Score: 81.8).
Establishes the Climate Superfund Cost Recovery Program as an interagency response to the effects of climate change. Directs the Department of Land Conservation and Development to serve as the lead agency of an interagency team. Requires the department to conduct an assessment on the costs of greenhouse gas emissions.
Directs the Department of Environmental Quality to issue cost recovery demand notices to entities determined to be responsible for the costs of climate change.
Establishes the Climate Superfund Cost Recovery Program Account.
Takes effect on the 91st day following adjournment sine die.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Creates a Kafkaesque government shakedown racket against businesses and people grounded in pseudoscience that circumvents due process!
Special Message from an Oregon Citizen:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
VOTE NO ON CARBON TAXES – SB 1187!
SB 1187 is a CARBON TAX that will raise the cost of energy in Oregon and the cost for every Oregonian!
CARBON TAX was rejected in prior legislative sessions.
Exactly what negative impacts is climate change doing? Are we to believe the nonsense that Al Gore predicted in 2006, which never materialized, there is a reason the Federal Government has taken Global Warming off their websites and are defunding the hoax that the UN has imposed on the World. Carbon Dioxide is plant food, which in turn produces Oxygen which all humans need to live!
SB 1187 is not about Climate Change but is designed as DEI, as the environmental justice mapping tool is being used, developed under ORS 182.555 The Federal government has rejected DEI as a failed program.
Submit testimony before 4/7 at 3pm
Email the Senate Energy and Environment Committee:
Sen.JaneenSollman@oregonlegislature.gov
Sen.DavidBrockSmith@oregonlegislature.gov
Sen.JeffGolden@OregonLegislature.gov
Sen.KhanhPham@oregonlegislature.gov Sen.NoahRobinson@oregonlegislature.gov
–Oregon Citizens Lobby
SB 1102 – POSSIBLE CARBON TAX – Relating to energy.Catchline/Summary: Digest: Makes ODOE do a study on energy and submit a report on its findings. (Flesch Readability Score: 65.7).
Requires the State Department of Energy to study energy. Directs the department to submit findings to the interim committees of the Legislative Assembly related to energy not later than September 15, 2026.
Sunsets on January 2, 2027.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Another Study becomes a Mandate with an Amendment after Public Hearing on Climate Hoax!
Special Message from an Oregon Citizen Testimony:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
SAY NO TO CARBON TAXING!
SB 1102 was written and introduced as a “study” bill, yet now presented to Oregonians behind the scenes is a -2 Amendment placing restrictions on business and Oregonians, creating restrictions for something that more than 20,000 scientists to-date have signed a declaration that there is no climate crisis.
See SLIDE #26 of Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine: <Download the presentation>
This slide alone should cause this Committee to reject ANY proposal to place a mandate, restriction, or penalty on any Oregon citizen or business.
Oregonians deserve better representation if this is what legislators desire to do to this state based upon CONTROVERSIAL topics.
SAY ABSOLUTELY NO to SB 1102 and SB 1187 and STOP it with your so-called unproven science rulings upon the people of this state.
The climate has always gone in cycles from warm to cold depending upon various natural occurring factors. penalizing utility companies for not meeting unrealistic and totally unnecessary climate goals will lead to those penalties being passed on directly to consumers, both commercial and residential. We have already seen several double-digit rate increases from utilities here in our state. The former combined with inflation is making energy unaffordable for some in our state. Even higher utility rates will lead to an economic downturn and the further Exodus of taxpayers from our state. Therefore, I strongly urge that this bill die the death it deserve.
Submit testimony before 4/7 at 3pm
Email the Senate Energy and Environment Committee:
Sen.JaneenSollman@oregonlegislature.gov
Sen.DavidBrockSmith@oregonlegislature.gov
Sen.JeffGolden@OregonLegislature.gov
Sen.KhanhPham@oregonlegislature.gov Sen.NoahRobinson@oregonlegislature.gov
–Southern Oregon Citizen
- This public hearing is an opportunity for students (kindergarten – 12th grade) to tell the committee about an energy or environment issue. You may sign up to speak at the meeting by clicking on “Register to Testify” above or submit written comment by clicking on “Click to Submit Testimony” in the staff list below. For additional assistance call 1-833-588-4500.
For information on how to submit written testimony or register to testify on bills scheduled for a public hearing:
- https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/citizen_engagement
- Written testimony may be submitted up to 48 hours after the committee meeting is scheduled to begin. Public testimony registration closes 30 minutes before the meeting is scheduled to begin
To access links to a livestream or recordings of legislative meetings:
Bills to Support
House Committee on Agriculture, Land Use, Natural Resources, and Water 8:00 am
HB 3372 – Relating to exempt uses of water. Digest: The Act tells an agency to study exempt uses of water. (Flesch Readability Score: 64.9).
Directs the Water Resources Department to study exempt uses of water. Directs the department to submit findings to the interim committees of the Legislative Assembly related to water not later than September 15, 2026
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Incredibly Vague and Outrageous- NO!
Special Message from Rep. Mark Owens:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
House Bill 3372 This bill will be interesting to watch unfold. It has bipartisan support, but also bipartisan opposition. For years, many Oregonians have used well water on small commercial gardens and supply produce or plants to CSAs, farmers markets, or even food banks. However, the law has not allowed this practice without a water right, and the Water Resources Department began enforcing this restriction in recent years.
With its current amendment, HB 3372 would permit small commercial gardens (no larger than one-half acre) to use up to 3,000 gallons per day (gpd) for commercial purposes without needing a water right. The 3,000 gpd limit would also apply to watering lawns and non-commercial gardens. You can watch the hearing live on OLIS, and I will share the recording in next week’s newsletter. Additionally, I’ve published a public letter on OLIS outlining the rationale and intent behind this bill.
Senate Committee On Finance and Revenue 1:00 pm
SB 587 – Digest: Exempts awards from and legal fees paid in wildfire suits from corporate excise and income tax. (Flesch Readability Score: 76.5). Creates Oregon corporate excise and income tax subtractions for amounts received in resolution of a civil action arising from wildfire. Creates Oregon corporate excise and income tax subtractions for wildfire-related legal fees paid by plaintiffs. Allows a taxpayer to amend a return to claim a refund for earliest tax year in which subtraction is allowed. Applies to declarations and executive orders issued on or after January 1, 2018, and before January 1, 2026, and to amounts received, losses incurred and legal fees paid in tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2018.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: 3 Years and counting = $0!
SJR 11 – Digest: The Act suggests a change to the Constitution to set aside money from the lottery for wildfires. (Flesch Readability Score: 60.1). Proposes an amendment to the Oregon Constitution to require a certain percentage of lottery revenues to be expended for wildfire prevention, suppression or management. Refers the proposed amendment to the people for their approval or rejection at the next regular general election.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Roseburg Area Chamber of Commerce Supports!
Senate Committee On Rules 1:00 pm
SB 964 – Digest: The Act defines a postmark for ballot envelopes. (Flesch Readability Score: 61.2). Defines “postal indicator” as an official mark stamped on an envelope by the United States Postal Service for purposes of determining the date or time at which a ballot was mailed.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: No Supporting Testimonies at this writing.
SB 1054 – Digest: The Act says that county clerks must provide a live video feed of ballot counting. (Flesch Readability Score: 73.1). Requires each county clerk in this state to provide a live video feed to be made available to the public through the Internet of rooms in which ballots are tallied and official ballot drop sites. Requires each county clerk to cause the live video feed to be recorded and made available to the public through the Internet for at least two years following the election at which the live video feed was provided.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Very Much Needed!
Special Message from Oregon Citizens Lobby:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
Some counties have tried to push observers to a distance that they might as well forbid observing. This bill will meet ADA requirements, allowing more people to volunteer as observers on a live feed, without accommodations. It also doesn’t prevent physical observers.
Senate Committee On Judiciary 3:00 pm
HB 3839 – Digest: The Act tells DSP to release level one and two sex offender information to schools. (Flesch Readability Score: 67.5). Directs the Department of State Police to ensure that level one and level two sex offender information is available to school districts and entities providing school visitor management services.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Enhancing School Safety – Please Support!
Tuesday - April 8, 2025
Bills of Concern
Senate Committee on Labor and Business 8:00 am
SB 1119 – Digest: The Act stops employers from doing certain things at work with respect to immigration. (Flesch Readability Score: 65.7). Prohibits employers from engaging in unfair immigration-related practices.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Oregon Farm Bureau Opposes!
Bad Bill Alert!
Senate Committee On Natural Resources and Wildfire 1:00 pm
SB 1154 – MAJOR THREAT – Relating to ground water; prescribing an effective date. Digest: This Act makes changes to laws about areas with ground water quality problems. (Flesch Readability Score: 63.4).
Modifies provisions of law related to declarations of ground water quality concern areas and ground water management areas. Directs the Governor to appoint an agency or agencies to lead an interagency team in ground water quality concern areas and ground water management areas. Provides that ground water management committees shall act in an advisory capacity.
Directs or authorizes the Department of Environmental Quality, the State Department of Agriculture, the Water Resources Department, the Oregon Health Authority and the Department of Land Conservation and Development to take specified actions in ground water quality concern areas and ground water management areas.
Takes effect on the 91st day following adjournment sine die
CLICK HERE for the Gut and Stuff Amendment from Senator Golden which could impact your water rights.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Oregon Farm Bureau Opposes!
Special Message from Oregon Citizens Lobby:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
SB 1154 Amendment -1 amounts to sweeping overhaul of Oregon’s groundwater policy, threatening local decision-making, property rights, and transparency. This amendment grants unelected agencies excessive power to inspect private property, restrict rural development, and impose mandates without clear scientific evidence or due process. Farmers, homeowners, and rural communities will bear the brunt of these bureaucratic overreaches. We must act now to preserve liberty, privacy, and local control.
This amendment is a massive expansion of state bureaucratic power. Authorizes an unelected interagency team – under a Governor-appointed lead agency – to direct ground water investigations, inspections, permit reviews, and public messaging. Thesese agencies gain authority to:
- Modify or revoke land use permits,
- Rewrite agricultural operating rules,
- Conduct private property inspections without a warrant, and
- Restrict homebuilding and well development outside urban boundaries.
No meaningful checks or opt-outs are provided to local governments or citizens. Once declared a “ground water management area,” local landowners are subject to mandates with limited appeal or due process.
SB 1154 -1 undermines local decision-making and property rights. permits counties to prohibit new homes unless they are hooked up to urban-style water systems or community wells – even in rural zones. It also allows DEQ inspectors to enter private property to examine septic systems, with only minimal notice, regardless of consent. The result is a top-down regime that weakens home rule authority and forces Oregonians to comply with broad state mandates crafted by unelected administrators.
Targets farmers without guarantees of scientific accuracy. Agricultural operations are heavily implicated in this bill, yet:
- No standards are set for how contaminants are scientifically linked to farm practices,
- Agencies can impose restrictions and recorkeeping mandates based on correlations, not causation,
- Nutrient applications and water use can be limited with little recourse for landowners.
This opens the door for regulatory overreach that punishes aland stewards who have not proven to contribute to the problem.
Affected: Farmers, Homeowners, Cities, Counties, Department of Agriculture, Department of Environmental Quality, Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Department of Land Conservation and Development, Office of the Governor, Oregon Health Authority, Water Resources Department.
(From Representative Ed Diehl’s testimony)
EMAIL COMMITTEE
Sen.JeffGolden@OregonLegislature.gov
Sen.ToddNash@OregonLegislature.gov
Sen.FredGirod@OregonLegislature.gov
Sen.FloydProzanski@OregonLegislature.gov Sen.KathleenTaylor@OregonLegislature.gov
Gut & Stuff Alert!
House Committee On Commerce and Consumer Protection 1:00 pm
HB 3074 – Digest: The Act directs the Department of State Police to study background checks for gun transfers. (Flesch Readability Score: 67.5). Requires the Department of State Police to study the efficiency of firearm transfer criminal background checks. Directs the department to submit findings to the interim committees of the Legislative Assembly related to the judiciary not later than September 15, 2026.
There is no amendment posted yet. Come back and CLICK HERE to see if/when one is posted.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Firearm Studies with Predetermined Outcome-No!
House Committee On Judiciary 3:00 pm
HB 3917 – Relating to a catastrophic wildfire fund; declaring an emergency. Digest: Creates a fund to pay for damage claims arising from catastrophic wildfires. (Flesch Readability Score: 60.7).
Creates the Catastrophic Wildfire Fund to pay for property damage claims arising from catastrophic wildfires that are ignited by the facilities of a public utility. Allows a public utility to participate in and capitalize the fund. Defines “public utility.”
Requires the Public Utility Commission to appoint an independent administrator to administer payments of eligible claims arising from a catastrophic wildfire. Provides for an independent administrator to prepare and present a plan of operations. Provides for a process to recapitalize the fund as needed, as determined by an independent administrator. Provides for procedures if an independent administrator determines that the fund is depleted.
Establishes a claims process. Limits the amount of property and noneconomic damages that may be recovered by a claimant from the fund.
Directs the commission to investigate whether the actions and conduct of a public utility prior to the ignition of a catastrophic wildfire were prudent or imprudent. Allows the commission to require a public utility whose actions were imprudent to reimburse the fund in whole or in part.
Allows a public utility, upon approval by the commission, to issue bonds and securitize debt for costs and expenses associated with contributions to the fund.
Applies to wildfires that begin on or after the effective date of this Act.
Declares an emergency, effective on passage.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Concerned Citiens Say No!
Bills to Support
Senate Committee on Labor and Business 8:00 am
SB 1061 – Digest: The Act requires the creation of a lumber grading training program. The Act requires DCBS to create a process for certain people to obtain lumber from those who have gone through the program. (Flesch Readability Score: 69.5). Requires the Director of the Oregon State University Extension Service to establish a lumber grading training program. Establishes the requirements of the program. Requires the State Board of Forestry to establish a certification process for those individuals who have successfully completed the lumber grading training program. Requires the Department of Consumer and Business Services to establish a process by which specified individuals may obtain lumber from an individual who is certified as having completed the lumber grading training program.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Wallowa School of Agriculture Supports!
SB 999 – Digest: The Act would change a definition with respect to laws about farmworker camps. (Flesch Readability Score: 63.4). Modifies the definition of “farmworker camp” so that the relevant statutes apply to farmworker camps specifically in connection with workers who work on a seasonal or temporary basis.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Tongue Point Job Corp Supports
House Committee on Climate, Energy, and Environment 8:00 am
HB 3944 – WILDFIRE MAP REPEAL – Digest: The Act repeals laws related to the building code, laws making areas less at risk for wildfire, laws about fire protection for certain lands and a map of wildfire hazard. The Act makes changes related to helping with defensible space. The Act makes changes related to certain areas near forests. (Flesch Readability Score: 61.3). Repeals provisions related to building code standards for wildfire hazard mitigation, defensible space requirements, fire protection for lands outside forest protection districts and the wildfire hazard map. Makes changes related to defensible space. Makes changes related to the wildland-urban interface.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Please Support Repealing the Map!
Joint Committee on Transportation 5:00 pm
HB 3478 – Digest: The Act removes the need to buy a certain amount of fuel by cardlock users. The Act says that cardlock license holders will need to renew every three years instead of every year. (Flesch Readability Score: 69.5). Eliminates gallonage requirements for eligibility for nonretail cardlock dispensing of motor vehicle fuel. Increases cardlock facility licensing period from one year to three years.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: No Supporting Testimonies at this writing.
Wednesday - April 9, 2025
Bills of Concern
Senate Committee On Finance and Revenue 8:00 am
HB 2092 -Digest: Updates the tie date to the federal Internal Revenue Code and other federal tax laws. Becomes law 91 days from sine die. (Flesch Readability Score: 64.9). Updates the connection date to the federal Internal Revenue Code and other provisions of federal tax law. Temporarily disconnects from the automatic, rolling connection to updates to the federal law definition of “taxable income.” Applies to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, and before January 1, 2026 .
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Oregon Business & Industry Oppose!
Bills to Support
Senate Committee On Finance and Revenue 8:00 am
SB 387 – Digest: The Act would grant higher property tax breaks for disabled veterans and their spouses if they survive them. (Flesch Readability Score: 61.6). Grants higher property tax exemptions for the property of veterans with disabilities. Grants exemptions for a veteran’s surviving spouse who remains unmarried.
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Featured Testimony: Bobby Levy Supports!
House Committee On Housing and Homelessness 1:00 pm
HB 3928 – Digest: This Act lets counties zone land for rural housing development. (Flesch Readability Score: 61.3). Allows counties to designate certain rural lands for rural housing development that are not subject to statewide land use planning laws. Exempts the lands from repayment of additional property taxes based on disqualification from special assessment.
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Featured Testimony: Breese Iverson Support – Protects Farm/Forestlands
Joint Committee on Addiction and Community Safety Response 5:00 pm
SB 881 – Digest: The Act transfers duties from the OAC to the CJC. (Flesch Readability Score: 95.1). Directs the Oregon Criminal Justice Commission to provide grants and funding for drug treatment and other related services. Transfers the duties of the Oversight and Accountability Council to the commission.
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Featured Testimony: No testimonies in support at this writing
Thursday, April 19, 2025
Bills of Concern
No bills of significance stand out at this writing.
IMPORTANT: Bills can be added at any time for Public Hearing, check the schedule here:
https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/Committees/Meeting/List
Bills to Support
No bills of significance stand out at this writing.
IMPORTANT: Bills can be added at any time for Public Hearing, check the schedule here:
https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/liz/Committees/Meeting/List
Friday, April 11, 2025
Bills of Concern
Ways and Means 7:00 pm – La Grande, Oregon
HB 5006 – Relating to state financial administration; declaring an emergency. Digest: The Act budgets money for the Emergency Board. (Flesch Readability Score: 61.2). Appropriates moneys from the General Fund to the Emergency Board for allocations during the biennium. Appropriates moneys from the General Fund to specified state agencies for biennial expenses. Declares an emergency, effective July 1, 2025.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: No testimonies in opposition at this writing
STATE BUDGET
Eastern Oregon University
McKenzie Theater, Loso Hall (Updated Room)
1 University Blvd.
LA GRANDE
ASL and Spanish language interpretation will be available at the public hearing.
To access links to a livestream or recordings of legislative meetings:
https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/citizen_engagement/Pages/Legislative-Video.aspx
PLEASE NOTE
• Testimony may be limited to 2-3 minutes.
• Those attending this community hearing in person will be given preference to present public comment by pre-registering to testify.
• The public hearing scheduled on April 16th at the State Capitol in Salem will prioritize remote public testimony for those who wish to participate by video link or phone.
• Written comment may be submitted online up to 48 hours after the meeting start time.
Keep Watch Alert!
The proposed Oregon Transportation ReInvestment Package – “TRIP 2025”, is like more like a “psychedelic tax TRIP” for Oregonians. Here is what it really says.
BUYING AND LICENSING A CAR – NOT DRIVING IT YET….
- DMV FEES – Increase Title fees by $90 or around 100%. Current fees range from $90 to $190.
- Increase Vehicle registration FEES – Increase fees by $66. Current vehicle registration fees for gas powered passenger vehicles range from $126-$156. EV’s pay $316 unless they are registered in the OreGo program.
- New Car TAX (also known as the privilege tax passed in 2017 in HB2017 – ironically the last transportation package). Increases the tax applied to new vehicles from 0.5% to 0.8% or a 60%.
- The “New” Car TAX – Which will apply to all new and used cars and be in addition to the privilege tax. It will be a “one time fee of 1% of the vehicle price.
- Tire TAX – Brand new tax that will be 3% for all tires purchased.
ACTUALLY DRIVING
- Weight Mile TAX – Increase it by + 16.9%. These are the fees that trucks pay instead of the fuel tax. Former Senator Boquist and I called for a Special session on this issue in December of 2023 because the weight mile tax was already constitutionally out of balance with the fuel tax.
- Fuel TAX – Raise the current fuel tax of $0.40 per gallon to $0.60 per gallon. The Oregon gas tax was raised last year by 5%. Oregon has the nation’s 10th highest gas tax.
- ***FUTURE FUEL TAX INCREASES WOULD BE INDEXED AND TIED TO INFLATION – NO LEGISLATIVE APPROVAL, NO VOTE, NO INPUT, JUST AUTOMATIC INCREASES***
- Road Usage CHARGE for cars and pickups – pay per mile. Currently this is an optional program for EV vehicles in lieu of higher registration rates. The new program would eventually apply it to ALL vehicles.
- July 2026: Existing EVs
- July 2027: Newly purchased EVs
- July 2028: Plug-In Hybrids
- July 2029: New vehicles rated at 30 MPG or greater (starting with model year 2030).
DON’T DRIVE? – THERE IS A TAX FOR THAT TOO
- Delivery FEE – Businesses with 10 medium duty vehicles (10,000-26,000 pounds – Amazon vans, UPS, Fed Ex, Service providers like Cintas and Aramark, Batteries Northwest, Snap-on Tools, etc.) would be assessed a per mile fee somewhere in between the weight mile rate (which they do not pay today; they pay the gas tax most likely) and the road usage charge.
- Bike TAX increase — Currently the bike tax is $15 this would raise it to $24.9 for all bikes over $200. That is a 63% increase.
- Payroll wage TAX increase – Payroll tax is currently at 0.1%. The increase would take it to 0.18% an 80% increase.
LATEST NEWS ON SB 762
HB 3944 – Relating to wildfire; declaring an emergency.
Digest: The Act repeals laws related to the building code, laws making areas less at risk for wildfire, laws about fire protection for certain lands and a map of wildfire hazard. The Act makes changes related to helping with defensible space. The Act makes changes related to certain areas near forests. (Flesch Readability Score: 61.3).
Repeals provisions related to building code standards for wildfire hazard mitigation, defensible space requirements, fire protection for lands outside forest protection districts and the wildfire hazard map.
Makes changes related to defensible space.
Makes changes related to the wildland-urban interface.
Declares an emergency, effective on passage.
Read Testimonies
Featured Testimony: Fixed Income families need this passed!
Special Message from Oregon Property Owners Association:
Make Your Voice Heard in Salem!
REPEAL SB 762!
Legislative schedule for public testimony on HB3944 is April 8th. Register on OLIS web site.
Oregon Property Owners Association endorse this House Bill:
“HB 3944 is a practical, no-nonsense response to the wildfire management challenges Oregon has faced in recent years. The bill repeals the most flawed and overreaching aspects of SB 762—such as the disastrous wildfire hazard maps and burdensome state regulations—while preserving the programs that genuinely protect property owners and reduce wildfire risks.
By emphasizing local control, HB 3944 returns power to the communities most affected by wildfire policies, empowering them to make decisions that reflect their unique needs and circumstances. At the same time, it ensures that taxpayer dollars are spent where they matter most, supporting voluntary efforts to improve defensible space, promote forest thinning, and enhance wildfire readiness in rural Oregon.
Make no mistake, passing this bill will require a unified effort. The road ahead is steep, and success will depend on the collective voices of property owners, local leaders, and all who care about restoring common sense to Oregon’s wildfire program.
We need you to take action—reach out to your legislators, spread the word, and champion this bill and its Senate counterpart. Together, we can repeal these harmful policies, protect property rights, and build a safer, stronger future for our state. Let’s make it happen!”
JUST SAY YES!!
–Oregon Property Owners Association

PRESS RELEASE!
For Immediate Release
Date: Tuesday, March 18, 2025
SALEM, Ore. – Senator David Brock Smith (R-Curry, Coos & Douglas Counties) and Senator Noah Robinson (R-Josephine County) have been working with House Republican Leadership, David Hunnicutt of Oregon Property Owners Association, ODF, OSFM and others on legislation to repeal the Wildfire Maps and associated mandates on our rural property owners.
“Repealing the fire maps and associated government overreach cannot wait. Oregonians have lost too much of their lives and resources worrying about this issue already,” said Senator Robinson. “Many of them fear they will not be able to continue living in their houses. Let’s get these maps repealed now!”
Senator Robinson has SB 678, that both Senators have worked on a -4 Amendment. They have also worked on the -4 Amendment to SB 83. Both bills are currently in Senator Golden’s Natural Resources & Wildfire Committee, and both amendments have been submitted to the committee. During the 2021 Legislative Session, Senator Golden authored SB 762 that ultimately created the Wildfire Maps and subsequent issues to rural property owners.
“Having worked on this issue since 2019 and drafted the competing bill to SB 762 in 2021 that did not pass, I am grateful for the collective work that has culminated into this legislation to repeal the failed State Wildfire Maps legislation,” said Senator Brock Smith. “Over 100 thousand Oregonians and their properties are impacted, and we have come together to reverse these threats.”
House Republicans and Senate Republicans are also putting forward a new piece of Legislation in HB 3944, that mirrors the language within the amendments above.
What the repeal does:
SB 678 Amendment – Section by Section
Section 1: This section:
- Repeals ORS 455.612: This statute contains the home hardening (R327) requirements for new homes and remodels in the high hazard/WUI wildfire mapped areas. R327 code requirements, which predated SB 762 and the wildfire map, will remain as part of the state building code, but they won’t be tied to any map, since the map is being repealed.
- Repeals ORS 455.614: This statute requires DCBS to maintain a mapping tool showing wildfire areas where the home hardening standards applied and the requirements for complying with the R327 code in those areas. Since the map is being repealed, there’s no need for this tool.
- Repeals ORS 476.390: This statute defines “defensible space”. The same definition is being added as an amendment to ORS 476.392. Since OSFM’s regulatory authority over defensible space is being repealed, meaning ORS 476.394 becomes unnecessary, there’s no reason to have a separate statute that only contains a definition of “defensible space.” You can just incorporate that definition into ORS 476.392. In other words, this is just a style fix for LC, but it makes sense.
- Repeals ORS 476.394: This statute prohibits a county/city from using OSFM’s defensible space requirements as a criterion to approve or deny a land use application. Since we are removing OSFM’s defensible space regulatory authority, there’s no need for this statute.
- Repeals ORS 476.398: This statute removes OSFM’s requirement that they report each biennium to the legislature on their defensible space efforts.
- Repeals ORS 477.027: This statute directs ODF to define the “wildland urban interface” (WUI). Since we are providing our own definition of WUI (see Section 3 below), there is no need to direct ODF to do so. ODF’s current definition of WUI is massively overbroad and based on a federal statute that had nothing to do with regulation and includes rural areas that are miles from anything remotely urban. Our proposed definition aligns with reality.
- Repeals ORS 477.161: This statute requires ODF, in conjunction with OSFM and local governments, to establish baseline standards for wildfire protection in areas outside of ODF forest protection districts. Since Section 29 of SB 762 mandated the counties to meet those baseline standards by January 1, 2026, this statute eliminates local control.
- Repeals ORS 477.490: This statute is the mapping statute. Obviously the most important and obvious statute to repeal.
- Repeals Sections 12a and 12b, SB 762: These sections established deadlines for DCBS home hardening requirements under ORS 455.612. Since our bill eliminates DCBS’ authority to impose home hardening requirements in wildfire areas, these sections need to be repealed as well.
- Repeals Section 29, SB 762: This section required all counties to establish baseline standards for wildfire protection in areas outside of ODF forest protection districts by January 1, 2026. Since our draft repeals ORS 477.161 (see above), this section was unnecessary and needs to be repealed.
Section 2: This section:
- Amends ORS 476.392 to eliminate the requirement that OSFM adopt defensible space requirements, apply those requirements in mapped wildfire areas, and enforce the requirements. Since the map is being eliminated, OSFM’s defensible space requirements aren’t capable of being tied to anything.
- Adds a definition of “defensible space” (the same definition currently found in ORS 476.390 – see the third bullet point under Section 1), and retains OSFM’s ability to administer a community risk reduction program which enables OSFM to establish educational, response planning, and community preparedness efforts incorporating defensible space. The amendments eliminate OSFM’s requirement to establish defensible space requirements and their enforcement authority to enforce any requirements they may choose to adopt on private property. They also direct OSFM to establish a defensible space model code and make that code available to all Oregon local governments. Local governments can choose to apply the code, can create their own code, or can have no code – the choice rests with the local government. OSFM needs to retain authority to administer a community risk reduction program in order to obtain federal funding for the program. That’s why we chose to amend this statute rather than repeal it.
- Authorizes OSFM to provide direct assistance to local governments to implement defensible space programs in their jurisdictions if they so choose.
Section 3: This section amends ORS 477.015 to define the WUI. ORS 477.027, which is being repealed by this bill, authorized ODF to define the WUI. ODF did that, and their definition was horribly overbroad. Since the state will never have enough money to fully fund wildfire programs statewide, available dollars should be targeted to those areas of biggest risk for wildfire damage to people and property. Those are the WUI areas, but a tighter definition will help ensure that funding goes to areas at absolutely greatest risk for a wildfire catastrophe. The definition proposed in this bill is significantly narrowed to apply only in areas where there is a significant cluster of homes and wildland vegetation.
Section 4: This section makes a slight adjustment to ORS 477.503, which requires ODF to establish a landscape resiliency and hazardous fuels reduction program. This is the program ODF uses to fund prescribed burn and forest thinning programs. The amendment adds a priority directing ODF to focus on protection of WUI areas when implementing thinning and prescribed burning efforts, as preventing a wildfire conflagration in the WUI will protect the greatest number of property owners and reduce the risk of a wildfire spreading into an urban area.
Section 5: This section adds a new member to the Oregon Wildfire Programs Advisory Council, the volunteer Council that advises the Governor and legislature on the state’s wildfire programs. The section adds a new position for a firefighter with experience fighting structural fires in WUI areas.
Section 6: This section amends the seller disclosure property statement that a property owner completes when selling their property. The current disclosure statement requires a property owner to notify a potential purchaser whether the land is located within the WUI. Since our bill eliminates the WUI maps, there will be no way for a property owner to determine whether their property is within the WUI, and therefore no way for the property owner to complete this disclosure. It is being removed as a result.
Sections 7-11: These sections are conforming amendments, where existing laws that contain references to the statewide wildfire map are being amended to reflect the deletion of the map.
Section 12: This section voids any assignment to either the WUI or the hazard maps made by ODF as a result of the mapping process. In other words, it completely wipes the slate clean for every property owner, and declares any map designation null and void, whether the property owner appealed their map designation or not.
Section 14: Emergency clause.
###
Hello Friends,
I wanted to add a personal note of thanks to everyone one involved with this incredibly complicated work, including Senate Republican Leader Bonham, Senator Robinson, Senator Girod, House Republican Leader Drazan, Representatives Osborne and Boice, the Governor’s Office, Oregon Department of Forestry, the Office of the Oregon State Fire Marshal, and of course David Hunnicutt with the Oregon Property Owners Association.
This work has been extremely complicated as there were good things within SB 762 that set up programs that provided needed resources to local fire districts for preparedness, land owners for needed fuels reduction, early fire detection equipment across the forest landscape, to name a few. It was necessary to retain these extremely beneficial programs that assist our fire districts and departments, landowners, Oregon Department of Forestry and the office of the Oregon State Fire Marshal.
I especially want to thank Senator Golden for his engagement and work on this critical issue. Senator Golden has been steadfast and vocal in his commitment to repeal the wildfire maps. I am grateful for his work on this and look forward to this bipartisan legislation with him and our colleagues to do so.
Yours truly,
Senator David Brock Smith
E-Mail Senator Jeff Golden (D) - Ashland (Chief Sponsor of SB 762)
Jeff Golden is the Chief Sponsor of this bill (SB 762)). Put it into your own words to repeal this bill. Be respectful.
Legislative Contact Page:
https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/golden
Email:
Sen.JeffGolden@oregonlegislature.gov
Capitol Phone: 503-986-1703