PAGE A8, KEIZERTIMES, MAY 7, 2021 Post's bills for police dog rescue, veteran's benefi ts taking shape By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes Rep. Bill Post has a number of bills that are making their way through the Legislature this year, but he said the most unusual thing is simply the climate in which everything takes place. Committee meetings, public hearings and most inter- actions between legislators are all virtual because of pandemic restrictions. “It’s just very strange from the way we’ve done business in the past,” Post said. The pressure from some constituents to stage a walkout and prevent work from getting done is also high. “Here’s the thing, which bill do we walkout on? Is it for gun bills? Is it for prescription bills? Is it for timber tax? Pick one,” Post said. In 2020, Republicans in the Legislature staged a walkout over proposed cap-and-trade regulations on harmful emissions, the same tactics are being called for presently over other issues. “We walked out because cap and trade would have fundamen- tally changed the economy of Oregon forever, but it’s a nuclear option and it should be used wisely and carefully,” Post said. Of the bills he sponsored that are continuing apace, Post said one has garnered surprising levels of support while another addresses an oversight for veterans. The bill garnering surprising support is HB 2650, which would permit emergency services to emergency transport for police dogs injured in the line of duty. Services would only be off ered to canines if there are no humans requiring transport. The bill cleared House hurdles with a unanimous vote of all members aside from 13 who had excused absences. Post is hopeful House Joint Memorial (HJM) 2, the memo- rial would recognize U.S. Armed Forces service members who participated in the clean-up from nuclear testing on Enewetak ALLERGY, Continued from page A1 Cactus Crater on Runit Island in Enewatek Atoll holds 110,000 cu- bic yards of radioactive contaminated soil and 6,000 cubic yards of contaminated debris. Rep. Bill Post sponsored a bill advocating for service members who participated in the clean-up to receive an expansion of their Veterans Administration benefits. Submitted photo Atoll. About 6,000 service members, between 1962 and 1980, were exposed to radiation-contaminated soil, concrete and military equipment while living on the islands for six-month stretches. Because those who participated in the clean-up are not consid- ered “atomic veterans’’ they are not eligible to receive compensa- tion for their exposure.  The memorial action calls for recognition of the soldiers’ clean-up eff orts by the U.S. Congress and urges the body to extend “atomic veteran” status to those that took part.  Hoping not to jinx the bill’s chances, Post isn’t planning any celebrations just yet. Oregon is the last state in the nation to require prescrip- tions for medication containing pseudo- ephedrine. Mississippi was the other holdout and it reversed course last month. Oregon’s path to Rep. Post this point began in 2005 when the federal Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005 was incorporated into the Patriot Act signed into law in 2006. The act imposed limitations on the amount of pseudoephedrine in a pill and instituted electronic tracking of purchases. At the same time, Oregon was in the midst of a heightened methamphet- amine crisis. Pseudoephedrine and other similar medications could be converted into methamphetamine though a dan- gerous chemical process. To combat the number of metham- phetamine labs cropping up in the state, Oregon lawmakers began requiring pre- scriptions for drugs that could be used to produce meth. While the eff ort curbed production in Oregon and other states, Mexican cartels picked up the slack with more potent and cheaper versions of the addictive drug. Although we are currently closed we are still serving the community. More than a building, a center without walls. 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