The Observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1968-current, May 27, 2021, THURSDAY EDITION, Page 17, Image 17

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    STATE
THURSDAY, MAY 27, 2021
THE OBSERVER — 9A
Oregon House OKs election- New wolf killing laws prompt
push to revive protections
day postmark for ballots
ters, using night-vision
scopes and setting lethal
snares that some consider
inhumane.
Wolves in the region
lost federal endangered
protections in 2011 under
an act of Congress after
the species had rebounded
from widespread extermi-
nation last century.
Hundreds of wolves
are now killed annually
by hunters and trappers
in Montana, Idaho and
Wyoming. Yet the pop-
ulation remains strong
— more than 3,000 ani-
mals, according to wild-
life offi cials — because
the wolves breed so suc-
cessfully and can roam
huge areas of wild land
in the sparsely populated
Northern Rockies.
Supporters of restoring
protections say the new
laws will tip the scales
and drive down wolf num-
bers to unsustainable
levels, while also threat-
ening packs in Wyoming
By MATTHEW BROWN
Associated Press
By PETER WONG
BILLINGS, Mont. —
Wildlife advocates pressed
the Biden administration
on Wednesday, May 26, to
revive federal protections
for gray wolves across the
Northern Rockies after
Republicans-backed laws
in Idaho and Montana
made it much easier to kill
the predators.
The Center for Biolog-
ical Diversity, Humane
Society and Sierra Club
fi led a legal petition asking
Interior Secretary Deb Haa-
land to use her authority to
return thousands of wolves
in the region to protection
under the Endangered Spe-
cies Act.
Republican lawmakers
in Idaho and Montana
pushed through legisla-
tion in recent weeks that
would allow hunters and
trappers to kill unlimited
numbers of wolves using
tactics such as shooting
from ATVs and helicop-
Oregon Capital Bureau
SALEM — Oregon, the
fi rst state to conduct all
elections by mail, would
join the ranks of states
accepting ballots post-
marked by election day
under a bill that has cleared
the Oregon House.
House Bill 3291 was
approved on a 39-21 vote
Monday, May 24, and goes
to the Senate.
The bill would align
Oregon with 17 states —
including Washington, Cal-
ifornia and Nevada — that
allow ballots to count if
they are postmarked by
election day. Four other
states count ballots if they
are postmarked the day
before the election. Oregon
is among the states that
have required ballots to be
in the hands of county elec-
tions offi ces by the close of
election day.
Under the bill, ballots
would have to arrive in
county elections offi ces no
later than seven days after
the election if they are to
count. States that allow
election-day postmarks
range from three to 20 days.
Rep. Dan Rayfi eld, a
Democrat from Corvallis
and the bill’s fl oor manager,
said about 150 voters in
Marion County cast ballots
in last year’s general elec-
tion, but they did not count
Pamplin Media Group, File
Oregon, the fi rst state to conduct all elections by mail, would join the
ranks of states accepting ballots postmarked by election day under a
bill that has cleared the Oregon House.
because they were received
after election day.
He said the concept of
election-day postmarks has
been on the table for two
decades.
Rep. Greg Smith, a
Republican from Heppner
who then was in his fi rst
term, voted for it in 2001
and now. The only other
Republican who voted for
it Monday was Rep. Ron
Noble of McMinnville. The
other 21 Republicans voted
against it.
“It creates another level
of complexity in a system
that is problematic,” House
Republican Leader Chris-
tine Drazan of Canby said.
“A deadline is a deadline is
a deadline.”
Drazan also said the U.S.
Postal Service has shifted
most of its mail processing
to Portland in the two
decades since the 2001 vote.
She also questioned
a provision that allows a
ballot to be counted even if
the postmark is unclear.
Rayfi eld said that when a
voter signs the return enve-
lope containing a ballot,
it will include a statement
that the ballot was mailed
on or before election day. If
a voter does otherwise, it is
considered perjury, a Class
C felony punishable by a
maximum fi ne of $125,000
and fi ve years in prison.
Secretary of State
Shemia Fagan, the state’s
chief elections offi cer,
endorsed an election-day
deadline in testimony to the
House Rules Committee on
Feb. 11.
and other nearby states
that have interconnected
populations.
They argue the changes
violated the terms that
allowed state manage-
ment of wolves, and want
Haaland to act before the
looser hunting rules start
going into eff ect in Idaho
on July 1.
“The (U.S. Fish and
Wildlife) Service was
very clear that a change
in state law that allowed
for unregulated, unlim-
ited take of wolves would
set off the alarm,” said
attorney Nicholas Arrivo
with the Humane Society
of the United States. “This
is essentially an attempt to
push the population down
to the very minimum.”
Wednesday’s petition
seeks to restore protec-
tions across all or por-
tions of at least six states
— Montana, Idaho, Wyo-
ming, eastern Washington,
eastern Oregon and a small
area of Northern Utah.
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What to know before claiming Social Security benefits
Hardworking adults spend years striving to achieve their
professional goals. Along the way, planning for retirement is
a way to ensure all that hard work pays off when the time
comes to call it a career.
In the United States, men and women nearing
retirement age may be thinking about when they should
begin collecting their Social Security retirement benefits.
Social Security is a social insurance program instituted by
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1935. The program
consists of retirement, disability and survivor benefits, and
workers in the United States contribute to Social Security
each week.
The decision about when to claim Social Security
retirement benefits is one all those who have contributed
to the program must eventually make. In recognition of the
difficulty of that decision, the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau offers the following tips to people wondering when
they should begin collecting their Social Security benefits.
• Confirm your full retirement age. Full retirement age
refers to the age at which people can begin collecting their
full benefits. Depending on the year you were born, you can
begin collecting your full benefit at age 66 or 67. Claiming
your benefit before you reach full retirement age will lead to
a permanent decrease in your monthly benefits. Conversely,
claiming after you reach full retirement age will lead to a
permanent increase in your monthly benefits. Since the
stakes are so considerable, it’s vital for adults to confirm
their full retirement age before they claim their benefits.
• Delay claiming if you can. The CFPB notes that you can
expect to get an additional 5 to 8 percent in monthly benefits
for every year you wait to claim your Social Security benefits
after age 62, maxing out at age 70. If you can afford to do so,
M
any people have been asking
wait to claim your full benefit
until age 70, as doing so can
translate to a benefit that’s 32
percent higher than it would
have been had you claimed
your benefit at age 62.
• Budget for retirement.
Short- and long-term budgeting
for retirement can help you
assess how much money
you will need to cover your
expenses when you stop
working. This step can help
you understand how much a
reduced or increased Social
Security benefit will affect your
bottom line in retirement.
• Continue working.
Remaining in the workforce
full-time or even part-time can
have a considerable impact
on the size of your Social
Security benefit. The CFPB
notes that continuing to work
for one or two additional years The decision about when to claim Social Security retirement benefits is one all those who have contributed
can replace low- or no-income
to the program must eventually make.
earnings from your earnings
his or her benefit until he or she reaches full retirement age.
record, thereby increasing your
The decision about when to collect your Social Security
benefit.
benefit is complex. Discussing your options with your spouse
• Consider the long-term needs of your spouse. Surviving
and financial advisor can help you make the most informed
spouses receive the higher of the two spouses’ benefits. So it
decision.
makes sense for the higher earning spouse to wait to collect
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77 N 8th Ave, Suite A
Elgin, OR 97827
Office: 541-437-3691
Fax: 541-437-3691
Cell: 541-786-4282