NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS | July 21, 2017 | PAGE 7
Who’s on our side?
By Tom Chamberlain Oregon AFL-CIO President
Some wins, some major
disappointments in Legislature
The 2017 Oregon Legislature began with a simple math prob-
lem: Subtracting expenses from revenue equaled a $1.8 billion
deficit. After the defeat of Measure 97 last November, Ore-
gon’s business community promised to work with the governor
and legislative leadership to find new revenue. Oregon already
has one of the lowest overall tax rates on corporations in Amer-
ica: Yes, lower than Mississippi, Idaho, and Alabama. Corpo-
rations in Oregon are not paying their fair share.
The linchpins to these discussions were cuts to PERS bene-
fits and a tightening of state spending. Public employee unions
activated their members, explained the issue and challenges,
and worked hard to find resolutions. At every turn, Oregon’s
business community refused to sit down and find a solution.
In the end, there were no major cuts to PERS benefits, but also
no new revenue or corporate tax increases.
While our Legislature did pass the Oregon Healthcare Pro-
tections bill, which provides coverage for 350,000 low-income
Oregonians and reduces premiums for nearly 220,000 Orego-
nians (but is now under attack), they failed to pass additional
meaningful revenue reform at a critical moment. This failure
leaves hundreds of thousands of working Oregonians unsure
about our state’s ability to fund vital services — and with an
ongoing need to restructure our tax system that still allows cor-
porations to pay some of the lowest tax rates of any state.
Simultaneously, the Legislature prioritized and passed cost
containment measures that stripped away public employee
benefits. Despite these cuts, our state will still be in the position
of scrambling to find revenue to fund vital services in the com-
ing years.
Another loss was the failure to pass HB 2004, Stable Homes
for Oregon Families. While this legislation passed the House,
it failed to get any movement in the Senate. This is a major set-
back for besieged renters. Portland rents increased 13 percent
in 2016, compared to a 4 percent bump for rents nationally.
Oregon workers did score some major victories:
SB 1040, The Rural Oregon Worker Protection Act: This
legislation already signed by the governor prohibits local gov-
ernments from implementing “Right to Work.” This is the first
legislation of its kind in the country.
SB 828, Fair Work Week: Creates protections for workers
in retail, hospitality, and service jobs related to scheduling.
Again, this groundbreaking legislation is the first statewide
policy of its kind in the country.
HB 2017, Transportation Package: At $5.3 billion invested
over eight years in Oregon’s infrastructure, this may be the
largest transportation package in Oregon history.
HB 3170, Expands Collective Bargaining Rights for Public
University Faculty: Expands collective bargaining rights for
some supervisory faculty at public universities.
HB 3458, Overtime Protections for Manufacturing Work-
ers.
The wins that workers achieved in the 2017 Oregon Legis-
lature sets a national tone that the union movement can go on
the offensive to improve the lives of workers. But the failure
to hold corporations accountable and balancing budgets on the
backs of public employees is unacceptable. For over 20 years,
Oregon governors and legislatures have tried to restructure our
tax system to generate revenue to match the needs of our peo-
ple. Time and time again, those efforts have been stymied by
an army of corporate lobbyists, forcing our budgets to be cob-
bled together in a patchwork of revenue increases, public serv-
ice cuts, and reduced wages and benefits for public employ-
ees.
Oregon deserves better.
Tom Chamberlain is president of the Oregon AFL-CIO, a 130,000-member-
strong federation of labor unions.
INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE A delegation of labor officials from eight countries visited Portland the
first week of July, as part of a tour organized by the U.S. State Department. On July 3, they met with
Northwest Labor Press Associate Editor Don McIntosh and Portland Jobs with Justice Executive Direc-
tor Will Layng at the offices of the World Affairs Council to talk about labor law and the challenges fac-
ing the local labor movement. From left: Layng; Ying Wang, INNO Community Development Organi-
zation, China; Chantharaporn Wisutthikan, Department of Labor Protection and Welfare, Thailand;
Mawusi Bedrah, Fair Wages and Salaries Commission, Ghana; Felipe Burgueno Gonzalez, Center for
Labor Action, Mexico; Papikie Mohale, South African Municipal Workers Union; Maja Ilic, Ministry of
Labor, Serbia; Soon Ji Kwon, Ministry of Employment and Labor, South Korea; Florida Sandanasamy,
International Labor Organization, Malaysia, and McIntosh.