The SpokeSman • WedneSday, January 12, 2022 P5 Bill Bartlett/photos for The Spokesman Construction nears completion of 50,000 square-foot addition to Medline, which manufactures medical parts. Tech Continued from P1 They employ 18 and when they reach full scale, that num- ber will grow to around 100 according to Carsten Sundin, President and CEO. They are supported by remote staff in Canada and India, but Sundin is proudest of the high level engineers and fabricators staff from Redmond who get the planes airborne. BasX is HVAC In the same league is BasX, the 10-year-old industry leader in the manufacturing of high efficiency data center cool- ing solutions, cleanroom set- tings and custom HVAC sys- tems which employs 320 at its 140,000-square -foot complex on SW 21st Street. Just get- ting through the front door is a model of technology with a virtual receptionist who even takes your temperature auton- omously as a COVID mitiga- tion measure. “Clean rooms” are those structures where extremely valuable or vulnerable oper- ations take place such as the making of computer chips that require extreme control of temperature, dust, humid- ity and air pressure to avoid contamination of the product. When rooms like that need to be designed, engineered and built, one does not call Bob’s Heating & Air. Medline in line for growth Drive all over the back streets and business parks of Redmond and you find busi- nesses just like those, some with impressive, large scale fa- cilities. Take Medline on NE Hemlock for example now doubling its size from 50 to 100,000 square feet. Inside the walls are highly skilled workers and highly complex systems making life-saving medical products such as used for tis- sue repair and wound care. Thirty engineers alone are part of a much larger roster of skilled craft workers whose output includes high-tech surgical devices like electri- cal scalpels. It takes extraordi- nary ability and certification to supply the hospital market. The Redmond plant is one of several in the $18 billion com- pany’s portfolio. Picking Red- mond for a production facil- ity is testament to the caliber of worker and infrastructure Capitol Continued from P1 Change at the top: House Dem- ocrats, who have a 37-23 majority, will choose the new speaker before the 2022 session. Rep. Janelle Bynum, D-Clackamas, wants the job, but Democrats may opt for a caretaker speaker for 2022 before regrouping after the election for the 2023 ses- sion. Adding to the political whiplash, House Majority Leader Barbara Smith Warner, D-Portland, has told Oregon Public Broadcasting she will give up her position as the party’s floor leader before the 2022 session as well. Senate Majority Leader Rob Wag- ner, D-Lake Oswego, first chosen majority leader for the 2021 session, will be the longest-serving legislative leader in the 2022 session with plans to stay in the Legislature. He’ll lead the Democrats, who have a majority of 18 of 30 seats. The minority Republicans in both chambers have new leaders as well. Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, a former House majority leader, steps in as an institutional stalwart for a fractured GOP caucus in which only 10 of the 12 senators follow the party leader. One of two large ca- pacity la- ser-cutting machines at BasX Solu- tions in Red- mond found in the city. Other, smaller technologies A much smaller and lo- cally owned firm, Springer Precision, on SW Deerhound typifies another of dozens of manufacturers in Redmond. It makes parts for firearms rang- ing from coil magazine springs to base pads to magazine ex- tensions and much more. Guns are loaded with technology once you take them apart. Pre- cise machining is critical in ev- ery sense of the word. Then there’s Risse Racing Technology in its new, larger facility on SW 2nd Ct., one more illustration of where A faction led by Sen. Dallas Heard, R-Roseburg, who is also the Oregon Republican Party chair, takes a hard- line stance or boycotts votes. In the House, Rep. Vikki Breese Iverson, R-Prineville, will lead a more cohesive Republican caucus. Cho- sen leader late last year after House Minority Leader Christine Drazan, R-Canby, stepped down to focus on her campaign for governor, it will be the first regular session with Breese Iverson determining the strategy for her “superminority.” The change will be unfamiliar to all but a handful of the most veteran law- makers. To have new legislative traffic controllers in a short session could be a tall task. “There will be a leadership experi- ence vacuum and that always leads to instability,” Knopp said. Big plate of bills: Lawmakers could submit nearly 200 bills, with addi- tional legislation coming from leader- ship and committee chairs. Each bill would have to be introduced, have a hearing, win committee approval, win a floor vote, then go to the other chamber where the process would be repeated all over. If approved and any changes reconciled, only then would it Redmond high tech is on full display. It designs and man- ufactures high performance mountain bike suspension components that are distrib- uted in Latin America, Europe and New Zealand as well as in the States. Schools playing a role Schools in Redmond are up to the task. Both high schools offer CTE (Career and Techni- cal Education) opportunities sorely needed to fill the ranks of unfilled jobs in the trades and manufacturing sectors. BasX, for example, expects to need another 100 workers in the near future. They are short- go to Brown. All in 35 days. Democrats would like to deal with skill and job training, increase the number of educators, make criminal justice reforms and address safeguards and aid for the pandemic’s front-line workers. “It’s my job to help my colleagues get their bills across the finish line,” Wagner said. Knopp said Republicans wanted to honor what he said was the will of voters who approved adding the short session in addition to the odd-year 160-day long session. “Only bills that are budget-related, technical fixes or emergencies should pass during the short session,” Knopp said. “Democrat majorities should be wary of government overreach as the public is done with it.” Stalls and stops: Republicans do not have enough members in either chamber to block legislation. But two archaic parts of the Oregon Constitu- tion have given them a big cudgel in recent years. Oregon is one of the few states where more than a majority of law- makers is needed in each chamber to create a quorum to do any business. handed now with a dozen or more job openings. Redmond Proficiency Acad- emy boasts award winning STEM Robotics and electives in computer science and AP Physics along with Business and Technology CTE courses. The Redmond Technology Education Center at Central Oregon Community Col- lege could not be better po- sitioned to guarantee gradu- ates rewarding careers. Their 34,000-square-foot building houses technology-centered programs that allow students to train for current and future family-wage jobs. The $12.5 million building began classes Oregon requires two-thirds atten- dance, which is 40 in the House and 20 in the Senate. Republicans have walked out over carbon cap legislation and education legislation in the past. The 2020 session died after just three bills were passed. Drazan came up with a different way to jam the gears on the Demo- crats’ agenda as minority leader in 2021. Under the Constitution, bills must be read in their entirety be- fore final passage. In less contentious times, the requirement was usually waived without objection and just the short title of the bill was read. If an objection was raised, it took a two- thirds vote of the House to overcome the objection. Objections had been used spar- ingly on highly controversial bills. Drazan employed a blanket objection to all legislation, which led to a mas- sive backlog of bills to back up until a deal was struck with Kotek to speed things up. Kotek agreed to give Drazan a seat on the House Redistricting Com- mittee, giving it 3-to-3 parity on the panel. But when a special session was held in September to approve redis- tricting, committees had to be for- in the 2014 fall semester. A key aspect of COCC’s vi- sion for the facility is its adapt- ability for future needs project- ing that 10 years from now and beyond, the Center will be able to support training in technol- ogies that are unknown today. To provide this flexibility, the Technology Education Center was designed with modifiable spaces as well as expansion space and large exterior access doors to allow for removing old and installing new equip- ment. Apart form their well- known vet tech degree pro- gram, the college offers a two- year automotive technology degree emphasizing electric and hybrid power systems, clean diesel and on-board ve- hicle management diagnostics prevalent in the current gener- ation of highly technical cars and trucks. Very few car own- ers could even dream of repair- ing their own vehicle today. The jobs produced by the many, albeit obscure, high tech enterprises in Redmond are just the kind idealized by city planners — good paying, sus- tainable and contributing to the city’s dynamism and attrac- tiveness. mally reestablished. Kotek announced the redistricting panel would revert to a Democrat majority. Deals or dead on arrival?: Pros- pects of finding areas of agree- ment were possible, leaders of both chambers and both parties said. But whether 2022 and its many challenges in a short time will make reaching consensus a challenge. “There’s no reason we can’t suc- cessfully pass essential bills that solve problems for Oregonians this year unless our Democrat leadership fails to listen to Oregonians by charging ahead with a partisan agenda,” Breese Iverson said. If her caucus sees bills they think fit the “partisan agenda” moving toward approval, Breese Iverson said slowing down the legislative assembly line was an option. “The reading of bills is an essential backstop in response to failed Demo- crat leadership that shuts out differing opinions and concerns,” Breese Iver- son said. “We hope it won’t be neces- sary this session and that we can work on bipartisan legislation to benefit the entire state fairly, but it’s not off the table.” e gwarner@eomediagroup.com