EIZER times $1.00/ ISSUE Volume 42 • No. 50 OCTOBER 1, 2021 Ruby becomes lone active openly gay pro baseball player LGBTQ+ Bryan Ruby rounds third base after hitting a home run n in a game from this summer. mer. MATT RAWLINGS of Keizertimes times Maverick By MATT RAWLINGS | Of the Keizertimes B ryan Ruby told his family and close friends his secret four years ago. He then told his teammates this summer. But last month, the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes fi rst baseman wanted to share his true self with the world. Ruby, 25, publicly announced in September that he is gay, making him the lone active professional baseball player to be openly a part of the LGBTQ+ community. “It has defi nitely been a weight off my shoulders. I just feel more free,” Ruby said. After completing a successful colle- giate career in 2019 with Vassar College in New York, Ruby played profession- ally in Germany and Guatemala before See RUBY, page A2 NEWSTAND PRICE: $1.00/ ISSUE Keizer’s next decade of representation 6 drastically altered Congressional DISTRICT SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS : By JOEY CAPPELLETTI Of the Keizertimes In a rush to beat an end of day dead- line, Oregon lawmakers passed new con- gressional and legislative maps Monday afternoon that Gov. Kate Brown subse- quently signed into law later that day. The new maps, which are expected to be challenged by Republicans in court, place Keizer in diff erent congressio- nal and legislative districts for the next decade. It was unclear early Monday if lawmak- ers would even make the deadline after House Republicans boycotted Saturday’s House session, denying Democrats the quorum needed to pass the redistricted maps. If lawmakers hadn’t passed new maps Monday, Secretary of State Shemia Fagan, who is a Democrat, would have been given sole power to draw the maps. “Many of us (Republicans) are only here because we don’t trust the secretary of state to draw these maps,” said Rep. Suzanne Weber, R-Tillamook. The congressional maps passed Monday place Keizer in the new 6th Congressional District, which Oregon gained after a population increase in this year’s census. Keizer’s new congressional district is expected to have a much larger Democratic lean than their previous 5th Congressional District, according to PlanScore, a website that measures par- tisan gerrymandering. It is unclear if Keizer’s current See DECADE, page A3 Keizer State House DISTRICT 21 Keizer State Senate DISTRICT 11 Keizer