OREGON Saturday, April 9, 2022 East Oregonian A9 Knight’s million is opening gambit Oregon has in the high stakes governor’s race distributed only By GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — On April Fool’s Day, Nike founder Phil Knight gave $750,000 to a 2022 campaign for governor, but this time the joke is on Republicans and Democrats. Knight’s contributions to the insurgent campaign of former Sen. Betsy Johnson of Scappoose now total $1 million, seven months before the Nov. 7 general election. It’s a clear sign that Knight sees Johnson’s unaffi liated campaign as the best shot at ending Democrats’ 35-year hold on Oregon’s governor- ship. It’s a switch from 2018, when Knight gave early and often — and very big — to former Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, who lost the general election to incumbent Kate Brown. His $2.5 million in contributions primed the GOP pump to compete with Democrats in a race that cost nearly $40 million for Brown to win. The Knight money will require responses from contributors to Democrats and Republicans, especially after the May 17 primary. Spending could set record Thomas Wheatley, a consultant for the gover- nor’s campaign of former House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, said Democrats are taking notice of the rising level of spending in the state and will stay competitive. “Democrats in Oregon and the national party under- MORE INFORMATION Other GOP candidates for governor candidates with more than $10,000 in funds: • Bend social media and marketing consultant Brandon Merritt has $33,367 in the bank. • Redmond businessman Bill Sizemore has $12,860 in the bank. • Baker City Mayor Kerry McQuisten: $34,117 in the bank. Mc- Quisten has raised and spent more than $100,000. • Tigard businessman Nicholas Hess has raised and spent more than $100,000 but has a negative account balance. • Former school superintendent Marc Thielman, who lives in Cottage Grove, has raised and spent more than $140,000 and has $23,070. stand the importance of strong Republican candidate winning the state,” Wheat- who stands up for our values, ley said. “Democrats have a the funding will turn to that strong history of doing what candidate,” Post said. For now, the fundraising it takes.” Republican consultant and gap looks large. Johnson has former state lawmaker Bill more than $5.1 million in the Post said Johnson is benefi t- bank. ing for the moment Only two candi- from a lack of oppo- dates among the 34 nents — the winners in the May primary of the primary will have more than defi ne the race. $1 million in the “T here is no bank from wide- Republican nomi- spread fundraising nee yet or any media as of April 5: Kotek attention yet on Betsy Johnson has $1.15 million, Johnson’s extensive while former House record of voting with Tina Minority Leader Christine Kotek,” Post said. “Betsy Drazan, R-Canby, has $1.18 was a Democrat three years million. ago when she voted yes on Lake Oswego consultant the Corporate Activity Tax.” and attorney Bob Tiernan, a Post said despite a long Republican, has $1,126,795, drought in races for Oregon which includes $500,000 governor, he believes national contributions each from Republicans know there is himself and Grants Pass opportunity in Oregon this LLC, with which he is affi l- year. Democratic resources iated. are spread thin trying to Treasurer Tobias Read has defend dozens of political raised more than $1.3 million hot spots. in the past two years and has “When it comes to the $888,895 on hand. Johnson will need the general election, with a money since she won’t have the massive pockets of the two national and state parties to depend on. She needs to run a signature campaign to qualify to submit just under 25,000 valid signatures to the secretary of state by the end of August to secure a spot on the general election ballot. A likely three-way race between the Democratic and Republican primary winners, along with Johnson, could eclipse the 2018 spending record. ‘Red Tide’ swelling In 2022, the winners of the Democratic and Republi- can primary will get an infu- sion of national campaign cash, especially Democrats looking to push their winning streak for governor to almost four decades. But times have changed since four years ago. The Democratic “Blue Wave” has switched to a Republican “Red Tide.” This election, Democrats are on the defense. Along with any current political issues, the Democrats are fi ghting the course of polit- ical history. The party of new presi- dents usually loses seats in Congress in the fi rst midterm election, an average of about 25 seats. Democrats are hanging on to majorities in the U.S. Senate and U.S. House by their fi ngernails. The House majority is down to 221-209 with five vacancies, well within the average midterm margin of loss to give the chamber back to Republicans. Fire-detecting cameras to be installed across state By ALEX BAUMHARDT Oregon Capital Chronicle SALEM — Oregon soon will have nearly 60 cameras across the state perched on cellphone towers, old fire towers and mountaintops, watching for potential forest fi res across the state. The cameras, part of the ALERTWildfire network, help fire departments and state agencies spot wildfi res early, predict their move- ments and slow their spread. They also allow Oregonians the opportunity to make evac- uation decisions early, based on their proximity to fi res. The network is made up of two dozen cameras now, which will more than double with new state money. Legislators in February appropriated $4.5 million to the Oregon Hazards Lab at the University of Oregon to add at least 29 cameras across the state over the next year. Most of the two dozen currently operating are in Southeast and Western Oregon. New cameras will be concentrated in the Rogue Valley and in the Bend, Rich- mond and La Pine areas. The video streams are accessible online 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to the public and to emergency response agencies and fi re- fi ghters, who can also use a time lapse feature to go back and trace the origins of a fi re. Additionally, artifi cial intelli- gence software in the system can detect smoke and alert fi re agencies and emergency responders. Such a forest surveillance system was fi rst implemented around Lake Tahoe in 2014 ALERTWildfi re.org/Contributed Photo This view came from a camera on Pine Mountain east of Bend that’s part of the ALERTWildfi re network. The cameras help fi refi ghters and the public spot wildfi res. by the University of Nevada Reno and has expanded to Oregon, California, Washing- ton and Idaho in partnership with state and federal agen- cies and public universities. The Oregon expansion is being spearheaded by Doug Toomey, a geophysicist and director of the Oregon Hazards Lab, where scientists study natural disasters in the Pacifi c Northwest, and search for ways to use technology to monitor and mitigate them. Toomey hope s t he camera’s will be useful to people living in areas prone to wildfi re. “You don’t have to sit and wait to see if your home is being evacuated. You can see what things look like in real time,” he said. In California, the system has allowed fi re agencies to respond more strategically to fi res when they begin to move. During the Lilac Fire in San Diego County in 2017, several fire departments collaborated to double the size of their initial response within the fi rst 10 minutes of fl ames spreading. They could see the size of the fi re from the elevated cameras rather than waiting to assess on the ground, according to a CBS news report. LeeAnnOttosen@UmpquaBank.com UmpquaBank.com/Lee-Ann-Ottosen Toomey said the Hazards Lab can program cameras to gray out homes or busi- nesses upon request for privacy reasons. Toomey said for the most part, people living within view of the fi re cameras have seen the bene- fi ts outweigh their concerns. The number of cameras in Oregon are still small in comparison to other states that are part of the ALER- TWildfi re collaborative. In California, the network has more than 1,000 cameras positioned around the state including dozens near its border with Oregon. half of emergency rental help so far By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — The Oregon Housing and Commu- nity Services Department said that as of Wednesday, April 6, it has made $319.3 million in emergency rental assistance payments to landlords on behalf of 48,313 Oregon households since the U.S. Treasury made the fi rst federal funds available in May 2021. But it has received a total of 105,082 applications. Because of duplicate appli- cations, the actual number of households applying is closer to 100,000, state offi - cials say. A household can get assistance only once. State law shields tenants from eviction proceedings while their applications for assistance are pend- ing, if they show proof to their landlords. The shield ends when the application is approved or denied. The law also set Feb. 28 as the deadline for payment of past-due rent, going back to the onset of the coronavirus pandemic on April 1, 2020. March 21 was the dead- line, and it resulted in a fi nal statewide surge of 13,592 applications for the month. The program paused appli- cations on Dec. 1, reopened on Jan. 26, and was sched- uled to close March 14. But Oregon got a last-minute allocation of $16 million in federal funds that went unspent in other states and communities. State offi cials still hope for a greater share of the additional $198 million they requested from the Treasury. Five counties and the city of Portland got federal funds separately for their own rental assistance programs, and their totals are not refl ected in the state agency fi gures. The Oregon Legislature approved $200 million from the state budget for emergency rental assis- tance in a special session in December 2020, when prospects for federal aid appeared uncertain. That $200 million was spent by the close of the two-year state budget cycle in June 2021. Oregon got an initial $289 million for emergency rental assistance from the U.S. Treasury, which allo- cated money that Congress approved as part of the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act, President Joe Biden’s pandemic recovery plan. That $289 million has been spent or committed. The program has contin- ued with $100 million more that the Legislature approved from the current state budget in Decem- ber, plus $16 million more from the Treasury, and $13 million that the state housing agency shifted from housing stabilization programs. Oregon also got $1.1 million from the Trea- sury late last year. Tenants can call Oregon Law Center’s Eviction Defense Project at 888-585- 9638 or evictiondefense@ oregonlawcenter.org. 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