BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2022 A5 LOCAL & STATE Condemned Continued from A2 Andrew Selsky/Associated Press, File Oregon Chief Justice Martha Walters, top left, swears in new House Speaker Dan Rayfield on Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022, at the state Capitol in Salem. Democrats retain control in Legislature, but lose supermajorities in both chambers That means Democrats can’t pass revenue-raising bills without GOP support BY PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau Democrats will remain in charge of both cham- bers of the Oregon Legislature when the new ses- sion opens Jan. 9, but will lack the 60% majorities required to pass revenue-raising measures on their own. Results are incomplete, but Republicans man- aged to reduce the Democrats’ current 18-12 major- ity in the Senate and 37-23 majority in the House. Whichever party has a majority usually names the House speaker and Senate president. They appoint the members and leaders of committees — where most of the work of the Oregon Legisla- ture is done — and assign bills to the committees. The majority party usually sets the agenda for the chambers. Democrats have held majorities in both cham- bers for a decade, and supermajorities — 60%, the requirement for revenue-raising measures — since 2019. Republicans were aided by the Bring Balance to Salem political action committee, founded by for- mer U.S. Rep. Greg Walden — himself a former Oregon House majority leader and Oregon state senator — and helped by a $2 million contribu- tion from Nike co-founder Phil Knight. Republicans mounted a strong bid to win their first majority in the Senate, or at least force a 15- 15 tie, in two decades. They lost their majority in 2002, when Democrats gained a tie, and then Democrats won three seats for an outright ma- jority in 2004. Oregon Senate Republicans were mounting a strong bid to win their first majority in the Senate, or at least force a 15-15 tie, in two decades. They lost their majority in 2002, when Democrats gained a tie, and then Democrats won three seats for an outright major- ity in 2004. Democrats have kept it since then, al- though there were 16-14 splits between the parties from 2011 through 2014. The Senate Leadership Fund raised more than $2 million to aid Republican candidates and at- tack Democrats. The new lineup apparently will be 16 Demo- crats, 13 Republicans and one independent, Brian Boquist of Dallas, who left the Republican Party. This excludes the undecided District 20 seat, where Democratic Rep. Mark Meek of Gladstone for a record 20 years. held a slim lead in his challenge of Republican Oregon House Sen. Bill Kennemer of Oregon City. Most of the district is in Clackamas County, where about half Democrats are likely to retain their majority the ballots were yet to be counted. over Republicans in the House. But that majority Meek is a three-term state representative; Ken- will be smaller than in the past four years. nemer was seeking a full term to the seat he was Results are incomplete, but Republicans ap- appointed to in 2021 after Republican Alan Ol- parently gained a net two or three seats, enough sen of Canby moved out of state. Kennemer was to reduce Democrats below the supermajority first elected a senator in 1986, then as mark of 36. There will be at least 20 a Clackamas County commissioner in new members — 13 Democrats and 1996, then as a state representative in seven Republicans are vacating their 2008 before he left in 2018. seats — and if all six appointees on “These results should give re- the ballot win their elections (most newed optimism to every person in were leading), almost half the House our state fighting for the well-being will be serving their first 160-day of hard-working Oregonians,” said long session in 2023. Senate Majority Leader Rob Wagner, Democrat Dan Rayfield of Cor- D-Lake Oswego, who is expected to be vallis, who succeeded Tina Kotek as Democrats a candidate for the Senate presidency. speaker at the start of the 2022 short “Soon, we will turn our attention to session, is likely to be his party’s the 2023 legislative session and con- nominee for a full two-year term as Republicans tinue our work to support a brighter presiding officer. future for every community in our The speaker is chosen by the state.” full House, but the majority party’s independent Sixteen of the 30 Senate seats were choice usually prevails. up for election on Tuesday, one for a The House had 25 new members two-year term in a redrawn District 18, which is in 1999 after Oregon’s term limits kicked in, and now entirely within Washington County. Dem- 24 new members in 2001. Those totals exclude ocratic Rep. Wlnsvey Campos of Aloha was two members with prior legislative service in 1999, elected; she will be up again in 2024 for a full and one in 2001. The Supreme Court tossed out term. term limits in 2002. One other note: Five Vietnam- Ten Democratic incumbents appear headed ese Americans will serve in the House, the largest for re-election, plus Aaron Woods of Wilsonville, group of Asian Americans ever in the Oregon Leg- who won the redrawn District 13 seat. islature. (Four others have served in Oregon his- Three Republicans will move from the House tory, but not at the same time.) All are Democrats. to open seats in the Senate: Daniel Bonham of Rep. Khanh Pham of Portland was elected to a The Dalles, succeeding Republican Chuck Thom- second term in District 45. She will be joined by sen of Hood River; Cedric Hayden of Fall Creek, Hai Pham of Hillsboro, a pediatric dentist, in Dis- succeeding Democrat Lee Beyer of Springfield; trict 36; Daniel Nguyen of Lake Oswego, a restau- and Suzanne Weber of Tillamook, succeeding rant owner, in District 38; Thuy Tran of Portland, Democratic appointee Rachel Armitage of War- an optometrist, in District 45; and Hoa Nguyen of ren in the seat that Democrat Betsy Johnson of Portland, an attendance coach for Portland Pub- Scappoose vacated in her losing nonaffiliated bid lic Schools, in District 48. Republicans were in the for governor. majority most recently in 2006. They managed Sen. Kim Thatcher of Keizer lost her District 13 to force a first-ever 30-30 tie with Democrats af- seat in redistricting, but appeared to be winning ter the 2010 election, but Republicans lost — and her bid for the open District 11 seat vacated by Democrats gained — four seats in 2012, which Democrat Peter Courtney of Salem, the longest enabled Democratic leader Tina Kotek to become serving legislator at 38 years and Senate president speaker. Control of Oregon Senate 16 13 1 Oregon set to collect contributions for paid leave benefits BY PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau Oregon, after years of prepara- tion, is set to start collecting contri- butions from businesses and em- ployees for a new state program of paid family and medical leave. Contributions are scheduled to start Jan. 1. Benefits are scheduled to be paid starting Sept. 3, 2023. “We want to get the word out about this vital safety net for work- ing people in Oregon,” said Karen Madden Humelbaugh, director of Paid Leave Oregon for the Employ- ment Department. The initial contributions for 2023 are capped at 1% of wages. For em- ployees, their share is six tenths, or 60%; for employers of 25 or more, their share is four tenths, or 40%. Smaller employers are not required to contribute, though their employ- ees will have to, and employees are covered. Tribes, self-employed workers and independent contractors also can opt into the program. Employers that already offer plans with equivalent benefits can be ex- cused from the program. So far, 31 law in 1991, two years ahead of the plans have been submitted, and the federal law. But its requirement for Employment Department has ap- 12 weeks of leave is unpaid. proved six. Humel- Humelbaugh said “It has one of the baugh said others are that unlike definitions in the process, and the in other states, Ore- most inclusive agency has set 30 days gon’s program covers definitions of family survivors of sexual as the turnaround point for a decision. domestic vio- in the country. Family assault, Benefits under the lence, harassment and Oregon program are could be a neighbor, a stalking. (Protections set at a maximum of them were added friend or someone in for $1,215 per week for to the family-leave law 12 weeks during a sin- starting in 2014.) our close circle.” gle year. The contri- It also allows for — Karen Madden butions go into a trust medical leave for Humelbaugh, director fund for benefits, workers, care of a of Paid Leave Oregon much like employer family member with for the Employment payroll taxes go into a a serious illness or in- Department trust fund for unem- jury, or the addition of ployment benefits. a new child through According to the birth, adoption or fos- National Conference of State Leg- ter placement. islatures, Oregon is one of 11 states “It has one of the most inclusive and Washington, D.C., with such definitions of family in the country,” programs. Oregon is among four she said. “Family could be a neigh- states that have not yet started them. bor, a friend or someone in our close California and Washington already circle.” have done so. Workers who choose to take leave Oregon approved a family-leave for at least 90 days will have their Local entertainment news jobs protected. President Joe Biden proposed a paid leave program under federal law with an initial benefit of $4,000 per month over 12 weeks, slightly less generous than Oregon’s pro- gram. But Congress did not pass it. It is unclear yet what happens to state programs if a federal benefit is authorized in the future. The Oregon Legislature extended the deadlines slightly in 2021 legis- lation. Employers will use the Oregon Employment Department’s new computer system, Frances Online, to file reports on employer and em- ployee contributions to the paid leave fund. It is the same system that employers starting using on Sept. 6 to file payroll reports, the basis for the taxes that employers pay into the state unemployment benefits trust fund. “That is part of the same portal. So we are ready for the contribu- tions,” Humelbaugh said. “We will be using that modernized system. Everything seems to be in line to meet that deadline.” Weekly inside your newspaper Gwin’s home was the first to be deemed a “chronic neighborhood nuisance” under a 2019 revision to the city’s property maintenance or- dinance. Brent Kerns, Baker County Justice of the Peace, made the chronic nuisance judgment on Jan. 11, 2022. Gwin appealed that decision, but the appeal was dismissed July 19. Although the city paid to remove trash and other debris from outside Gwin’s home four times from 2017-21, the recurring violations of the city’s property maintenance ordinance, cul- minating with the chronic nuisance designa- tion, are not the reason Gwin’s home was torn down, said Dawn Kitzmiller, the city’s building official. The structure was taken down because she deemed that it had multiple structural prob- lems that clearly made it a dangerous building, Kitzmiller said. The 950-square-foot home, built in 1900, has a market value of $3,740, according to the Baker County Assessor’s Office, which last ap- praised the property in 2019. The lot, which covers almost 5,000 square feet, has a market value of $31,330, according to the Assessor’s Office. “At some point that structure would have failed,” Kitzmiller said in August. “It was in ter- rible shape.” Kitzmiller said she met with Gwin soon after she inspected his home on April 7, 2022, and told him she would be sending an official letter declaring the home unsafe to occupy. She gave him until mid May to submit a plan for either repairing the house — which Kitz- miller said she didn’t think was feasible given the likely cost — or dismantling it. “I’m sorry for Mr. Gwin, but he’s been given so many chances,” Kitzmiller said. In an email to the Herald, Gwin said he had “requested to purchase the necessary permits to demolish the house myself” but that city offi- cials didn’t give him a deadline. Gwin also contends that a shed on his prop- erty was not supposed to be torn down, but it was, along with the house. Gwin also wrote in his email that the city took a trailer he owns and that was parked on the street, and that he has not recovered per- sonal documents, photo albums and other items that were inside the trailer. Gwin pointed out that a 2019 state law re- quires a 72-hour notice before a city or other government agency removes personal items from public property. Gwin said the city also took his utility trailer, which was also parked on the street. He said his cellphone was inside the trailer, and because he lost his phone he wasn’t able to attend a hearing with the Social Security Administration related to his application for disability. “I have no money, am homeless, have mental impairments that make employment difficult to sustain,” Gwin wrote in an email to the Her- ald. “I don’t have the means to acquire phone service so I don’t have a telephone number and can not get another hearing for disability con- sideration without one.” Baker City Police Chief Ty Duby said he be- lieves the city has been “more than fair with Lucas.” Duby said if anything, the city was more le- nient than it could have been, including repeat- edly paying to remove items from Gwin’s prop- erty before declaring his home as dangerous. “He just never came into compliance” with the city’s property maintenance ordinance, Duby said. “At some point it’s not fair to the community.” Gwin acknowledged that he accumulated a lot of material on his property. “I’m messy, I’ve never denied this fact, I’ve al- ways plead guilty to my property maintenance issues,” he wrote. “But I am a good human, I am a tax paying citizen and a honest man.” Gwin said he tried to clean up his property multiple times after being cited by the city, but he claims the city paid a contractor to remove mate- rial because he “wasn’t working fast enough.” “Because I am slow I am not allowed to have the same rights as someone who can function at a standard pace,” he said. “My inability to function at normal mental capacity does not exclude me the right to be afforded the same rights as those given to any person thought to be of greater mental capacity.” Gwin said that the during the five-year pe- riod when the city cited him several times for violating the property maintenance ordinance, he had tried to make improvements to his home and property. At one point, he wrote, he was “renovating my bathroom as the plumbing had been in dis- repair for years and the floor needed replacing due to the water damage. I was working full time and I was only able to visit the dump on the weekends. I also had removed all the carpet from my home and had it rolled up preparing to dispose of it the following weekend.” Gwin wrote that prior to his first citation he had “several thousands of dollars of barn wood I had just aquired in the days just prior and was processing systematically at a rapid pace, this barnwood I was using as a temporary bar- rier that week to block the publics view of the carpeting and the remains of the bathroom flooring, the floor joists, and the old plumbing as I went ahead and replaced the entire houses plumbing in the process.” Gwin wrote that later “I lost my job do to my depleting mental state and closed myself off from human contact replacing the people in my life with as many material possessions as I could acquire, I piled them around me to protect me from the world that left me cold and scared.” Gwin contends he was “singled out” by the city for his property maintenance violations. “The violations of maintenance are those of the past,” he wrote. “I need help being heard for the trespasses on my freedoms and my liberty and the desecration of my rights. I need these things brought to light that everyone might see them.”