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Locals prepare for 2007 session
Education, OSP funding among the
priorities
By Ty Beaver, H&N Staff Writer
As the Nov. 7 general election
nears, area educators, law enforcement
officials, government officials and
farmers are gearing up for the 2007
Legislative session, planning ways to
get their needs and priorities to the
ears of lawmakers.
Their priorities include:
Education
Reducing class sizes:
The state ranks second for the highest
number of students per classroom in the
nation, said Chip Terhune of the Oregon
Education Association.
Linda Paddock, UNISERVE
consultant for Klamath and Lake
counties, said class size is an issue
locally as well, and is a priority of
educators.
More vocational training in
schools: OEA wants to see the return of
high school vocational programs. Many
Oregon students may not go to college,
but want and need skills for the
workforce, Terhune said.
Paddock said the Klamath Falls
City Schools has discussed increasing
the district’s vocational training
options.
Law enforcement
More funding for the Oregon
State Police, community corrections and
other public safety issues:
The Oregon Sheriff’s Association and the
Klamath Board of County Commissioners
are concerned about the lack of funding
and ongoing cuts in the number of Oregon
State Police troopers. In Klamath Falls,
10 troopers patrol county highways, and
there hasn’t been 24-hour coverage since
1999. In 1993, the county had 26
troopers, but budget cuts over the years
dwindled that number to the current
level.
The sheriff’s association also
examines any legislation that affects
public safety and watches funding levels
for community corrections.
Tim Evinger, Klamath County
sheriff, also wants the 2007 state
Legislature to provide more funding for
public safety.
The state police have
inadequate funding and can’t keep enough
troopers on the road, requiring the
sheriff’s departments to pick up the
slack, he said, adding, “Public safety
has been bleeding itself dry.”
Farming
Water rights and natural
resources: Guaranteeing water rights of
landowners, especially in the Klamath
Basin, is a goal of the Klamath County
Board of Commissioners and the Oregon
Farm Bureau.
The water supply is a valuable
commodity for the agricultural community
and needs to be protected, said Tracey
Liskey, first vicepresident of the
Oregon Farm Bureau. The county
commissioners echoed that sentiment.
“I think they could do a lot
more there,” said commissioner Al
Switzer of the Legislature’s
involvement.
Commission chairman Bill Brown
said he wants to see more leadership
from the state in working with federal
agencies on natural resources.
Measure 37: The controversial
land-use law has caused problems
throughout the state for county
governments and landowners. Concerns
about its affect on
farmland have caught the attention of
the Oregon Farm Bureau, Liskey said,
particularly for its ability to severely
limit the amount of arable land in the
state.
All three county commissioners
said they also want the 2007 state
Legislature to address unclear portions
of the law to make it easier for county
governments to handle claims.
Minimum wage:
Liskey said the Oregon Farm Bureau is
opposed to raising the state’s minimum
wage. Oregon farmers already pay above
the current rate and an increase could
make it more difficult for farmers to
stay in business.
“It puts us in an unfair
marketplace,” he said.
Labor and immigration:
Agriculture needs the labor a migrant
workforce provides, Liskey said, but he
acknowledged such labor needs to be
legal. The state should work with the
federal government to help create a
program to solve the problem, he added.
“We need a workforce that can
come and go and pay taxes like it
should,”
Liskey said.
Brown said he wants the
Legislature to address the draining of
social services that illegal immigrants
create.
Government
State budget: Several measures
on the Nov. 7 ballot could reduce the
state’s budget by millions of dollars if
approved by voters, and various interest
groups are concerned about possible
funding cuts.
Switzer said he’d like to see
how the Legislature handles reduced
funding while maintaining or improving
the services it provides to Oregonians.
The state also needs to find ways to
help schools and roads in counties that
may not receive federal timber payments
in the future.
Evinger said the state can’t
afford to lose anymore of its budget if
it expects to maintain current services.
Education could suffer greatly
if Measure 48, known as the Taxpayers
Bill of Rights, is approved, Paddock
said. Local schools could lose 25
percent of their state funding if the
measure is passed.
“It will devastate education,”
she said.
Drug and alcohol prevention:
Commissioner Elliott would like to see
the state distribute funding for drug
and alcohol services more equitably
throughout the state, basing it on the
severity of the problem in an area
instead of on population density.
Trade licensing: Elliott said
an issue facing rural counties with
numerous construction projects is a
shortage of licensed skilled workers.
Relaxing the prerequisites to
license workers such as electricians or
creating equivalency standards with
other states is one thing the
Legislature could do to keep new
Oregonians employed and the construction
business moving, he said.
Tax reform: Reg LeQuieu,
county assessor, said he would like the
next state Legislature to make it less
costly for counties to collect taxes for
districts within their jurisdiction.
Perhaps allowing counties to keep 1
percent of all collected property tax
for each district would allow counties
to perform the task without detriment,
he said.