Senator
Doug Whitsett
R-
Klamath Falls, District 28 April 8, 2011
Oregon,
perennial national leader in
unemployment, poverty, hunger,
homelessness and despair.
I believe that a direct correlation
exists between Oregon’s oppressive
regulatory environment and the sad fact
that our state is a perennial national
leader in unemployment, poverty, hunger,
homelessness and despair.
Oregon per capita personal annual
income ranking is 32nd in the nation and
is the lowest since 1929. It now stands
$3,501 below the national average of
$39,626. The average Oregonian is
taking home nearly $300 per month or
9% less than the average American.
Yet more troubling is the fact that the
national growth in per capita income is
increasing almost twice as fast as
Oregon’s per capita income. This
downward spiraling income is in large
part due to Oregon’s shift away from a
resource-based manufacturing economy
where employees were able to make true
family wage earnings to a more
service-based economy with lower paying
jobs.
Nearly 750,000 Oregonians now depend on
food stamps. That means that nearly one
in five Oregonians are using food stamps
to feed their families. The number of
people depending on that federal subsidy
has increased 13% since December 2009.
Oregon’s workforce unemployment has
been higher than 10% during most of the
Great Recession that began in 2007. In
fact, Oregon has a long history of
leading the national average up in
unemployment rates as well as following
the national average down.
Unfortunately, Oregon’s unemployment
rates have been at, or very near the top
of the national unemployment rates for
more than a decade.
Well more than half of Oregon’s
unemployed workers today have not been
able to find work for more than six
months. According to the Oregon
Department of Employment, the U6
unemployment rate includes all eligible
workers that do not have a job or that
are employed less than full time for
economic reasons. That U6 rate has
exceeded 20% in Oregon for much of the
recession period and currently exceeds
30% in many rural counties. Combined
state and federal unemployment benefits
have been extended to more than three
years. While these benefits are a
lifeline for thousands of unemployed
Oregonians, they are not sustainable.
The only solution to unemployment is job
creation.
Oregon Administrative Rules are created
by Oregon agencies in order to refine
and enforce statutes created by the
Legislature. The rules have virtually
the same enforcement consequences as
state laws. Those rules are constantly
being created and altered by the state
agencies
Oregon currently has 180 state
agencies. Those agencies enforce more
than 11,000 agency rules. More than
9,500 of those rules are edited by the
agencies each year. I believe that our
people and our business communities are
being smothered by those agency rules
that are constantly being created and
altered.
About eight out of ten new jobs are
created by small businesses. Those
business owners have little hope of
staying current with that changing body
of rules and regulations. Jobs are not
being created, or are being lost,
because small and mid-sized businesses
are simply unable to cope with the maze
of constantly changing administrative
rules.
This untenable situation is not likely
to be resolved until our political
leaders recognize that their ongoing
actions are a major cause of the
problem.
We must be able to strike a balance
between the passion for preserving
pristine environmental conditions and
the ability to sustain family wage jobs.
The long held belief that businesses
relocate to Oregon to enjoy the
environmental benefits simply has not
materialized. We have very few more jobs
today than we did ten years ago in spite
of rapid population growth.
Moreover, our unique one-in-the-nation
centralized land use planning scheme
must be altered to better allow owners
to use their property for profitable
endeavors. A vast amount of capital is
sequestered in real estate that cannot
be used for its highest economic benefit
solely because of the state’s land use
regulations.
We must find common ground between
appropriate consumer protection and the
ability to sustain profitable
businesses. More than half of Oregon’s
180 state agencies have some regulatory
function. More than twenty agencies,
boards and commissions exist for the
sole purpose of regulating Oregon
commerce. For instance, Oregon’s
Department of Consumer and Business
Services has grown into a $400 million
enterprise with more than 900 employees.
The agency is funded almost entirely by
fees and charges levied on the
businesses that they regulate. The fees
are burdensome to the business
community. More important, the
regulations have evolved into a crushing
negative economic force.
We must establish limits on tort
liability so that businesses can
function without oppressive liability
insurance costs. Moreover, we must
create a fair liability environment
where businesses are able to make
business decisions that are not dictated
by the fear of catastrophic tort losses.
Many good bills have been introduced in
this Legislature that would address each
of these important issues. To date
virtually none have been enacted into
law. We have spent a great deal of time
debating a plethora of measures that
address the specific concerns of well
funded interest groups, many of which
will result in job killing outcomes. We
have spent virtually no time debating
legislation dealing with job creation.
With each passing legislative day it
appears less likely that the leadership
will allow bills that do address these
important issues to be brought to the
floor for a vote.
In my opinion, this legislature is well
on its way to completing another
legislative session without addressing
the most important needs of Oregon
citizens.
Please remember if we do not stand up
for rural Oregon, no one will.
Best,
Doug
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