
Lauren Dake
Oregon Public BroadcastingLauren Dake is a JPR content partner from Oregon Public Broadcasting. Before OPB, Lauren spent nearly a decade working as a print reporter. She鈥檚 covered politics and rural issues in Oregon and Washington.
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A coalition of powerful business and political leaders are moving ahead with plans to 鈥渇ix鈥 Measure 110, the voter-approved drug decriminalization effort.
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Members of one of Oregon鈥檚 largest labor unions successfully gathered enough signatures to force a recall vote of one of the state鈥檚 most labor-friendly lawmakers 鈥 Rep. Paul Holvey, a Democrat from Eugene.
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The Oregon state agency charged with monitoring discrimination in workplaces across the state was itself a hostile work environment for the Black woman who was hired to head the civil rights division of the Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industries. A Multnomah County Circuit Court jury awarded Carol Johnson $1.7 million dollars on Monday, supporting her claim she faced a hostile workplace and race discrimination.
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Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek has approved spending billions of dollars to help ease the deepening housing crisis in the state. She also promised Thursday to provide more certainty for renters and cut red tape for developers.
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Oregon has spent more than $25 million housing 462 kids in foster care in hotels after the state promised to stop the practice as part of a legal settlement in 2018.
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Over the course of eight frantic days, the House and Senate rushed to pass hundreds of bills, most with little or no discussion. The tumult left some lawmakers with little positive to say when asked how they鈥檇 describe the session.
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Oregon state lawmakers returned to Salem on Tuesday and worked at frenzied speed to make their way through a pile of policy and budget bills that had piled up during the six-week legislative walkout. One of the big-ticket items on the list: A $1 billion commitment to fund Oregon鈥檚 share of the mega-project to replace the Interstate 5 bridge over the Columbia River connecting Portland and Vancouver.
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Hundreds of bills are set to perish if the impasse continues; measures to create more affordable housing, to help at-risk students, bills aimed at combating climate change and measures addressing the public-defender crisis.
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On Thursday, Senate Democrats did not say how they plan to bill their colleagues, what would happen if Republicans don鈥檛 pay nor where the money would go.
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With both parties unwilling to budge on a bill tackling abortion and transgender care, the 2023 session appears stuck.
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Oregon Senate Minority Leader Tim Knopp worked hard to get Republicans elected. Why is he leading them down a path that could end their careers?
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State election officials are fining the Democratic Party of Oregon a late filing fee of $15,000 after the party changed the donor of a hefty campaign check. The fine concludes the investigation into the state Democratic party, but officials are still looking into other issues surrounding the large campaign check.