Josephine County resident Jonathan Knapp is trying to collect over 4,000 signatures to put a change to his county鈥檚 charter on the ballot.
A previous effort, which Knapp opposed, failed in May to update the county鈥檚 guiding document. That measure would have increased the number of commissioners while reducing their pay, created newly-designed districts for candidates and created a new county manager position. The proposal also sought to require all elected offices to be nonpartisan.
Knapp鈥檚 proposal includes a laundry list of changes with a focus on local control.
One thing his measure would do is make elected positions partisan.
鈥淲e're asking that any candidate running for office indicate what party they are a member of as a matter of transparency,鈥 said Knapp.
Although the county has historically leaned right, non-affiliated voters are the . Under Oregon law, making offices partisan would exclude those voters from participating in primary elections.
The new charter would require commissioner candidates to have lived in the county for at least two years and ban officials from holding more than one elected office. It would also prohibit a county sales tax, ranked-choice voting and vaccine requirements for employment or education.
鈥淲e added a section on 鈥榖ody autonomy鈥 which basically gives parents the rights over their children and citizens of Josephine County the right to refuse vaccination,鈥 said Knapp.
Josephine is one of nine 鈥渉ome rule鈥 counties in the state, which allows voters to change their government鈥檚 charters. Since 1981, Josephine County has .
Knapp said his measure would also change Josephine County鈥檚 status from 鈥渁n agency of the state鈥 to a 鈥渂ody politic.鈥 He said that could give the county more local determination over policies passed in Salem. He explained that designation would have allowed the county to not comply with state Measure 110 which decriminalized hard drugs (that measure was later repealed).
However, Chad Jacobs, a professor of local government law at Lewis and Clark Law School, said the county would still be required to follow statewide measures like Measure 110.
鈥淭he way that this local home rule authority has been interpreted by the courts is that the state can still preempt the counties from doing certain things, even if there's language in their charter that says otherwise,鈥 said Jacobs.
Knapp said he was a close observer of Josephine County鈥檚 recent commission which formed to review their charter and had decided against putting his measure on the May primary ballot so as not to confuse voters with a competing proposal. He said that he is a member of the Republican Party but that no group was behind the proposed charter update.