Tuesday, February 14

Sam Adams is on Yelp

News The other day I noticed a curious tweet from our venerable mayor's Twitter account:Yes, Sam is tweet... More

Feb 13, 2012 01:20 pm by RUTH BROWN  | Comments 1
 

Doctor Groups Flex Muscle In Capitol: $2.3 Million in Campaign Cash to Influence Health-Care Reform

News The State Capitol has been abuzz the last couple of days because of a hot list (PDF) circulating in ... More

Feb 10, 2012 06:00 pm by NIGEL JAQUISS  | Comments 4
 

Nonsense Knows No State Boundary: Washington Legislators Get Bogus Job Claims on CRC

News Up north of here, Washington legislators in Olympia are debating whether or not they should authoriz... More

Feb 10, 2012 09:09 am  | Comments 1
 

Occupy Arrestees Win Their Right to Full Trials—Even Though They May Not Need It

News The estimated 160 people arrested during Occupy Portland protests in the past five months have won t... More

Feb 9, 2012 01:24 pm by HANNAH HOFFMAN  | Comments 4
 
 
 
Home · Articles · News · Murmurs · We Hope The OEA Realizes This Column Is Not A Bill Sizemore Measure
October 29th, 2008 WW Editorial Staff | Murmurs
 

We Hope The OEA Realizes This Column Is Not A Bill Sizemore Measure

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Alley at Candidates Gone Wild
IMAGE: Jennifer Newsted

Allen Alley, the Republican candidate for state treasurer, told KPOJ-AM last week in an interview that he hasn’t said whom he’s supporting for president. Curious that, given that Alley’s Facebook page lists him as a member of “McCain – Palin 2008: Friendraising to a November Landslide!!” Alley didn’t return messages seeking an explanation.

It’s come to this on Senate Bill 10, the sweeping ethics-reform bill passed last year by the Legislature: Oregon AG Hardy Myers is suing Marion County judges in order to make one of those judges comply with a public records request for info that SB 10 said should be public—specifically the names of public officials’ family members. As reported Oct. 15 in Murmurs, judges in six counties decreed earlier this year that a portion of the new law didn’t apply to them. But on Oct. 27, Myers sued Marion County Presiding Judge Jamese Rhoades on behalf of the state ethics commission. “The legislative direction...is unambiguous and unequivocal: SEIs [Statements of Economic Interest], and all the information that they contain, are to be disclosed to the public,” the lawsuit says.

Meet the new boss. The race to replace Sgt. Robert King as head of the city’s powerful 900-member police union ended in a blowout victory for Southeast Precinct Sgt. Scott Westerman. He avoided a runoff by winning 53.7 percent of the vote Oct. 24 against four other contenders. Westerman, considered a middle-of-the-road candidate on the anger scale at a time when cops are seething about work conditions (see “Copping the Vote,” WW, Oct. 22, 2008), takes office Nov. 1.

 

Veronica Rodriguez gets a new day in court Nov. 4 when the state Supreme Court hears oral arguments in her case. The former youth counselor was found guilty in 2005 of first-degree sex abuse for holding the back of a 13-year-old boy’s head against her clothed chest (see “A Brush with Measure 11,” WW, Feb. 20, 2008). New in the 29-year-old Rodriguez’s corner are the Oregon Education Association, the Boys & Girls Club of Portland and the Oregon Criminal Defense Lawyers Association. Each filed briefs on her behalf as she fights serving the final five years of a mandatory minimum sentence of six years and three months.

More tough news for Oregon’s GOP: As first reported this week on WWire, former U.S. Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-Ore.) is moving to California. Hatfield, 86, is leaving his home in Mary’s Woods retirement community in Lake Oswego for a condo in Palm Desert, Calif. Now in ailing health and in a wheelchair, Hatfield—who was Oregon’s governor before serving 30 years in the U.S. Senate—has round-the-clock care.

 
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10.29.2008 at 09:51 Reply
God bless Mark Hatfield. We ALL owe him our support and thanks for HIS support of all of us in public service.

 

 
 

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