‘‘The difference now is, people are really taking our opinions
seriously. We feel like our voice matters,’’ says Ackerman,
chief lobbyist for the Oregon League of Conservation Voters.
Paulette Pyle, a spokeswoman for a pesticide industry group known as
Oregonians for Food and Shelter, knows her side is on the outs with
the new Democratic majority in the House after years of enjoying
especially close ties with Minnis.
‘‘We don’t have a lot of stuff that we’re going to be
putting into the hopper. We will probably be playing defense this
year,’’ Pyle says.
Senate Republican Leader Ted Ferrioli says even though Democrats
regained control of the House in November
and retained control of the Senate, they shouldn’t take that as a
mandate from the voters to approve everything on the
environmentalists’ ‘‘aggressive’’ agenda.
Environmental
warfare
‘‘I hope and pray we do not see environmental warfare against
Oregon’s small farms and businesses,’’ the John Day lawmaker
said. ‘‘Oregonians want balance. People should try to be
rational.’’
With the Legislature now controlled by his party, Democratic Gov.
Ted Kulongoski has included in his 2007-09 budget money for improved
water and air quality monitoring and enforcement. His proposal
places special emphasis on testing for toxins that enter the
Willamette River and other waterways.
Kulongoski made several references to the environment in his
inaugural speech on the opening day of the Legislature’s 2007
session. He said Oregonians have a new opportunity to regain
‘‘our reputation as a people who honor our natural
environment.’’
Kulongoski spokeswoman Anna Richter Taylor says that in addition to
his budget priorities, the governor is supporting other environmental
initiatives, such as updating Oregon’s bottle deposit law to
encourage recycling of a greater number of beverage containers.
‘‘This is a very promising legislative session,’’ Richter
Taylor said. ‘‘For the first time in a long time, there is an
opportunity to advance some very important environmental
policies.’’
As the new speaker of the House, Merkley believes there is a lot of
public support for ‘‘making our state as clean as we possibly
can’’ and that House Democrats will work hard for such things as
an updated bottle bill, a program to recycle old computers and a
cleanup of the Willamette. Under the previous Republican-controlled
House, Merkley said, the governor’s proposal to give the state
Department of Environmental Quality more resources to monitor the
Willamette River ‘‘would have been dead on arrival.’’
‘‘The discussion then would have been about cutting the DEQ’s
staff in half,’’ the Portland Democrat said.
Field burning debate
Some of the pending bills are sure to spark vigorous debate, such as
the one to ban field burning, which some
Willamette Valley grass seed farmers use as a method to clear
stubble and kill weeds, and which sends huge pillars of smoke into
the air each summer.
The state receives hundreds of complaints about the practice each
year from people, especially those suffering from asthma, despite
reductions in the annual acreage burned from 320,000 acres in the
1970s to about 50,000 acres in recent years.
The grass seed industry says field burning accounts for only a tiny
fraction of the state’s overall air pollution problem, and that a
field burning ban would be an undue hardship on many grass seed
growers, who together comprise a $500 million a year industry for
Oregon.
Rep. Paul Holvey, a Eugene Democrat who is sponsoring the field
burning ban, says he doesn’t know if there’s enough support to
pass the bill but he expects it to at least get a full public
hearing. Such a bill likely wouldn’t have seen the light of day in
previous sessions run by the Republicans, Holvey said.
‘‘That is a change,’’ he said. ‘‘We will be able to at
least have a discussion in a public venue about this issue.’’