| I’m a strong advocate for fiscal accountability, and I’ve seen the work done to already tighten state spending. As one example, I point to my efforts to cut fifty positions and $100 million from the ODOT budget before the special session to approve a transportation plan.
That brings us to the November challenge.
Each agency that relies on income tax money, corporate taxes, or lottery funds has been asked to plan for at least a 5% reduction. (Now is a good time to review my late October newsletter on the state budget.) That is a tedious, time-consuming, and heartwrenching process. We spent six months during the 2025 long session building that budget with public hearings, agency reviews, and lots of negotiation. Now we have to come back in the 2026 short session and do it all over in just six weeks.
There are seven budget committees responsible for different subject areas. Senator Jeff Golden (Ashland) and I co-chair the budget committee on Transportation and Economic Development. We manage eleven agencies that include Housing, Veterans Affairs, Business Development, Consumer and Business Services, Employment, Transportation, and the Bureau of Labor and Industry.
Those agencies have already come forward with proposed reductions. Examples include DMV services, helping rural veterans get to medical appointments, art grants, local infrastructure projects, long-term rental assistance, senior and disabled housing development, elderly rental assistance, foreclosure avoidance counseling, funding for County Veteran Service Officers, the Firefighter Apprenticeship program, or investigation of wage theft or employment discrimination.
I often share the example from the last session when we had to choose between funding emergency shelters or helping people who were facing eviction from their homes. And as hard as these choices are, I’m quietly grateful that I’m not responsible for cutting budgets governing schools, health care, or mental health support. As you can see, these are real programs that affect real people. If they don’t affect you, they certainly affect your community. |