Legislative Report: Your Voice is Needed as Session Heads into Final Stretch

With the short session of the Oregon State Legislature heading into the home stretch—it's scheduled to conclude on Monday, March 9—legislation is being pushed through committees and lobbied with abandon, but there's still time use your voice to speak up for Oregon's agricultural lands.

Hillsboro Supersiting of Industrial Land (SB 1586): This bill is a bald-faced land grab of nearly 1,800 acres of prime agricultural land being pushed by developers intent on cashing in on an expansion of the Urban Growth Boundary (UGB). This is the sixth attempt by developers to expand the boundary and is being done outside the established expansion process, and has moved forward without any of the required public involvement. For perspectife, in 2014 Hillsboro received over 1,000 acres of industrial land, which was supposed to be an ample 50-year supply, but the city burned through it in less than a decade with data center development and other commercial, recreation, and retail land uses. Additionally, the bill extends tax breaks for these same corporate interests—companies that can easily afford to pay their fair share.

Thus far almost 800 individuals and organizations have submitted testimony, with nearly 90 percent in opposition to the bill; there have been so many people signed up to speak at the hearings that they have had to extend the number of sessions. But more is needed.

TAKE ACTION:

  • Submit written testimony by Wednesday (2/25) at 8 am. You can copy and paste the text above into the form or edit it, or compose a letter and attach it as a PDF.
  • Attend the Washington County Commission meeting on Tuesday (2/24) at 6:30 pm at 155 N. First Ave., Suite 300, Hillsboro, OR, or sign up to testify via Zoom Link. by 4:30 pm on Tuesday, 2/24.

Read Part One of farmer Aaron Nichols of Stoneboat Farm's essay on the pressure developers are putting on Oregon's diminishing agricultural lands.


Is this the future we want for Oregon farms?

Allowing "farm stores" as a nonfarm use on EFU land (HB 4153): This bill requires counties to allow 5,000 to 10,000-square-foot “farm stores,” offering shopping, dining, alcoholic beverage service and sales, and ongoing big events such as concerts and weddings in exclusive farm use (EFU) zones.

Opposed by small farm advocates like Friend of Family Farmers and 1,000 Friends of Oregon, among others, it would allow nonfarm retail sales, food and beverage service and unlimited events on agricultural land without safeguards to ensure that agriculture remains the primary use of the property. Without these safeguards, commercial entities could easily take advantage of lower tax assessments and buy up cheap farm land to develop into event venues and retail outlets, without ever intending to meaningfully farm the land in the first place.

Although nearly 1,600 pieces of testimony were submitted with more than 70 percent opposing the bill, it has still gone forward. Your voice is critical to defeating this anti-small farm bill.

TAKE ACTION: Sign this letter telling your legislator why you oppose this measure.


Hunger impacts 1 in 6 children in Oregon.

Expanding school meals for all (SB 1581). This bill requires Oregon school districts to offer lunch and breakfast to all students at no charge, regardless of income. So far this bill has moved forward in the Joint Ways and Means Committee with a "do pass with amendments" recommendation, which is encouraging.

TAKE ACTION: Sign this letter and help this bill make it over the finish line!

Legislative Report: Short but Critical 2026 Legislative Session Convenes

Convening on Groundhog Day could be taken as an ominous portent to the beginning of the short 2026 session of the Oregon Legislature. Legislators have just 35 days to figure out how to close a $297 million gap in the Oregon Department of Transportation Budget brought on by the Trump administration's devastating 2025 budget bill that reduced revenues—especially to Democrat-controlled states—and increased costs. The Democrats, who control both houses of the Oregon legislature, have also vowed to craft a reponse to Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement agenda.

Though the transportation funding bill is going to take up much of the oxygen in the legislature this year, there are issues around our food system that you can take action on.

Farm Store Bill (HB 4153): This bill seeks to limit who can operate a farmstand based on acreage and sales, giving vast privileges to large operations while elbowing out beginning farmers and smaller-scale farms and producers. Friends of Family Farmers (FoFF), an advocacy organization for small and beginning farmers in Oregon, opposes this bill because it limits who is allowed to have a farm store for their operation and makes no specific protections for the simplest type of farm stand . Valley Flora Farm in Langlois posts on their website that, if passed as written, the bill would "close existing farm stands [of farmers] who are following the law right now but are too small to meet these [new] requirements" and implies that "folks with an honor system stand at the end of their driveway supplied with garden overflow (zucchinis in August, a couple pints of berries, or a sign saying 'eggs $6') would be outlawed by this approach."

As background, this bill is a result of Governor Tina Kotek's "pausing" the work of a Rulemaking Advisory Committee (RAC) that had become a target of the Oregon Property Owners Association (OPOA), which describes its mission as "protect[ing] the right of private property owners to make use of their property." The OPOA launched a disinformation campaign featuring a farm couple wailing that "if you enjoy u-pick, if you enjoy farm-to-table dinners, if you enjoy pumpkin patches, if your kids enjoy a hayride or cow train, these are the kind of things that we and other farms are going to lose"—none of which was true.

Once the viral video campaign had done its job and pressured state officials to derail the work of the committee, the OPOA admitted they were behind this new legislation, stating on their website "since we announced HB 4153…" and listing all the reasons that it's a great leap forward for the state's agricultural sector.

FoFF sums it up nicely: 

  • What this bill makes legal as a farm store: 100-acre Exclusive Farm Use property with 45 acres of hay field and 55 acres of outdoor concert venue where events can be held on an unlimited basis with no impact test to the farms around it or a need to get an agritourism permit.
  • What this bill makes illegal for a farm store: 10-acre property where 5 acres is under production and the farm makes $4,000 per year in farm income to supplement their income and occasionally teaches a class on preserving their farm product.
  • This bill makes farm stores easier and more permissive for large property owners while penalizing small land holders for having less to work with. Even if you support the 100-acre farmer example above, should it come at the expense of the 10-acre farmer example?

TAKE ACTION:


Disproportionate cuts to OSU Statewides & Organic Agriculture Program: Due to a budget shortfall of $63 million, the legislature is proposing a one percent to five percent cut to most agencies, but the OSU Statewides Programming, which includes the Organic Agriculture Program, is facing a 7.1 percent cut. Advocates, while acknowledging the need to trim budgets, are asking the legislature to "rightsize" the cuts to the program to match those being asked of other agencies. The Organic Agriculture Program at OSU now has six extension specialists across cropping systems working throughout the state, working to enhance the viability of Oregon agriculture through improved soil health, cover crop adoption, ecological pest management, locally adapted cultivars, farm viability, and transition to organic and other ecological methods.

TAKE ACTION:

Sign the letter asking the legislature not to disproportionately cut the OSU Statewides & Organic Agriculture Program.


Budget for Programs in the Immigrant Justice Package: The Trump administration and Republican congressional leaders are targeting immigrant communities. The Immigrant Justice Package provides the Oregon legislature with a critical opportunity to invest in proven solutions and support immigrant families now, including:

  • Immigration Legal Services ($5M): Deportation defense and legal help to keep families together
  • Children’s Stability Fund ($5M): Support for families when a caregiver is detained
  • Protect Healthier Oregon: Maintain health coverage regardless of immigration status
  • School Meals for All: Free breakfast and lunch for every student
  • Anti‑Hunger Investments: Emergency food benefits and funding for food banks
  • Support for bills to limit harmful immigration enforcement actions, protect personal data, prevent discrimination, and ensure transparency and accountability in law enforcement operations.

TAKE  ACTION: 

Call your state legislators and tell them you support the Immigrant Justice Package. Find your legislator by clicking here and typing your address into the search bar at the top of the page.


Photos: Farm stand at Shimanek Bridge Farm in Scio; Commonplace Farm from Oregon Organic Coalition; Farm workers from Community to Community.