76th Oregon Legislative Assembly

The 76th Oregon Legislative Assembly convened beginning on January 11, 2011, for the first of its two regular sessions. All 60 seats of the House of Representatives and 16 of the 30 state senate seats were up for election in 2010. The general election for those seats took place on November 2. The Democrats retained the majority in the senate, but lost six seats in the house, leading to an even split (30-30) between Democrats and Republicans. The governor of Oregon during the session was John Kitzhaber, a Democrat, who was elected to a third term in 2010 following an eight-year absence from public office.

76th Oregon Legislative Assembly
75th Legislative Assembly 77th Legislative Assembly
Overview
Legislative bodyOregon Legislative Assembly
JurisdictionOregon, United States
Meeting placeOregon State Capitol
Term2011–2012
Websitewww.leg.state.or.us
Oregon State Senate
Members30 Senators
Senate PresidentPeter Courtney
Majority LeaderDiane Rosenbaum
Minority LeaderTed Ferrioli
Party controlDemocratic
Oregon House of Representatives
Members60 Representatives
Co-SpeakerBruce Hanna
Co-SpeakerArnie Roblan
Party leadersK. Cameron (R) / T. Kotek (D)
Party controlsplit

The even split in the House of Representatives was addressed with the selection of two co-speakers, Democrat Arnie Roblan and Republican Bruce Hanna. The two were selected by Governing Magazine among its eight "Public Officials of the Year," and praised for "setting in motion a tenure that has been marked by rare bipartisan cooperation and two of the most productive legislative sessions in Oregon's history."[1][2]

The 76th was the first session in which the legislature met twice in regular session, following the 2010 passage of Ballot Measure 71, which instituted a second regular session for each two-year legislative term.

Senate members

Senate during the 76th assembly

The Oregon State Senate is composed of 16 Democrats and 14 Republicans. In the last election, the Democratic Party lost two seats: in District 20, Martha Schrader lost a close election to Alan Olsen and in District 26, Rick Metsger did not seek re-election and was replaced by Chuck Thomsen.

Senate President: Peter Courtney (D–11 Salem)
President Pro Tem: Ginny Burdick (D–18 Portland)
Majority Leader: Diane Rosenbaum (D–21 Portland)
Minority Leader: Ted Ferrioli (R–30 John Day)

DistrictHomeSenatorParty
1RoseburgJeff KruseRepublican
2Central PointJason AtkinsonRepublican
3AshlandAlan C. BatesDemocratic
4S. Lane/N. Douglas cos.Floyd ProzanskiDemocratic
5Coos BayJoanne VergerDemocratic
6SpringfieldLee BeyerDemocratic
7EugeneChris EdwardsDemocratic
8AlbanyFrank Morse[3][4]Republican
Betsy Close[5]Republican
9MolallaFred GirodRepublican
10SalemJackie WintersRepublican
11Peter CourtneyDemocratic
12McMinnvilleBrian BoquistRepublican
13HillsboroLarry GeorgeRepublican
14BeavertonMark HassDemocratic
15HillsboroBruce StarrRepublican
16ScappooseBetsy JohnsonDemocratic
17Multnomah CountySuzanne Bonamici[6][7]Democratic
Elizabeth Steiner Hayward[7]Democratic
18PortlandGinny BurdickDemocratic
19TualatinRichard DevlinDemocratic
20CanbyAlan OlsenRepublican
21PortlandDiane RosenbaumDemocratic
22Chip ShieldsDemocratic
23Jackie DingfelderDemocratic
24Rod MonroeDemocratic
25GreshamLaurie Monnes AndersonDemocratic
26Hood RiverChuck ThomsenRepublican
27TumaloChris TelferRepublican
28Klamath FallsDoug WhitsettRepublican
29PendletonDavid NelsonRepublican
30John DayTed FerrioliRepublican

House members

House of Representatives during the 76th assembly

The Oregon House of Representatives is split evenly between 30 Democrats and 30 Republicans and the parties share control of the chamber. Republicans gained six seats over the previous session.[8]

Co-Speaker: Bruce Hanna (R–7 Roseburg)
Co-Speaker: Arnie Roblan (D–9 Coos Bay)
Co-Speaker Pro Tempore: Tina Kotek (D–44 Portland)
Co-Speaker Pro Tempore: Andy Olson (R–15 Albany)
Republican Leader Representative: Kevin Cameron (Oregon politician) (R–19 Salem)
Democratic Leader Representative: Dave Hunt (D–40 Gladstone) (Jan. 11, 2011 – June 30, 2011), Tina Kotek (D–44 Portland) (June 30, 2011–present)[9]

DistrictHomeRepresentativeParty
1Gold BeachWayne KriegerRepublican
2RoseburgTim FreemanRepublican
3Grants PassWally HicksRepublican
4Central PointDennis RichardsonRepublican
5AshlandPeter BuckleyDemocratic
6MedfordSal EsquivelRepublican
7RoseburgBruce HannaRepublican
8EugenePaul HolveyDemocratic
9Coos BayArnie RoblanDemocratic
10NewportJean CowanDemocratic
11Central Linn/Lane Cos.Phil BarnhartDemocratic
12SpringfieldE. Terry BeyerDemocratic
13EugeneNancy NathansonDemocratic
14Val HoyleDemocratic
15AlbanyAndy OlsonRepublican
16CorvallisSara GelserDemocratic
17ScioSherrie SprengerRepublican
18SilvertonVic GilliamRepublican
19SalemKevin CameronRepublican
20Vicki BergerRepublican
21Brian L. ClemDemocratic
22WoodburnBetty KompDemocratic
23DallasJim ThompsonRepublican
24McMinnvilleJim WeidnerRepublican
25KeizerKim ThatcherRepublican
26WilsonvilleMatt WingardRepublican
27Washington Co.Tobias ReadDemocratic
28AlohaJeff BarkerDemocratic
29HillsboroKatie Eyre BrewerRepublican
30Shawn LindsayRepublican
31ClatskanieBrad WittDemocratic
32Cannon BeachDeborah BooneDemocratic
33PortlandMitch GreenlickDemocratic
34Washington Co.Chris HarkerDemocratic
35TigardMargaret DohertyDemocratic
36PortlandMary NolanDemocratic
37West LinnJulie ParrishRepublican
38Lake OswegoChris GarrettDemocratic
39Oregon CityBill KennemerRepublican
40GladstoneDave HuntDemocratic
41MilwaukieCarolyn TomeiDemocratic
42PortlandJules BaileyDemocratic
43Lew FrederickDemocratic
44Tina KotekDemocratic
45Michael DembrowDemocratic
46Ben Cannon[10][11]Democratic
Alissa Keny-Guyer[12]Democratic
47Jefferson SmithDemocratic
48Happy ValleyMike SchauflerDemocratic
49TroutdaleMatt WandRepublican
50GreshamGreg MatthewsDemocratic
51ClackamasPatrick SheehanRepublican
52Hood RiverMark JohnsonRepublican
53SunriverGene WhisnantRepublican
54BendJason CongerRepublican
55Mike McLaneRepublican
56Klamath FallsBill GarrardRepublican
57HeppnerGreg SmithRepublican
58PendletonBob JensonRepublican
59The DallesJohn HuffmanRepublican
60OntarioCliff BentzRepublican

References

  1. "GOVERNING Announces 2012 Public Officials of the Year". Governing Magazine (Press release). October 19, 2012.
  2. Mapes, Jeff (October 23, 2012). "Governing Magazine adds praise for Hanna-Roblan partnership in Oregon House". The Oregonian.
  3. Resigned September 17, 2012
  4. "Senator Morse calls it quits". Albany Democrat-Herald. September 15, 2012. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  5. "Former Ore. representative to fill Senate vacancy". Albany Democrat-Herald. October 10, 2012. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  6. Resigned November 21, 2011 to successfully run for the United States House of Representatives for Oregon's 1st congressional district.
  7. Mapes, Jeff (December 21, 2011). "A Washington County commissioner at sea casts decisive vote to fill Oregon Senate seat". The Oregonian. Retrieved December 22, 2011.
  8. "Oregon Legislature election results". OregonLive.com. Archived from the original on November 5, 2010. Retrieved November 5, 2010.
  9. Mapes, Jeff (June 30, 2011). "Tina Kotek replaces Dave Hunt as Oregon House Democratic leader". The Oregonian. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  10. Resigned September 1, 2010 to become Governor Kitzhaber's education advisor.
  11. Har, Janie (August 25, 2011). "Oregon House District 46: Multnomah County Democrats to vote on finalists Sept. 21". The Oregonian. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  12. "Commissioners select Keny-Guyer for House District 46 post". September 27, 2011. Retrieved September 27, 2011.
Preceded by
75th legislature
76th Oregon Legislative Assembly
2011–2012
Succeeded by
77th legislature
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