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Oregon Protesters Confront Weakened Minimum Wage Increase and Lack of Renter Protections
On Thursday, February 18, minimum wage and housing justice activists in Oregon descended on Salem to protest a weakened wage proposal and delayed renters’ rights legislation. $15Now Oregon — the state wing of the larger Fight for $15 movement sweeping the country — saw opposition over the last several months coming from the much more moderate Raise the Wage coalition and its $13.50 minimum wage proposal. The bill that passed the Oregon Legislature, which would raise the minimum wage to the highest in the country, would bring the minimum wage in Portland to $14.75 by 2022. This six-year process is dramatically slower than what organizers had been proposing, and it leaves smaller cities like Eugene to only $13.50 and the majority rural areas of the state at only $12.50.
At the same time, another bill aimed at providing modest extensions in the notification periods for “no-cause” evictions and protections from rent increases for new tenants was progressively weakened after meetings with landlord trade organizations before being sent back to committee.
Groups rallied around the common economic hardship that is hitting the working-class areas of Portland, as the massive influx of new resident has allowed developers and landlords to raise rents faster than in any other urban…