Salem hearing on climate bill draws big crowd
SALEM, Ore. (AP) — So many people flocked to the Oregon Capitol to testify Saturday at a public hearing on a climate change bill that the allotted time for each to speak was reduced to 90 seconds.
As a large screen in Hearing Room C showed the seconds ticking off, loggers expressed concern that Senate Bill 1530 would lead to increased costs, and the demise of their business.
Others, taking turns at occupying three seats before the Senate Committee On Environment and Natural Resources, said global warming was an emergency that was already affecting them, and would affect their children and grandchildren even worse.
“Rather than passing the buck, and demanding that the rest of the nation and world take care of us, we have a moral obligation to address our emissions,” Alan Journet, who lives in Jacksonville, a town of 2,700 in southern Oregon, said in written testimony on behalf of 1,500 rural Oregonians who are members of a group called Southern Oregon Climate Action Now.
The so-called cap-and-trade bill calls for the state to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to at least 45% below 1990 emissions levels by 2035 and to at least 80% below by 2050. The bill would force big greenhouse gas emitters to obtain credits for each metric ton of carbon dioxide they emit. Opponents say fossil fuel companies will wind up offloading increased costs to customers.
“Applying a carbon tax to Oregon citizens is a poorly disguised strategy to extract huge sales tax amounts from residents,” Nolan Nelson, of Eugene, said in written testimony ahead of Saturday’s hearing.
At least 150 people signed up to testify, many showing their positions on T-shirts. Opponents often wore Timber Unity shirts. The group on Thursday staged a protest outside the Capitol, with a procession of more than 1,000 trucks blasting their horns, to protest the bill.
A demonstration in support of the bill, with an expected attendance of over a thousand, is planned for Tuesday at the Capitol, according to Renew Oregon.
“Opponents of climate action in Oregon had their day, now it’s advocates’ turn,” said Brad Reed, group spokesman.