More than 1,000 rally Tuesday at Oregon Capitol in support of climate change legislation

Sam Stites/Oregon Capital Bureau Activists pack the steps of the Oregon State Capitol on Tuesday to show support for a cap and trade bill being considered by legislators.

 

By SAM STITES and CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE/Oregon Capital Bureau

SALEM — Activists seeking to clean Oregon’s environment by reducing greenhouse gas emissions turned out by the hundreds Tuesday, pushing legislators to move ahead with a cap and trade policy.

Demonstrators ranged from Salem-area teenagers who took time out from school to middle-aged Wasco County residents.

All told, organizers say that more than 1,000 people traveled to the Capitol to support Senate Bill 1530, which aims to cap and shrink the state’s carbon emissions and generate revenue for environmental projects.

Maia Stout, a 15-year-old from Yachats, explained to the crowd what climate action means to her. For the past several months, Stout — like 17-year-old Swedish activist Greta Thunberg — has participated in the global youth climate strike, standing outside her high school in Newport and along U.S. Highway 101 every Friday to bring attention to the issue.

“I advocate for climate action because I understand that the mistakes we’ve made don’t fix themselves,” Stout said. “I raised my voice because I can’t vote for three more years and time is running out.”

The pending legislation would establish a new limit on certain emissions and reduce them over time.

The limits would apply to certain industries and major fuel importers. The cap and trade policy would carve up the emissions limit into allowances that emitters can buy and sell on a market. The idea is that as emissions targets get lower, fewer allowances are available, and industry would improve pollution controls.

Opponents have criticized the plan for its potential impact on consumers and small businesses, particularly through higher fuel costs. Recent revisions to the legislation spare counties east of the Cascades from regulations on fuel importers and provide a way for natural gas companies to guard their low-income customers against higher costs.

The event began at noon with speeches on the Capitol steps from activists and political officials, including remarks from Multnomah County Commissioner Jessica Vega Pederson, Milwaukie mayor and congressional candidate Mark Gamba and Eric Richardson, Eugene-Springfield NAACP president. Following speeches, the demonstrators marched around the Capitol chanting and waving signs baring messages supporting the climate legislation.

The event, organized by the environmental group Renew Oregon, was a counterpart to a protest in Salem last week organized by Timber Unity.

Sam Stites/Oregon Capital Bureau Left to right, Senate Majority Leader Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, Sen. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, and Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ashland, applaud remarks by Maia Stout of Yachats during her speech Tuesday on the steps of the Oregon State Capitol

Activists made the trek to Salem from all parts of the state Tuesday, including Dean Myerson who was part of a carload of demonstrators who drove three hours from The Dalles.

Myerson said he believes Oregon needs to lead the way on climate action.

“We can’t just wait for everybody else to do something first, which seems to be one of the arguments; ‘we can’t do this alone,’ which is true, but somebody has to start,” Myerson said. “In Wasco County we had a series of really bad fires a couple years ago. A lot of historic homes were destroyed, a farmer died … There’s always been fires, but climate change is making them worse.”

Coral Avery, 22, a student at Oregon State University, is an enrolled member of the Shawnee tribe of Oklahoma.

“Climate and natural resource use really goes back to indigenous people,” Avery said. “That’s the main reason why I’m here today, is to represent, the best I can, my community and other indigenous communities who have overall been left out of the conversation or at least haven’t been centered in it before.

Avery, who is involved in student government at OSU, said that she has lobbied for climate legislation since moving to Oregon four years ago. She said she was “most hopeful” for the bill that was proposed last year but that it didn’t protect rural communities.

“And I’ve heard that, through reading it, that it’s been revised in some ways to better support them and look out for when things change when polluters are held accountable for their emissions,” Avery said.

The Oregon Capital Bureau in Salem is staffed by reporters from EO Media and Pamplin Media Group and provides state government and political news to their newspapers and media around Oregon, including YachatsNews.com 

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