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🤑 Rebate or nah?

Plus: 🌮 New food cart pod | Friday, September 27, 2024
 
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Axios Portland
By Meira Gebel · Sep 27, 2024

🤯 It's Friday, believe it or not.

Today's weather: Clouds gradually clear throughout the day. High 71, low 51.

🕺🏻 Sounds like: "A Hard Day's Night" by The Beatles

Situational awareness: The Portland Bureau of Transportation is continuing to repave parts of NE Killingsworth today, from 53rd Avenue to Cully Boulevard, so expect lane closures.

Today's newsletter is 676 words — a 2.5-minute read.

 
 
1 big thing: 🗳️ What measures are on the ballot
By
 
Illustration of a pattern of checkmarks that turn into question marks and vice versa, over a red and blue background with a pattern of ballot elements.

Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios

 

Oregon voters will decide whether to receive a $1,600 annual rebate through an increase in corporate sales taxes via a ballot measure that has received fierce pushback from lawmakers, local businesses and labor unions alike.

Why it matters: If Measure 118 passes, every Oregonian would receive an annual check, regardless of age or income, starting next year.

  • The rebate would be paid for by a 3% gross receipts tax for all companies doing business in Oregon that make more than $25 million annually in sales.
  • If passed, the new tax would generate $1.3 billion in revenue for the 2023-25 biennium, according to the Legislative Revenue Office.

The intrigue: This would be separate from the "kicker."

Catch up quick: The measure is one of five initiatives Oregonians will vote on this November that could alter how the state governs its elections, businesses and elected officials' salaries.

Here's a brief look at the other four measures.

Measure 115 would amend Oregon's constitution to allow the Legislature to impeach statewide elected officials — if both the House and Senate reach an affirmative two-thirds vote.

Measure 116 would establish a commission to study and set the salaries and compensation for statewide elected officials.

  • The yearly base pay for Oregon lawmakers is around $35,000. The study would look at all elected offices, including governor, secretary of state, judges, district attorneys, as well as state senators and representatives.

Measure 117 would establish ranked choice voting for federal and statewide elected offices.

Measure 119 would essentially make it easier for cannabis workers to unionize by requiring cannabis retailers, processors and labs to submit a labor neutrality agreement with a union in order to request or renew their operating license.

The bottom line: The last day to register to vote in order to participate in the Nov. 5 election is Oct. 15.

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2. Rose City Rundown
 
Illustration of Mt. Hood emerging from a cell phone.

Illustration: Lindsey Bailey/Axios

 

🏥 Over a year after they first announced plans to merge, Legacy Health and Oregon Health & Science University filed paperwork with officials yesterday for a regulatory review, which could take months to complete. (The Oregonian)

Over 1,200 non-citizens that were accidentally registered to vote via a DMV clerical error could not have swayed any Oregon contests, officials told lawmakers this week. (OPB)

🌯 A new food cart pod called the Brooklyn Carreta will open in the former La Carreta site, on the corner of SE McLaughlin and Holgate Boulevard, in February 2025. (Bridgetown Bites)

The number of illicit massage parlors in Portland has reportedly tripled in the past five years — from 36 in 2019 to 114 this year. (Willamette Week)

🧯 Lawmakers OK'd an extra $47.5 million from the state's general fund to go to the Oregon Department of Forestry as the agency continues to battle a record-breaking wildfire season. (Oregon Capital Chronicle)

The search continues for a missing person after a fishing boat capsized on the Columbia River Wednesday afternoon. Six others were rescued. (KGW)

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3. 🎸 1 exhibit to go: Beatlemania lands in Portland
By
 
A photo of a man wearing sunglasses facing toward a camera and receiving a beverage from a person wearing a yellow bathing suit.

George Harrison on Miami Beach in 1964. Photo: Courtesy of Paul McCartney under exclusive license to MPL Archive LLP

 

More than 250 photographs and video clips from Paul McCartney's personal archive are now on display at the Portland Art Museum through January.

🤩 Zoom in: They feature an inside look at The Beatles' meteoric rise during a three-month period between late-1963 into early 1964, when the band turned from a British sensation into international celebrities.

  • The photos paint an intimate portrait of members John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr during a pivotal moment in their lives — all through McCartney's lens.
John Lennon in Paris in January 1964. Photo: Courtesy of Paul McCartney under exclusive license to MPL Archive LLP

What he's saying: "Looking at these photos now, decades after they were taken, I find there's a sort of innocence about them," McCartney said in a press release. "Everything was new to us at this point."

🖼️ If you go: Included with general admission to the Portland Art Museum ($22-25). Open Wednesday through Sunday, 10am to 5pm.

  • The exhibit, "Paul McCartney Photographs 1963–64: Eyes of the Storm," runs through Jan. 19, 2025.
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  • Support local journalism with Axios Local.

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🍏 Meira is checking to see if she can still buy tickets to Charli XCX's tour stop in Portland next month.

This newsletter was edited by Rachel La Corte.

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