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Oregon Governor Calls For May Special Session On Business Tax

Oregon Governor's Office
Governor Kate Brown

 

Oregonians won't have to wait long after the May 15 primary to see what could be the first legislative showdown of general election season.

Governor Kate Brown Tuesday announced she intends to call a special session of the Legislature on May 21 for an attempt to pass a roughly $15 million annual tax break to a sliver of Oregon businesses.

"I’m calling for a special session on May 21 to make this change to keep our small businesses growing," Brown said in a statement.

It's the first special session Brown has called for during her three years in office, and it could be an uneasy one. The governor announced on April 6 that she was signing a bill that effectively blocked a tax break worth hundreds of millions of dollars for Oregon "pass-through" businesses, a move that angered Republicans.

Brown's push for a far smaller tax break is an olive branch as she runs for reelection. In recent weeks, the governor's office has floated legislation that will give lower tax rates to a segment of small businesses known as sole proprietorships. The state gave the same tax rate to a larger segment of businesses in 2013.

The scope of the proposal is limited. The state has more than 260,000 sole proprietorships, but only about 9,000 would be covered by the legislation she's floating. Even so, Brown is making the case that her bill is urgent.

"I’m simply not willing to let these main street businesses ... go through another tax year with unfair tax treatment as compared to their larger competitors," Brown said.

Brown's statement Tuesday is a way to put pressure on Republicans to follow her lead. Conservative lawmakers aren't likely to oppose a tax cut for businesses, but they could make the passage painful.

That's because the governor has said she wants to get a special session completed in a single day. To accomplish that, she'll need Republicans' assent to suspend normal legislative rules.

Tayleranne Gillespie, a spokeswoman for the Senate Republican Caucus, said before Brown's announcement of a date that Republican senators were tentatively willing to go along with a one-day session — so long as the scope remained limited.

"We still hold the cards in our hand in terms of suspending rules," Gillespie said. "Right now we’re more concerned about if it’s longer than a day. We don’t want people trying to push other things through."

Senate Minority Leader Jackie Winters, R-Salem, said in a statement that Republicans will work with the governor to help small businesses, though they think she's not going far enough. 

"This so-called 'emergency' was caused by the governor and the majority party," Winters said in a statement. "Their actions during the 2018 session to take away a small business tax cut is the reason we are now being called in to special session." 

House Minority Leader Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, said he hopes the governor and Democrats will limit the scope of the special session: "In the end, the tone and tenor of the session will be defined by whether Democrats are able to stick to their word."

Brown's choice of date for a special session is built around efficiency. Legislators are already scheduled to be in Salem for regularly scheduled legislative days, a series of meetings that occur several times a year outside of the normal legislative schedule, so additional costs for holding a special session are minimal.

The session also could unveil an interesting dynamic. State Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, is the presumptive Republican front runner to challenge Brown in November's gubernatorial election. If he wins the nomination in the May 15 primary, he may be torn between giving small businesses a tax cut and handing Brown a legislative victory.

Dirk VanderHart covers Oregon politics and government for OPB. Before barging onto the radio in 2018, he spent more than a decade as a newspaper reporter—much of that time reporting on city government for the Portland Mercury. He’s also had stints covering chicanery in Southwest Missouri, the wilds of Ohio in Ohio, and all things Texas on Capitol Hill.