Dems squander supermajority as session ends with no transportation bill

Get used to seeing a lot more of this. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

The 2025 legislative session has come to an end and lawmakers have failed to pass any transportation legislation.

After years of work, a statewide listening tour, dozens of committee meetings and public hearings, Democrats who led the process failed to bring a bill over the finish line. It’s a massive political defeat of historic proportions that comes with consequences likely to be felt in every corner of the state.

After the main transportation bill died, a last ditch effort to pass a plan-B bill, House Bill 3402-3 (the “-3” refers to the amendment that was adopted by committee) was slated for a vote on the House floor late Friday night, but Democrats needed help from Republicans to clear time-sensitive procedural hurdles and they didn’t get it.

Democrats — despite having a supermajority in the House, Senate and holding the Governor’s office — were unable to keep all their Senators in line and ultimately lost the game to the minority party.

House Bill 2025-28; an $11.6 billion package that would have saved transit systems, given the Oregon Department of Transportation a boost to maintenance and operations, funded highway expansion megaprojects, and invested in major safety projects, died earlier in the day on Friday because Democratic Senator Mark Meek wouldn’t vote for it. Meek had shared frustration about the rushed timeline of the bill for weeks and — while he was open to some tax increases — wasn’t comfortable with the size of the bill. Before the final committee vote he shared disinformation on social media, telling his followers that the bill included tolling when in fact that is blatantly false.

The bill passed committee 8-4 and there were smiles as it had some bipartisan momentum (thanks to a “yes” vote from Republican House Rep. Kevin Mannix) heading to the House floor. It was likely going to pass the House, but it was the Senate that doomed Democrats.

Democrats hold 18 of the 30 seats in the Senate and they needed every one of those votes to hold onto the three-fifths majority required to pass a tax bill. Senator Meek, a Democrat, remained a very stubborn “no” and Senate President Rob Wagner failed to persuade a single Republican to take Meek’s place in the “aye” column.

With HB 2025-28 dead, lawmakers scrambled to fill a placeholder bill, HB 3402-3, with bare bones legislation that would be an interim measure to keep ODOT afloat and prevent massive layoffs at the agency. The bill was heard in the House Rules Committee Friday evening where lawmakers heard massive, diverse, nearly unanimous opposition — from city and county leaders, unions, advocacy groups, and individual Oregonians.

The only two voices in support of the bill came from Governor Tina Kotek — who said in her committee testimony she would lay off 600-700 ODOT workers on Monday morning if the bill didn’t pass (about 14% of their total workforce) — and from ODOT leadership, who said it was vital to keep the lights on and perform a basic level of service until more money could be found.

“I know it is disappointing when you get to this point in session and such a big bill with so much work is not going to move forward,” Kotek said in her testimony. “The path forward today is to ensure that ODOT-provided essential services continue… It will solve an immediate need, but it’s not going to solve all our problems… But nonetheless, we have to move forward.”

HB 3402-3 would have raised around $2 billion over 10 years (less than half the amount of the 2017 transportation bill and $10 billion less than HB 2025) via a three-cent gas tax increase and increases to vehicle title and registration fees. Beyond this relatively tiny revenue bump, opposition to the bill was fierce because the bill stipulated that all new revenue would go to ODOT. That provision was a huge slap in the face to counties and cities who have traditionally received 30% and 20% of State Highway Fund revenue respectively (with ODOT keeping 50%).

HB 3402-3 had no funding for transit, and no funding for key programs Oregonians are clamoring for like the Great Streets program, Safe Routes to School, Community Paths, and so on. It also had no set-aside funding for key highway expansion megaprojects that many lawmakers voted for in 2017 like the I-5 Rose Quarter, I-205 widening, and Abernethy Bridge widening.

Despite this opposition, HB 3402-3 passed the Rules Committee 4-3 on a party-line vote.

It headed to the House floor and was in the queue for a vote late last night, but time ran out because Republicans refused to help the Democrats suspend some procedural rules to get it over the finish line. (For an excellent breakdown of how this process played out, check this Bluesky thread from Oregon Capitol Chronicle reporter Julia Shumway.)

With nothing to show for years of work and negotiations, it remains to be seen what the fallout will be from this immense debacle. Governor Kotek threatened to layoff 600-700 ODOT workers on Monday morning. That would be a catastrophic blow to those families, to the agency and to Oregonians who rely on the state to keep the transportation system in good shape. Portland Mayor Keith Wilson, representing a City of Portland budget that was counting on $11 million from the transportation bill, said he would be forced to lay off up to 60 Portland Bureau of Transportation staffers.

Republicans and their allies in the online punditry ecosystem are gleeful to see these bills die. The House Republican Caucus released a statement saying the tax increases would have, “funded a progressive left agenda that would harm Oregonians.” “Forcing families to pay one of the largest tax hikes in history when they can barely get by was a cruel policy from the start,” added House Republican Leader Christine Drazan.

From here, I’m not sure what the likelihood is of lawmakers saving transportation funding in an interim or emergency session. If they do make an attempt, Democrats will need to to get their own party fully in line. One thing made clear Friday is that Republicans would rather see ODOT burn to the ground than give them any new funding.

While some lawmakers map out next steps (and others sit back and start vacation), advocates and city leaders now find themselves in a distressing moment of uncertainty. Transit advocates and agency leaders might be the ones feeling most left out in the cold. Without an increase in transportation funding, TriMet has said they would cut 27% of transit service — which could be up to 45 of their 79 bus lines — starting in 2027.

There’s a lot more I want to share about all this, but that’s the basics of what happened yesterday and where we stand this morning. Stay tuned for more coverage.

The new transportation bill: Here’s what you need to know about HB 3402

(Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Move over House Bill 2025, there’s a new transportation bill in town. As it appears the Democrats big transportation bill is dead in the water, there’s a scramble to stuff transportation policy into a separate bill in order to come away with at least something this session.

HB 3402 is a classic “gut and stuff” — meaning it was filed as a placeholder just in case lawmakers needed it. And boy do they ever as I’ve confirmed that HB 2025 doesn’t have the votes in the Senate to pass.

So what’s in HB 3402? Here’s what I know so far:

  • Performance audits on the State Highway Fund and ODOT capital projects once every two years.
  • Changes how the ODOT Director is appointed (by the Governor, instead of the Oregon Transportation Commission). This is a relatively useless clause that has been rightfully identified as an “accountability charade” by City Observatory.
  • The bill beefs up and clarifies the roster of an ODOT accountability advisory committee.
  • It gives the Joint Committee on Transportation legal authority to “review of scope, schedule changes, and budget updates of major projects (those exceeding $250 million) on a quarterly basis, as well as of city or county projects of less than $25 million with a requested cost increase of at least 10 percent and projects exceeding $25 million where the requested increase is at least five percent.” This seems to me like a way to take some authority away from the Oregon Transportation Commission and give it to legislators.
  • Increases the statewide gas tax by three whole cents (LOL) — from 40 cents per gallon to 43 cents per gallon.
  • Increases annual fee for registration of passenger vehicles from $43 to $64.
  • Increases vehicle title fee from $77 to $168.

All revenue from the above gas tax and fee increases, an estimated $2.3 billion, will flow directly to ODOT.

That last provision is huge, because it means cities and counties would be totally zeroed out in new state funding. Portland Mayor Keith Wilson has wasted no time in expressing his opposition to it: After more than a year outlining the tremendous need at the local level, House Bill 3402-3 threatens to sideline local authority and transit priorities at a time when collaboration is most needed,” he wrote in a statement at 2:00 pm today.

Here’s more from Wilson:

“Portland operates Oregon’s second-largest transportation system, which supports millions of people and goods moving in and out of the state. This bill puts that system at risk. It jeopardizes dozens of essential city infrastructure jobs and our ability to perform basic safety functions like filling potholes and implementing traffic safety improvements.

We can’t afford a patchwork solution. Legislators, please don’t leave Salem without addressing crumbling city transportation systems. We’re calling on our state partners to lean into our shared commitment to building a resilient and future-ready transportation network for all Oregonians.”

The City of Portland’s budget for the Portland Bureau of Transportation is counting on $11 million from the state. That funding was expected to come from the state via a new transportation bill — and this one won’t do it.

Beyond not including the 50/30/20 funding formula that counties and cities rely on, HB 3402-3 includes none of the safe streets or transit funding that was in HB 2025. As far as I know, the 0.1% payroll tax that funds transit (via the Statewide Transportation Improvement Fund) which went into effect in 2018, doesn’t have a sunset date. It was proposed to go up to 0.3% in HB 2025. Transit agencies across Oregon have made it clear that without an increase, they would make significant service cuts.

In a post on Bluesky today, The Street Trust urged their followers to oppose the bill. The group’s executive director Sarah Iannarone wrote that, “After a year of consensus building, lawmakers are about to pass HB 3402, a last-minute bill that keeps the lights on at ODOT and turns them off for everyone else.”

Here’s more from Iannarone and The Street Trust:

“This is not a transportation package. It is a desperate procedural maneuver that prioritizes a single agency’s short term needs over the public good – jeopardizing safety, mobility access, and equity. It does nothing to address the rising traffic violence on our streets, the erosion of critical transit lifelines, or the lack of safe infrastructure for people walking, biking, rolling, and relying on public transportation.”

Also notable about HB 3402-3 is that it includes no dedicated funding for key highway megaprojects that remain unfinished like the I-5 Rose Quarter, Abernethy Bridge, I-205 widening, and so on. These projects were funded in HB 2017 and there has been very strong political will to complete them. While this new bill doesn’t include set-aside funding for them, since all new revenue would go to ODOT, the agency could decide to spend it on them. However, it appears that since the bill gives the JCT oversight of ODOT project spending, that decision could be more political than the agency is used to.

ODOT supports HB 3402-3. In a letter sent today to members of the House Committee on Rules, ODOT Director Kris Strickler said the bill is an “interim step to maintain some level of ODOT’s operations and maintenance functions for the 2025-27 biennium.”

HB 3402-3 is scheduled for a public hearing in the House Committee on Rules at 3:45 pm today. That committee includes two of the loudest voices who opposed HB 2025 — its Vice-Chair Rep. Christine Drazan and Rep. Shelly Boshart Davis. (Note: I’m hearing it will be moved to Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment.)


UPDATE, 8:05 pm: HB 3402-3 has passed the House Rules Committee with a party-line vote of 4-3 and will now move to the House floor for a vote. The bill would raise $2.0 billion from a mix of a three-cent gas tax increase and registration and title fee increases.

UPDATE, 6/28 at 9:00 am: The legislative session has adjourned and 3402-3 did not pass. It did not receive a vote on the House floor.

The big transportation bill is dead

The State Capitol in 2009. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Oregon Public Broadcasting is reporting that House Bill 2025 is dead:

“According to four sources within the Legislature, Democrats acknowledged Friday morning they do not have the votes to pass House Bill 2025. The sweeping bill would have hiked an array of taxes and fees in order to generate billions for much-needed road projects.”

It’s stunning news for the $11.6 billion transportation package that passed out of committee Thursday night. Momentum seemed to pick up when one Republican member of the Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment, House Rep. Kevin Mannix, voted yes on the bill. But if OPB has it right, all that might pass this session is a paltry, three-cent gas tax increase that Democrats have attached to a separate bill (HB 3402-3).

HB 2025 was supposed to get voted on by the House and Senate today. But it’s 1:50 pm and the vote in the House still hasn’t happened. The House is in recess and is slated to re-convene at 2:15 pm today. I asked one source if the bill was really dead and they messaged back, “Currently using the defibrillator.”

Sources say the bill had enough votes in the House, but not in the Senate. The bill needed just one Senate Republican to support the bill, and it wasn’t going to happen.

I’ll post a confirmation once I know more. (*See this update to learn about HB 3402-3, the new transportation bill for this session.)

In the meantime, check out this video about how one lawmaker who opposes HB 2025 — Democratic Senator Mark Meek — poisoned the debate by spreading blatant falsehoods on social media. This is a good illustration of how many oppositional voices to this bill are not using their platforms to discuss alternative policy positions, but instead are stooping to fear-mongering and bad faith arguments to foment anger at the people and process behind the bill.


UPDATE: Portland Mayor Keith Wilson has released a statement about HB 3402-3, the bill Democrats have stuffed with transportation policy as an alternative to HB 2025. I’m still learning what the bill does, but Wilson doesn’t like it. Here’s his statement:

“After more than a year outlining the tremendous need at the local level, House Bill 3402-3 threatens to sideline local authority and transit priorities at a time when collaboration is most needed.

Portland operates Oregon’s second-largest transportation system, which supports millions of people and goods moving in and out of the state. This bill puts that system at risk. It jeopardizes dozens of essential city infrastructure jobs and our ability to perform basic safety functions like filling potholes and implementing traffic safety improvements.

We can’t afford a patchwork solution. Legislators, please don’t leave Salem without addressing crumbling city transportation systems. We’re calling on our state partners to lean into our shared commitment to building a resilient and future-ready transportation network for all Oregonians.”

Transportation bill passes committee (again), now heads to floor vote

The Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment during its final meeting Thursday.

House Bill 2025 has passed out of committee for the final time and will get a vote on the House floor Friday. The $11.6 billion package of transportation funding underwent considerable changes since it passed out of the Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment last week. Authors of the bill lowered the overall revenue of the bill by about $3 billion by reducing the gas tax provision and eliminating a new vehicle “transfer tax.”

Those changes helped persuade one Republican on the JCTR to vote in favor of the bill. In remarks at the committee meeting this afternoon, Senator Kevin Mannix said, “Where are we going to go if we don’t move forward with this legislation? The easy thing is to say, ‘Well, we’ll just sit back. I mean, I’m a Republican, I’ll just let the Democrats carry the water.’ But wait a minute, I’ve had an opportunity to participate in this process… and I know it would be easy enough to sit here and say no, but I’ve decided that I need to say yes so that we can move forward.”

The bill was voted out of committee 8-4, with “no” votes coming from Senators Bruce Starr and Suzanne Weber, as well as House Representatives Jeff Helfrich and Shelly Boshart Davis.

Starr and Davis were the most vocal opposition and framed their concerns primarily around the tax increases in the bill and what they felt was a lack of bipartisanship throughout the negotiations.

Sen. Pham holding up a chart that shows Oregon as the state that pays the lowest in transportation-related taxes of all seven western states.

While Starr and Davis said Oregonians couldn’t afford to pay for safe routes and reliable transit, JCTR Co-Chair Senator Khanh Pham said she supports the bill because a dysfunctional and disinvested transportation is unaffordable. “One in three, or one in four Oregonians can’t afford a car, or maybe their household depends on one car and can’t afford a second car,” Pham said in her closing remarks. “They depend on reliable bus service and they can’t afford to be late. That is more expensive. That is costly when you’re late for work and you lose your job. Those, those are the the expenses that I worry about when it comes to impacts on Oregon families.”

Sen. Pham, who represents a part of southeast Portland, presided over the JCTR for the first time and was clearly thrilled to play that role. At one point during her remarks she held up a chart to counter narratives that Oregonians should not pay more for using roads. Using data from the Legislative Revenue Office, Pham pointed out that Oregonians currently pay the lowest amount in annual transportation-related taxes among all seven western states. And if HB 2025 passes, Oregon would move up to 6th.

Just hours before the meeting, Senator Mark Meek, a former member of the JCTR and Democrat who opposes the bill, posted an update on his Instagram page saying HB 2025 would impose a new tolling program on I-205. Meek’s assertion is completely false and it led to committee co-chairs and Governor Tina Kotek having to make remarks to debunk the rumor at the outset of the meeting.

From here, the bill, known formally as HB 2025-A28, will move to the House Floor for a vote on Friday. Given the recent changes to the bill and the relatively calm comments from lawmakers in committee today, I have a strong hunch the bill will have the votes it needs to pass.

Oregon Court of Appeals rules against City of Portland in parking setbacks case

Northbound on SE 17th approaching E Burnside.

What level of responsibility does the City of Portland have to implement a key safety policy — even if they don’t have capacity to address every location that needs it?

That’s one question lawyers sought to answer when they claimed, in a 2020 lawsuit, that the Portland Bureau of Transportation was negligent in the death of Elijah Coe in May 2019. Coe was riding his motorcycle eastbound on East Burnside Street approaching SE 17th as the driver of a car drove up 17th and began to try and turn left (westbound) onto Burnside.

According to the suit, because PBOT didn’t prevent other car users from parking all the way up to the corners at the Burnside and 17th intersection, the driver and Coe were unable to see each other. When the driver entered the intersection, Coe veered suddenly to miss them and was killed in a head-on collision with a driver coming the opposite direction.

Oregon law (ORS 811.550) states that parking is not allowed within 20-feet of crosswalks at an intersection. Portland City Code (16.20.130) also specifies a 50-foot parking buffer at intersections and a prohibition of vehicles over six feet high. Armed with those laws, activists spent years urging PBOT to enforce them. The issue is especially important for vulnerable road users because they can be very hard to see by cross-traffic when tucked behind parked cars.

In part due to the 2020 lawsuit and pressure from advocates, PBOT began to hasten their implementation of intersection daylighting. In 2021, the city announced 350 intersections would get the treatment. But three years later, they hadn’t made the progress they promised. PBOT made another announcement earlier this year about their intention to spend $200,000 on vision clearance work.

Meanwhile, the 2020 lawsuit was dismissed by a Multnomah County Court judge in 2022. Lawyers for the city leaned on the concept of discretionary immunity, a legal concept backed up by state law (Oregon Tort Claims Act, ORS 30.265(6)(c)) which says cities are largely immune from liability for policy decisions that involve the exercise of judgment on behalf of the agency or authority in question.

In the case of intersection daylighting, the city’s attorneys said PBOT was correctly following their adopted policies when it comes to parking setbacks at intersections. Specifically, PBOT lawyers cited three sources of policy: the Comprehensive Plan, which PBOT used to allow parking up to the crosswalk; the PedPDX pedestrian master plan that called for removing parking at the corner of E Burnside and 17th during the next capital improvement or paving project; and the city’s complaint-based system for addressing road safety-related concerns.

Put another way, City of Portland attorneys convinced the trial court that PBOT managers made appropriate judgment calls and should be granted immunity from negligence because, given their limited capacity, they had to use discretion on where they implemented the policy.

But lawyers for Elijah Coe appealed the dismissal and the Oregon Court of Appeals decided in their favor in a judgement released Wednesday.

In a 10-page judgment issued by the Oregon Court of Appeals yesterday, they say the city’s defense focused solely on parking setback policy in proving their immunity — when the court feels there were other factors in the crash that revealed negligence. Here’s an excerpt from the judgment:

“… parking management is only one means by which the city could have addressed sight distance issues at the intersection or exercised reasonable care on which her negligence allegations are premised. Because sight distance depends on various factors, including the allotted speed limit and street design, other means of addressing inadequate sight distances include decreasing the speed limit, installing a traffic signal, eliminating permissive right and left turns, and providing advance warning signage. It follows that, even if the city were to establish that it was entitled to discretionary immunity as to decisions to allow or remove parking at the intersection under those two policies, those decisions would not provide a complete affirmative defense to any one of plaintiff’s alleged specifications of negligence.”

The city’s argument also rested on the fact that PBOT Engineering Supervisor Carl Snyder said their complaint-based system hadn’t reported a parking or visibility-related safety concern at this intersection. However, the court referenced testimony from Snyder where he described a complaint filed with PBOT by the nearby Childroots daycare and preschool in 2010. In that complaint, Childroots said SE 17th at Burnside was too narrow and PBOT responded by removing some parking on 17th.

“From that evidence,” the court wrote in its judgment. “The city had notice and knowledge of broader visibility concerns at the intersection—indeed, of the precise sight distance issue at the south side of the intersection where Whitfield turned left onto East Burnside in front of Coe in this case.”

Based on those findings, the Court of Appeals ruled that the city is not entitled to discretionary immunity.

Now the case can move forward to trial.

One of the lawyers representing the plaintiff is Scott Kocher of Forum Law Group (also a BikePortland advertiser). “The appeals court gave our case a green light to go to trial because it ruled the city has no immunity for allowing parking in sight triangles,” Kocher explain in a message to BikePortland today.

“If the city continues with its lip service approach of fixing only a handful of locations it can be sued and will have to pay.”

Weekend Event Guide: Loud n Lit, bike swap, Sunday Parkways and more

Riders getting loud n’ lit in 2024. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

I’m loving all the Bike Summer ride reports. Y’all look like you’re having an amazing time. I’m doing really well with my second knee surgery and recovery is happening faster than my first one. In a few weeks I’ll be out on my bike again, capturing all of your beauty and bike rides. I can’t wait!

As for this weekend, swipe or scroll down a bit to see which events and rides made the cut for the guide:

Saturday, June 28th

Inner Child Ride – 2:00 pm at Colonel Summers Park (SE)
If you’re tired of adulting and holding it together while the world falls apart, come out and find your inner child on this ride that promises lots of play. Remember that parachute game in preschool? Bring your stuffed animals, favorite toys, nostalgic snacks, bubble makers, and get ready to make new friends! More info here.

26″ or Die Day One – 6:30 pm at Something Cycles (E Burnside)
Join a fun, flat-bar and knobby-tire crew on an urban assault ride. You’ll be hoppin’ curbs, balancing on ledges, or whatever other fun diversions you can find. More info here.

Loud n Lit – 8:30 pm at Irving Park (NE)
The baddest, loudest, craziest ride of Bike Summer is back for another roll. Join the pre-party at Irving Park and enjoy DJs connected to massive mobile sound systems. Light up your bike and your outfit and enjoy the illuminated flair of others as you ride and dance the night away. More info here.

Sunday, June 29th

PDX Gold – 9:00 am at Brooklyn Park (SE)
You wanna’ climb? Then do this 55-mile, 7,000-feet elevation gain route that’s been vetted by really neat dudes and comes with safety (and pain) in numbers, some mechanical support, an aid station, and even an after-party. And it’s totally free (but donations to local nonprofits encouraged!). More info here.

Birding By Bike – 10:00 am at Farragut Park (N)
Grab your binoculars and get ready to pedal to some bird-spotting spots with fellow lovers of winged creatures. More info here.

Red R Criterium – All Day on Swan Island (N)
A multi-lap road race around a short loop in an industrial park with two tight corners and one sweeping one before the finish. It’s a perfect course to challenge your skills and get your thrills. If you’re crit-curious, this is the race for you. More info here.

Rocky Point Trail Maintenance – 8:30 am to 1:30 pm (Scappoose)
Don’t you hate riding singletrack and you look down and your shins are stinging red and bloody? Weeds can do that. Now you can get your revenge by whacking them off the trail. Join NW Trail Alliance for this work party and do some good for your local trail network. More info here.

Bike Swap – 11:00 am to 2:00 pm at Migration Brewing (NE)
It’s a bike swap, but the vendors are bike shops and local bike companies. You don’t want to miss the cool parts and bikes these folks will bring out of their basements to offer at really good prices. Vendors so far include Metropolis Cycles, Cyclepath Bike Shop, Portland Design Works, Anson’s Bike Buddies (Hood River), Joe Bike, Ruckus Composites, Shovel Research, and more. More info here.

Sunday Parkways Northeast – 11:00 am to 4:00 pm in Cully area (NE)
It’s that time again. Time for you and your friends and family to grab bikes and take to the streets for a festival of freedom from cars that connects our communities and neighborhoods. Expect great activities at parks along the way, food vendors, and more. More info here.


— Did I miss your event? Please let me know by filling out our contact form, or just email me at maus.jonathan@gmail.com.

Dems fish for votes with changes to transportation bill in final hours of session

ODOT staff are on the edge of their seats. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Democrats in Salem have made their final play in a desperate attempt to curry support for their transportation funding plan. With just a few days left in the legislative session, the latest move to find support for House Bill 2025 includes major changes and one final stop in committee before what will be an all-out sprint to the finish line.

The bill, known as HB 2025-A28 will get its final public hearing and committee vote later this afternoon.

As I reported yesterday, the version of HB 2025 that was adopted by the Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment (JCTR) six days ago, known as HB 2025-A, has been amended. Documents posted to the legislative website Wednesday afternoon reveal a new bill with a smaller tax footprint that omits several provisions that spurred opposition among moderate Republicans and even some Democrats.

The authors of the bill need to do three things in very short order to fulfill their top priority of the session: pass the bill out of committee, get three-fifths majority on the House floor, and make sure that the language of the bill doesn’t spur a ballot referral.

To Democratic leadership, this means the bill needs to be less of an easy target to lawmakers and voters who think it takes too much out of their wallets. Their latest changes to the bill shrink it by $3 billion. According to OPB, the state would take in about $11.6 billion in new revenue over the next 10 years with the newly amended version of HB 2025, instead of $14.6 billion in the bill passed last week.

Democrats have also caved on their plan to raise the gas tax and index it to inflation. The original bill would have raised the per gallon gas tax by 15 cents in the coming three years, followed by an automatic increase pegged to annual inflation rates. In committee hearings, Republicans strongly opposed indexing the gas tax to inflation because they feel it would abdicate their power.

The newly amended bill scraps the indexing plan and would simply raise the gas tax by 12 cents starting next year.

Another way the Democrats have scaled back the bill is to give up on a new “transfer tax” that would have been levied on the retail price of used and new vehicles at a rate of 1% and 2% respectively.

To make up for that revenue loss, the new plan is to increase the dealer vehicle privilege tax and general vehicle use tax. That tax is currently 0.5% and applies only to new cars. It was boosted to 1% in the current version of the bill. The latest proposal is to increase it to 2.25% and apply it to used cars for the first time.

Money raised from the privilege tax would be distributed to these projects and programs:

  • 38% to the Great Streets Fund, which invests in urban state highways to make them more humane, main streets.
  • 38% to the Anchor Project Fund, the new name for what lawmakers say is “unfinished business” from the previous transportation package that mandated completion of key megaprojects like the I-5 Rose Quarter, Abernethy Bridge, I-205 widening, and so on.
  • 10% to the Zero Emission Incentive Fund, which gives out rebates for purchasing electric cars (but not electric bikes because once again the legislature has failed to create equity between cars and bikes in that program).
  • 8% to the Connect Oregon Fund, which invests in non-highway infrastructure like airports, marine terminals, rail, and some biking and walking projects.
  • 6% to the Railroad Fund which can be spend on passenger rail maintenance and operations.

Money raised from the use tax would be spent as follows:

  • Up to $5 million to the Wildlife-Vehicle Collision Fund
  • Up to $25 million to the Safe Routes to School Fund
  • Anything left over would be distributed via the 50/30/20 formula to the state, counties, and cities respectively.

Another hot-button issue with the version of the bill was the volume and size of increases to dozens of vehicle-related fees such as ones folks pay at the DMV for titles, registrations, new license plates, and so on. The new bill slashes those increases by significant amounts.

One final change I’m still trying to fully understand is how the new bill handles the bicycle tax. HB 2025-A kept the $15 tax on new bicycle intact. HB 2025-A28 appears to fold the bike tax into the general vehicle use tax, meaning it will now be a more progressive, percentage-based tax of 1% of the purchase price of a new bicycle. (Note: I’m still trying to find clarity on this provision and will update this post when I figure it out.)

Those are the big differences with the newly amended bill. It will get a public hearing and final vote in the JCTR today at 3:30 pm. From there, it should move onto a floor vote. According to OPB, the extremely tight timeline means Democrats need some procedural help from Republicans to get it over the finish line. I’ve heard some Democratic support for other bills this session authored by Republicans have created the opportunity for this to happen, but there are no guarantees.

Stay tuned. This bill could pass or fail. It’s anyone’s guess at this point.

Beyond the noise, here’s what’s actually in the 2025 transportation package

(Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

As Democrats in Salem scramble to pick up the pieces of the transportation bill in the final few days of the legislative session, I feel like it’s worth looking more closely at what’s in the bill they’re trying to pass.

With headlines devoted to the drama of the process and Republican opposition, some folks might forget what’s at stake with the actual policy that hangs in the balance.

But first, let’s recap where things stand: House Bill 2025-A passed the Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment (JCTR) on Friday with a party-line vote of 7-5. It was due for a floor vote Monday, but instead, Democrats pulled the bill and referred it back to committee. Lawmakers likely did this for two reasons: either they were afraid the bill didn’t have enough votes to pass, or they worried it would be referred to voters, something one group is already vowing to do. Sources say authors of the bill are currently revising some elements of the package to make sure the vote will go their way. Those changes should be made public any day now. Once they’re out, the floor vote would happen quickly. Since Democrats have a super-majority they need to pass tax increases, as long as they get their party in line (and Republicans don’t pull procedural shenanigans), the bill will pass.

So what’s in the bill? Yes it’s a big tax increase. But Oregonians have been underpaying for their privilege to use the transportation system for too long and the bill has finally come due.

Here’s what we’d gain and lose (in terms of money in our pockets) with HB 2025-A:

10-Year Revenue Outlook

Over the next 10 years (the state budgets in two-year cycles called biennia), the bill’s fees and taxes would generate about $14.6 billion. Because the fees and taxes come into effect at different times and get progressively higher over time, here’s how the biannual revenue would play out:

  • 2025-2027: $1.06 billion
  • 2027-2029: $2.5 billion
  • 2029-2031: $3.4 billion
  • 2031-2033: $3.7 billion
  • 2033-2025: $4.0 billion

Accountability

I personally don’t think the accountability measures go far and deep enough, but here’s what HB 2025-A would do:

  • Mandate performance audits every other year on capital projects and state highway fund spending.
  • The Governor would appoint ODOT director, instead of the Oregon Transportation Commission (this is a charade, as pointed out by City Observatory).
  • The bill beefs up the existing Continuous Improvement Advisory Committee membership, meeting requirements, and reporting responsibilities.
  • Mandates a review by the Joint Committee on Transportation of all major projects over $25 million on a quarterly basis. The committee would look at cost, scope, and schedule changes to make sure there’s no funny business going on.
  • The Legislative Policy and Research Office would do an audit of ODOT on whether and how the agency addressed recommendations from study conducted this year.

Where Revenue Would Come From

Weight Mile Taxes

The bill would simplify weight mile tax tables for heavy trucks, making it simpler for freight haulers to comply. It would also create a new weight mile table heavy electric vehicles that are over 26,000 pounds.

Gas Tax Increase

HB 2025-A would raise the gas tax by 10 cents, to 50 cents per gallon starting January 1, 2026. It would go up to 55 cents per gallon in 2028, and then starting 2029 it would be pegged to inflation.

Payroll Tax Increase for Transit

While the Republicans pushed a bill that would have zeroed out state spending on transit, HB 2025-A will increase transit spending via an increase in the payroll tax. Currently at 0.1%, the bill increases the tax to 0.3% by 2030. Revenue from this tax funds the Statewide Transportation Improvement Fund, or STIF.

Vehicle Privilege Tax

The vehicle privilege tax is paid by car dealers (for the privilege of selling cars in Oregon). It’s currently 0.5% of the retail price of a car and would increase to 1%. Since this tax is not levied on road users, it’s not constitutionally bound to the State Highway Fund. Therefore, lawmakers would use 50% of revenue for passenger rail improvements and the remainder would go toward EV rebates and the Connect Oregon fund (a program that funds non-highway projects).

General Vehicle Fee Increases

HB 2025-A includes dozens of fee and tax increases to things like DMV-related services, new and used car titles, registrations, vehicle permits, and so on.

Transfer Tax

This is new tax that would be levied on the transfer of new and used vehicles with a gross weight of 26,000 pounds or less and that are sold for over $10,000. Tax rate is 2% of the sales price for new vehicles and 1% of the sales price for used vehicles.

Bicycle Tax

The $15 tax on new bicycles that went into effect in 2018 will remain in place. It amounts to about $1.2 million per year.

Road Usage Charge

HB 2025-A will finally push Oregon’s “OreGo” pay-per-mile road usage charge program into the limelight. The bill will give Oregonians an option of participating in the program for a flat fee of $340 per year.

The bill will also require owners of delivery fleets to enroll electric fleet vehicles into the OreGo program. Then, starting in 2028, all plug-in electric vehicles, plug-in hybrid vehicles, and hybrid vehicles will be required to enroll.

The per-mile charge for the OreGo program will be pegged to a percentage of what the average cost of a price of gas is per gallon.

Where Revenue Would Go

Gas Tax

The gas tax increase would help fund five “anchor projects” to the tune of $125 million per year (which would still leave huge funding gaps). The top two priority projects are the I-5 Rose Quarter and Abernethy Bridge. Then the OTC would determine priority for funding of I-205 widening, Newberg-Dundee Bypass, and State Highway 22/Center St. Bridge retrofit.

Any remaining gas tax revenue would be distributed via the standard 50/30/20 formula to ODOT/counties/cities respectively.

Transfer Tax

$125 million per year from this tax would go to the Great Streets Fund, a fund that pays for ODOT urban highways to become city-owned main streets (like 82nd Avenue). $25 million would go to Safe Routes to Schools, and $5 million would be put into a new Wildlife-Vehicle Collision Fund.

An additional $125 million from this revenue source would go to paying for debt service on anchor projects (a.k.a. highway expansion megaprojects).

Miscellaneous (Yet Still Very Important!) Provisions

Highway Cost Allocation Study

The HCAS is a study that determines whether or not Oregon road users are paying their fair share. I profiled the issue last year because it’s something freight advocates have been complaining about for a long time. This bill would remedy the issue by calling on the legislature to act if the equity ration between heavy and light vehicles ever goes beyond 1.05%.

Freight Lane Widths

There was a lot of controversy around the initial language of this provision in the bill. Lawmakers changed that language a bit to clarify that 12-foot minimum lane widths would only apply to state highway freight routes that are outside the urban growth boundary.

More Funding for Light Rail Maintenance

Section 170 of the bill would stipulate that revenue that comes into the STIF (the state’s transit funding program) can be spent on light rail capital expenses related to maintenance of existing light rail infrastructure. Currently, these funds cannot be used for this purpose.

Better Highway Project Selection

When the Oregon Transportation Commission considers projects for the Statewide Transportation Improvement Program (STIP), the bill would require them to weigh whether or not a project “reduces overall demand for motor vehicle travel on a highway,” and whether or not the local jurisdiction has made a good faith effort to maintain and preserve highways (as opposed to just building new ones).

Funding for Oregon Community Paths

The bill would deposit $2 million annually from a portion of the gas tax that’s collected from non-highway uses (like gas for lawnmowers, etc…) into the Multimodal Active Transportation Fund. This fund invests in off-street biking and walking paths and what’s known as the Oregon Community Paths program. The initial bill left this funding out and advocates pushed hard for this.

New ODOT Studies

Don’t sleep on studies! These can often provide a foundation for future policy. HB 2025-A directs ODOT to study allowing all entities (cities and transit agencies) that receive STIF funding to provide transit passes for people under 23 years old. Another study would look at the impact on travel demand for any project that expands driving capacity.

Commuter Rail Expansion

The bill would require ODOT to do a formal study of the expansion of TriMet’s Westside Express Service (WES) to Salem and Eugene. This heavy rail service currently runs north-south between Beaverton and Wilsonville.

No E-Bike Rebate This Session

Note that the e-bike rebate program, which I was hopeful would make the cut when it was included in an amendment last week, is no longer part of the bill.


So there you have it: the major highlights (or lowlights depending on your political persuasion) of the transportation bill as it stands right now. Like I said, there’s a lot at stake here and despite how terribly Democrats have fumbled the bag so far, there’s still a shred of possibility that a bill passes this week. I fully expect lawmakers will propose some changes in the next 24 hours, so stay tuned for that in the coming day or so. There should be some sort of committee meeting Thursday and it will likely include a public hearing. Buckle up!

UPDATE: The newly amended bill has been released and a public hearing and work session are scheduled for tomorrow (6/26) at 3:30. There are some significant changes. See this story from OPB for a good rundown of what’s in the amended bill.

Community over cars: Council lines up behind streets for people

This driving lane on W Burnside at 10th became a plaza in 2023. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

There’s a growing consensus on city council that Portland has more streets than it needs for driving on and that in the future, plazas and other creative uses of the right-of-way will flourish citywide. With support from council and city staff, backed up by Portland’s existing transportation policy and programs, and combined with an eager network of advocates — we could be on the the brink of an exciting new chapter in how we use streets.

At a meeting of the Portland City Council Transportation & Infrastructure Committee Monday, the Portland Bureau of Transportation Deputy Director of Planning, Art Pearce, shared an overview of transportation planning. But the conversation about converting streets from thoroughfares to public spaces began before Pearce made his way to the dais.

During a presentation about a city proposal to “vacate” (a legal process to terminate public ownership of a street and turn it over to adjacent property owners) a stretch of SE Oak Street through Laurelhurst Park, Councilor Mitch Green asked a notable question: “How long does the process take?” he asked David McEldowney, who works in the city’s right-of-way permitting division.

Some people in the room knew where Green was going with his question. The economist, Democratic Socialist, and first time council member believes one way PBOT can reduce its maintenance liability is to reduce the assets it’s required to maintain. Back in February, Green suggested that PBOT ban drivers on some streets as a money-saving strategy. “Every mile of road is a liability in terms of unfunded, ongoing operations and maintenance, which will then be always costlier in the future,” he said.

Green was probing McEldowney about the street vacation process because he thinks it might be an avenue toward converting streets into plazas, cul-de-sacs, community gardens, superblocks, and so on. McEldowney said the process takes about a year, to which Green replied: “So would you say that if the city was interested in doing a lot more of these, we’d be looking at a year?”

“I think in the future we’re going to be wanting to look at streets that are underutilized that could maybe be turned into other things.”

– Olivia Clark, city councilor

Green is not the only councilor looking at streets with this perspective.

“Councilor Green, I think I know where you’re going with this,” chimed in committee Chair Olivia Clark after Green’s exchange with McEldowney. “I think in the future we’re going to be wanting to look at streets that are underutilized that could maybe be turned into other things.”

Clark said she was “shocked” to learn 30% of Portland’s land area was managed by PBOT in the form of city streets. “That’s rather astounding, and gives me some pause, especially when we think about the fact that we’re so far behind in asset management and taking care of those streets,” Clark said. “So many of them are failing that we’ve had some informal discussions among the committee members here about how we could convert those spaces.”

Residents of Mt. Scott-Arleta neighborhood turned this driving lane into a public square in 2022. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Clark is looking beyond plazas to reduce PBOT’s maintenance liabilities. After doing a walking tour of downtown, she mentioned the possibility of greening Flanders Street through northwest. “There’s a lot of interest on this committee to look at alternatives like that, not just plazas, but other other ways of looking at these assets.” “Because,” she asked rhetorically, “will we be able to raise the funds over time to really maintain 30% of the land space?”

When PBOT’s Deputy Director Pearce got into his presentation about transportation planning in Portland, he made it clear city policy supports not just turning streets into “other things,” but also that it’s the city’s goal to significantly reduce the use of cars. Pearce connected the high cost of driving to housing affordability and explained the tradeoffs in building a car-centric city: “If we are putting funds into building structured vehicle parking, for instance, that can be $50,000, even $80,000 per unit per parking space that should be spent — both the space and the money — should be spent on housing people and not on cars, and so we need to make a system that is less reliant on that need.”

After Pearce told councilors that 30% of Portland’s land area is PBOT right-of-way, he said it’s a “constant choice about how we use our space.” He then framed that choice as, “whether we want to use it for storing cars and mobility, or use it for creating public space.”

When PBOT does choose to use streets for mobility, Pearce said a recent study commissioned by the city showed how inefficient it is when cars are the majority vehicle in the mobility mix. “In just six buses,” Pearce noted, “We were moving the same number of people as 241 cars.”

Slide shown at city council committee meeting Monday by PBOT Deputy Director of Planning, Art Pearce.

Pearce knows streets will have to move more people in the future and that, as Portland becomes more dense and adds new residents, more people will need streets where they can feel free to not move at all.

Pearce sees PBOT’s street plaza program taking a more prominent role in city planning as neighborhoods become more crowded. “If you’re creating less space in each apartment or each house, you need more and more space for people to be connected outside together,” he explained to councilors. “If we’re thinking about being an interconnected community who sees each other outside, and being less stuck in our own bubble and algorithms, it’s in those public spaces where, maybe there’s music happening and there’s kids playing, that you’re having really human connection. And I think that’s instrumental to Portland’s next chapter.”

Councilor Tiffany Koyama Lane also spoke highly of plazas. “A lot of us up here value these street plazas,” she said before asking Pearce what he thinks about tactical urbanism. “I hadn’t heard that term yet,” she acknowledged, “but it’s something I think a lot of us have been talking about, maybe without using those exact words.” Koyama Lane defined tactical urbanism as, “opportunities for community members, businesses, grassroots organizations, other similar entities, to lead and even fund some interventions within the public right of way,” and “working with community to make our streets safer and more vibrant.”

Pearce took that as an opportunity to share a key takeaway from a staff retreat in January where his Planning, Policy, and Projects team came up with a theme to guide their year. That theme? “Enabling co-creation.” “Creating with community is instrumental to that,” he added.

The best, most recent example of this approach in action is in north Portland where bike bus leaders worked with PBOT to install temporary diverters along their school’s morning bike bus route. Another example is when PBOT worked with a neighborhood association leader in 2023 to create a plaza in a former lane of West Burnside at 10th. Empowering Portland’s army of street advocates and neighborhood block party lovers could be a very powerful way for PBOT to leverage its impact citywide, quickly transition streets to more healthy uses, and create a base of content constituents to support the agency’s forthcoming funding requests.

If PBOT is to continue along this trajectory, they’ll need buy-in from their leader, Director Millicent Williams. And it turns out she’s on board too. “We have a tremendous opportunity,” she said in remarks to council Monday. “Now is the time to look at how we can do things differently — whether it’s a weekend, a season, a pilot, something that can become a permanent installation, to get people used to some of the change.”

When it comes to changing how streets are used, Williams wants Portlanders to know, “It’s not a threat. It’s really an opportunity to reimagine our communities and see them as we’d like to see them.”

For businesses along SE Hawthorne and 37th — the location of PBOT’s latest and greatest street plaza —what they wanted to see was a street full of color and community, not cars. A brightly painted mural and benches have helped create a welcoming plaza that’s become an instant hit (and also attracted a visit over the weekend from city council members Angelita Morillo and Steve Novick.)

What’s exciting about these street transformations is that they don’t have to take a long time. Green’s inquiry about street vacations notwithstanding (that’s a specific process and not always required), Williams was quick to point out that the new Hawthorne street plaza only took a few months to go from conversation to completion.

And they want to build more of them. PBOT is all about the bottom-up approach these days. Street design ideas that originate from residents, activists, neighborhood groups, business owners, and so on — are often more actionable than those that emanate from dusty planning documents.

So now is the time to share your dream street idea. Pearce said he wants to get conversations going now, so he and his team can take necessary steps to make it happen over the winter season, “And have it ready to bloom with the roses.”

Oregon Walks nabs $150,000 grant for downtown wayfinding project

W Burnside and 10th. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Downtown Portland’s renaissance will get another jolt of energy thanks to a newly funded project that will improve walking conditions.

Travel Oregon, the state’s tourism commission, announced $6.2 million in grants today. Awards were granted to 65 projects statewide, including two from the Portland region. One of them is a $150,000 grant to the nonprofit Oregon Walks for a project that will, “develop and deploy a pedestrian wayfinding pilot project in downtown Portland.”

Oregon Walks is a nonprofit that focuses on making walking safer, more convenient, and more fun. They worked with the Portland Bureau of Transportation as a partner on the grant application. Better wayfinding signage in downtown Portland was recommended as a top priority in the City of Portland’s Pedestrian Master Plan.

Oregon Walks Executive Director Zachary Lauritzen said PBOT played a major role in making this happen. “They’ve been an amazing partner. [PBOT Pedestrian Realm Coordinator] Gena Gastaldi and her team put together a really compelling pitch/design and deserve a ton of credit for moving this forward.”

According to a statement form Travel Oregon, the “Walk Portland” project will include installation of high-quality maps and signage, public art and lighting, visitor engagement, data collection and photo/video documentation. Described as a “pedestrian wayfinding system in downtown Portland,” there will also be an accompanying website.

“Through signage, artwork, and a designated downtown walking route, Walk Portland will help people feel more confident exploring downtown as a pedestrian—whether you’re new to Portland or have lived here your whole life,” says Lauritzen. “We’re stoked to lend a hand in the rejuvenation of downtown,” he added. “We really believe in activation—getting more people out and about—as a way to make places feel safe and welcoming.”

Transportation bill passes out of committee, but road blocks remain

Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment at their meeting on Friday.

With just one full week left in the legislative session, Oregon’s transportation funding package, House Bill 2025, is in a very precarious position.

The bill is seen by supporters as a vital funding lifeline for the Oregon Department of Transportation as the agency transitions away from the gas tax and looks to shore up its ailing highway fund. It comes with dozens of tax increases and several new funding sources in order to pay for bridge and road maintenance, freeway expansion projects, safe routes to schools, updates to urban highways, new off-street paths, public transit, and more. Overall, HB 2025 is slated to raise $14.6 billion in new revenue for transportation over the next 10 years.

An amended version of the bill (-23 amendment) passed out of the Joint Committee on Transportation Reinvestment on Friday on a party-line vote of 7-5; but it took a last second procedural maneuver by Senate President Rob Wagner (a Democrat) to make it happen. Since Democratic committee member Mark Meek made clear his intention to vote against the bill, Wagner replaced Meek in order to ensure passage.

As if having a committee member present but unable to vote wasn’t awkward enough, a pointed exchange between two committee members punctuated a meeting full of strong disagreements.

Committee Co-Vice Chair Shelly Boshart Davis, a Republican, is strongly opposed to the bill. She favors a version of the bill that would completely eliminate state funding for transit, safe routes to school, and bicycle infrastructure (the bill would repeal the 1977 Bicycle Bill). A vote on that version of the bill (the -8 amendment) failed 8-4.

Boshart Davis is a leading voice from a chorus of Republicans who think HB 2025 is nothing more than a Democratic tax grab and that ODOT needs to focus on its “core mission” of catering solely to car users and letting cities fund transit and cycling needs. “We are looking at the largest tax increase in Oregon’s history,” she said at Friday’s meeting. Boshart Davis is also opposed to what she calls a “really bad process” that was “grossly irresponsible” because she feels the public hasn’t had enough time to weigh in on the bill (the full fiscal analysis wasn’t released until Friday).

As Boshart Davis repeated these stinging critiques at Friday’s meeting, committee Co-Chair Senator Chris Gorsek — a Democrat and architect of the bill — interrupted her (see exchange above). “Excuse me,” he said, “You are impugning all of us that have worked on that bill. So stop with that! You’ve made your point representative. Enough!”

Committee Co-Chair Susan McLain calmed things down, but the damage was done. Later in the meeting, Boshart Davis said she planned to make a formal complaint about Gorsek’s behavior. Today, House Republicans issued a statement calling for Gorsek to be removed from committee assignments and face censure on the Senate floor.

While Democrats have a super-majority in the House and Senate, they spent weeks trying to hash out a bill that would garner at least a few moderate Republican votes — but that effort has produced no fruit. A large bloc of Republicans that are vehemently opposed to the bill are already saying they’d work to refer it to voters if it passes. There are also threats of a walkout if and when the bill comes to a floor vote. One Republican, Darcey Edwards, who represents portions of Washington and Columbia counties west of Portland, boycotted today’s floor session because of her opposition HB 2025.

While a floor vote was scheduled for early this week, a few hours ago Oregon Public Broadcasting reported that Democrats would send HB 2025 back to committee for consideration of possible amendments.

So far no further committee meeting has been scheduled and no new amendments have been posted.

With just days left in the session, Democrats still have road blocks to clear before passing their highest priority legislation.

At the end of Friday’s meeting, Portland Democrat Khanh Pham said, “I recognize this is a major investment, and that is part of what I think is my responsibility, our responsibility as as legislators, to actually govern for our state. And for that reason, I am unapologetic about the need for investing in our roads, for the health of our communities and the health of our economies.”


UPDATE, 3:05 pm: Senate President Rob Wagner has taken himself and Sen. Gorsek off the committee and has added three new members: Senator Khanh Pham, Senator Lew Frederick, and Senator James Manning Jr. HB 2025 has also been rereferred to the committee and OPB has the latest on how House Speaker Julie Fahey is trying to amend the bill with moderate Democrats to ensure passage.

Monday Roundup: Parking wars, bikes and your brain, allergies, and more

Hi friends (and everyone else).

I’m three days post-surgery on my second knee replacement and I’m feeling OK. I plan to work when I can, but things could be touch-and-go for the next week or so depending on a combination of factors like pain, the effects of my pain meds, and so on. The great news is that in a few weeks I’ll be on my way to a new chapter in my life. One where my knees are healthier and I can move through the world with more confidence. I’m excited, but I’ve gotta’ get through this tough slog first. Thanks for your patience and understanding.

Here are the most notable stories that came across my desk in the past seven days…

In defense of vision zero: After a newspaper’s editorial board labeled Boulder’s quest for vision zero “juvenile,” an advocate responded with a very thoughtful and effective defense of the road safety approach that Portlanders would be wise to read. (Daily Camera)

A mural and a culture war: A colorful mural with the message “All Bike(r)s Welcome” touched off a huge controversy in Bentonville, Arkansas — a city that prides itself on being the most bike-friendly in America. The debate revealed a clash of cultures in a city full of contradictions. (Cycling Weekly)

Parking wars: People in a U.K. town have resorted to blockades and physical altercations as they fight against an “invasion” in car parking from a nearby neighborhood. It’s a war on cars IRL. (Birmingham Mail)

Parade death: A truck carrying one of the U.S. Army tanks used in Trump’s military parade ran over and killed a pedestrian on the streets of Washington D.C. (USA Today)

Pike Place pedestrianization: Seattle’s iconic public market finally went carfree because their mayor stood up and wanted to make it happen. So far it appears to be going very well. (Seattle Met)

Hypercar hypocrisy: It is totally absurd that we allow automakers to sell “hypercars” that go 0-60 mph in under two seconds regular people to be used on public streets. Seriously. When will a leader step up and say enough is enough? No regulatory agency that stands by and allows these products to be sold should be considered credible when it comes to discussions of road safety. (CNBC)

An expensive addiction: This article is an excellent overview of the many ways cars have become even more expensive to own in recent years, and it helps explain why city leaders and planners have an opportunity to swoop in and give folks options to ditch driving for good. (Wall St. Journal)

Cycling and dementia: A major new study shows that people who cycle regularly into older age are less likely to have dementia because their brains stay sharper and more active. (Vice)

Damn allergies: A pro cyclist decided to end his career because his allergies were so overwhelming. I’m sure a lot of folks in Portland can relate! (Cycling Weekly)


Thanks to everyone who sent in links this week. The Monday Roundup is a community effort, so please feel free to send us any great stories you come across.