By GARY A. WARNER/Oregon Capital Bureau
The Legislature held its third special session of 2020 on Monday, amid a pandemic and violent protests at the Capitol organized by a right-wing group.
A protest organized by the Patriot Prayer group attracted over 100 people, who at one point forced their way into a side door of the Capitol. Some smashed glass doors and attacked journalists.
Oregon State Police, Marion County sheriffs deputies and Salem Police, many dressed in full riot gear, responded to the attempt by some demonstrators to force their way into the Capitol.
The demonstration was declared an unlawful assembly and law enforcement moved the demonstrators off the Capitol grounds, closing Court Street using a Salem Police Department armored car.
State police arrested four men on charges ranging from being a felon in possession of body armor, unlawful use of mace, criminal trespass and disorderly conduct, and are looking for a fifth suspect.
At about 5 p.m., the lights went out in the Capitol and had to be restarted while lawmakers sat in the relative dark.Despite the action outside, the demonstrations did not disrupt the session, which Gov. Kate Brown had called to push through $800 million in aid linked to the COVID-19 pandemic and the wildfires that burned over 1 million acres in late summer.
Brown called the session as several federal programs were set to expire at the end of the year. Oregon had received $1.4 billion of the $2.2 trillion nationwide CARES Act approved in the spring and signed by President Donald Trump.
Congress continued to work on a compromise $900 million aid package, but with the deadline looming, Brown decided to bring lawmakers back to Salem.
The Legislature voted to:
• Allocate $600 million to the state emergency fund for upcoming needs for COVID-19 and wildfire recovery.
• Extend an eviction moratorium until July 1, 2021. The current moratorium ends Dec. 31. As part of the package, $150 million was allocated for reimbursing landlords for up to 80 percent of the back rent they are owed and $50 million in renter assistance.
• Limit liability claims against schools due to actions during the state of emergency declared by Brown in March and extended several times. A similar bill to limit medical provider liability stalled in committee.
• Allow to-go sales of alcoholic beverages when the order includes a meal.
The session was held in Salem despite the COVID-19 pandemic that has infected 103,755 Oregonians, killing 1,347. The two prior special sessions during the pandemic were held when infection rates were significantly lower.
The session got off to a rocky start in the Senate when Sen. Dallas Heard, R-Roseburg dramatically ripped off his face mask while addressing the Senate, daring President Peter Courtney, D-Salem, or law enforcement to take action against him. Saying he was protecting the rights of “the children of God,” Heard railed against the pandemic restrictions in the Capitol and across the state.
“If you had not done such great evil to my people and had simply asked me to wear my mask, I would have,” Heard said. “But you commanded it, and therefore I declare my right to protest against your false authority and remove my mask.”
Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem, cut Heard off.
“Your time is up,” Courtney said, rapping his gavel. When Heard protested, Courtney ordered Heard’s microphone shut off. Heard then walked off the Senate floor.
The order to wear masks in the Senate was put in place by Courtney following incidents during the second special session in which he strongly requested the masks, but saw Republican Sens. Dennis Linthicum of Klamath Falls and Brian Boquist of Dallas come into the chamber without any face covering. House Speaker Tina Kotek had required masks in the earlier session.
Heard went outside the Capitol to address protestors, where he was alternately applauded for his stand by some and heckled by others who said he was a “collaborator” because of his position as a lawmaker.
The crowd chanted “Arrest Kate Brown” and “let us in.” They carried American flags, including one upside down — a symbol of distress. Some carried the Gadsden flag depicting a coiled rattlesnake ready to strike, with the words “Don’t Tread on Me.” The flag from the American Revolution has become a favorite of conservative activists in recent years.
Other demonstrators carried “Trump 2020” flags and some wore the red “Make America Great Again” hats popularized by President Donald Trump.
Most demonstrators did not wear masks to prevent spread of the COVID-19 virus. A few wore gas masks and others were dressed in military-style tactical outfits. A few carried semi-automatic assault-style rifles.
At least two live streams of the protest were running on YouTube. Other videos showed demonstrators smashing the glass doors of a side entrance to the Capitol and attacking journalists covering the demonstrations.
A fire alarm went off inside the Capitol rotunda, but it was a false alarm, officials said. At least two protestors were arrested. Oregon State Police put out pictures of some of the violent demonstrators, asking the public to contact authorities with their identities.
In the House, the unhappiness over the session being held while the Capitol has been closed to the public due to the COVID-19 crisis was criticized in a more sedate manner.
“We need to find a way to innovate and get the public involved in the process again,” said Rep. Cheri Helt, R-Bend. “There is a lack of imagination on how to get the conversation going again with the public.”
At the end of the day, Sen. Shemia Fagan, D-Portland, who will be leaving the Senate to become Secretary of State next year said the problems of holding the session were worthwhile.
“We voted to prevent tens of thousands of Oregonians from losing their homes in the middle of winter and a surge in the pandemic,” she said.