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Senators examine HB 4161 to clarify when public bodies may provide food, beverages and low‑value merchandise
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Summary
HB 4161 would clarify that public bodies may provide food and beverages at official events and allow officials to accept merchandise valued at no more than $100 per calendar year; supporters said the bill is needed after an OGEC advisory opinion created uncertainty.
The committee heard testimony on House Bill 4161, a proposal to clarify ethics rules when public bodies provide sustenance or low‑value merchandise to public officials. Legislative staff said the bill allows public bodies to provide food and beverages during official meetings and events and permits officials to accept merchandise valued at up to $100 in a calendar year under the public body's policy.
Witnesses — including Representative Nathan Sosa, League of Oregon Cities representatives and the Oregon Community College Association — described a Beaverton advisory opinion that treated consumption of food provided by the public body as a 'use of office' in some circumstances. Supporters said the bill is intended to remove that uncertainty for boards, employees, volunteers and contractors statewide. The $100 cap was discussed as a practical limit distinct from the gift‑limit statute that applies to other contexts; senators probed whether an inflation escalator should be considered but supporters said the change was intended to be modest and practical.
Witnesses asked the committee to consider the broad population affected (employees, elected officials, volunteers) and the practical impact on evening meetings and in‑service events; the committee closed testimony and adjourned.
