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Washington County identifies session wins and risks: $25M housing preservation, fairgrounds boost, transportation trade-offs
Summary
County government relations staff told commissioners the 2026 short session preserved many pass-through funds, authorized $25 million for affordable housing preservation, dedicated 1% of lottery revenue to county fairs (effective July 1, 2027), but shifted $108 million within ODOT and relied on tax decoupling and cuts totaling about $128 million to balance the state budget.
Washington County's government relations team briefed commissioners on March 17 about the 2026 Oregon legislative session, outlining a mix of wins for the county and continuing financial pressures for state agencies that could affect local projects.
Aaron Doyle and government relations staff emphasized that counties preserved most pass-through funds but the legislature closed a state budget gap through multiple mechanisms. "The first thing we want to start with here was ... SB1507," Pablo Fenuela told the board, explaining that parts of federal tax changes were decoupled, and that the session included agency spending reductions totaling roughly $128 million for the biennium. Staff said the reductions were largely accomplished by removing unfilled positions and cutting discretionary items.
Transportation emerged as a key trade-off. Carly Silva Gabrielson reported that ODOT faces an estimated $289 million shortfall; the legislature…
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