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Monday, August 31, 2009

Town Hall with Senator Merkley in Bend

JOIN US FOR A TOWN HALL MEETING WITH US SENATOR JEFF MERKLEY IN BEND ON TUESDAY

WE WILL URGE HIM TO SUPPORT IMMIGRATION AND HEALTH CARE REFORM FOR OREGON AND FOR AMERICA!

September 1st at 7:00pm
Summit High School
Gymnasium
2855 NW Clearwater Drive
Bend, OR

Map

The Mid-Willamette Valley Caravan will leave CAUSA Oregon office at 700 Marion Street NE, Salem at 1:30 p.m. (SHARP).

During this public event, CAUSA and Central Oregon allies will actively participate in this Town Hall and call on Senator Merkley to support Comprehensive Immigration Reform and Health Care legislation this year for Oregon and for America.

For Questions or to RSVP please call (541)245-1625

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Saturday, August 29, 2009

Immigration Reform Photo of the Week

This photo was taken on Friday in Bend where over a hundred supporters of Immigration Reform joined with CAUSA, Central Oregon Jobs with Justice and Recursos Para Derechos Humanos to call on Congressman Walden to support Comprehensive Immigration Reform legislation this year.

Photo taken by Francisco Lopez, Executive Director, CAUSA

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Friday, August 28, 2009

Over a hundred turn out for Immigration Reform Rally in Bend

Bend, Ore--Today over a hundred supporters of Immigration Reform joined CAUSA, Central Oregon Jobs with Justice and Recursos Para Derechos Humanos at a rally in Bend to call on Congressman Walden to support Comprehensive Immigration Reform legislation this year.

The rally took place during the Central Oregon town hall style TV show "Talk of the Town". During the show, U.S Congressman Greg Walden for Oregon's 2nd District shared updates on current congressional matters.

Those in attendance were calling for a humane and comprehensive immigration reform that: provides a fair and coherent path to legalization; protects U.S. and immigrant workers; allocates sufficient visas to close unlawful migration channels and thereby strengthen border security; utilizes smart, cost-effective enforcement measures that actually enhance security while protecting human rights and due process; keeps families together; promotes immigrant integration; and protects fundamental rights for all.

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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Immigration Reform Advocates to Rally in Bend on Friday

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 26, 2009

Contact:
Greg Delgado, Central Oregon Jobs with Justice 541-390-6213
Francisco Lopez, CAUSA, Executive Director 503-984-6816
Erik Sorensen, CAUSA Communications Director 503-488-0263

Immigration Reform Advocates to Rally in Bend on Friday

Local groups rallying for Immigration Reform to call on Congressman Walden for Support

This Friday, CAUSA, Central Oregon Jobs with Justice and Recursos Para Derechos Humanos will hold a rally in Bend to call on Congressman Walden to support Comprehensive Immigration Reform legislation this year.

The rally will take place during the Central Oregon town hall style TV show "Talk of the Town". During the show, U.S Congressman Greg Walden for Oregon's 2nd District will share a brief update on current congressional matters. His address will be followed by a community discussion.

"The rally is intended to continue the momentum around the importance to pass immigration reform this year," said Francisco Lopez, Executive Director of CAUSA. "We want Congressman Walden to join with us in pushing for humane and just legislation, so that the familes suffering under our broken system can finally have relief. The time for reform is long overdue."

"People are suffering needlessly because we have failed for decades to address immigration in a fair, practical and systematic way", said Greg Delgado, a spokesman for the groups. "Immigrant families are being broken apart, breadwinners deported, leaving children and dependents stranded. And still people are risking their lives to cross the border because there's an even greater risk in staying home, of being overwhelmed by poverty or caught in the crossfire between drug cartels."

RALLY IN SUPPORT OF COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM
Date: Friday, August 28th, 2009
Time: 3:00 p.m.
Location:
Cascades Theatrical Company (CTC)
148 NW Greenwood, Bend Oregon

The groups that will rally in Bend on Friday are part of a broader coalition of faith, labor, business, community and immigrant advocacy organizations seeking a humane and comprehensive immigration reform that: provides a fair and coherent path to legalization; protects U.S. and immigrant workers; allocates sufficient visas to close unlawful migration channels and thereby strengthen border security; utilizes smart, cost-effective enforcement measures that actually enhance security while protecting human rights and due process; keeps families together; promotes immigrant integration; and protects fundamental rights for all.

The groups will meet outside the Cascades Theatrical Company (CTC) at 2:30pm with the rally to begin at 3:00. For more information, please contact Greg Delgado with Central Oregon Jobs with Justice at 541-390-6213

CAUSA (www.causaoregon.org) is Oregon's statewide, grassroots immigrant rights coalition. We work to defend and advance immigrant rights through coordination with local, state, and national coalitions and allies.

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Immigration Reform Advocates mourn the Loss of Senator Kennedy

Today CAUSA, Oregon's Statewide Immigrant Rights Coalition, joins with immigration reform advocates around the nation in mourning the loss of Senator Edward Kennedy. We send our condolences to his family in their time of mourning.

Throughout his career, Senator Kennedy held a deep committment to making the lives of immigrants and refugees better and worked tirelessly to reform America's broken immigration system.

The statement below is from Ali Noorani and our partners at the National Immigration Forum about Senator Kennedy's dedication to the betterment of the lives of immigrants and refugees .

August 26, 2009

Contact:
Douglas Rivlin (rivlin@immigrationforum.org)
(202) 383-5989 or (202) 441-0680 (mobile)

Immigration Reform Advocates Mourn the Loss of Senator Kennedy

Washington, DC - The following is a statement by Ali Noorani, Executive Director of the National Immigration Forum, a non-partisan, non-profit pro-immigrant advocacy organization in Washington.

As the head of the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition in Boston before coming to the Forum, I witnessed the deep personal commitment Senator Kennedy felt for immigrants and for fixing America's immigration laws. After a devastating raid in New Bedford in 2007, Senator Kennedy and other leaders met with family members who gathered in the basement of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church as hundreds streamed in. The families huddled around Senator Kennedy asking him for help finding parents and loved ones who had been taken away by armed federal officers.

Senator Kennedy did not want to leave that church basement. These were his people, these were the people he wanted to help, and these were the people impacted most directly by our broken immigration system. I saw in his concern for these terrified and shattered families Senator Kennedy's personal commitment to righting wrongs when he saw them.

That afternoon, and in the days and months ahead, Senator Kennedy led yet another push for comprehensive immigration reform on the floor of the United States Senate. Each time he spoke, he went back to that moment in New Bedford to remind our country why we need to fix our out-dated immigration system. Fighting for the dignity and safety of immigrants who give their work and their sweat to this country was not an abstract policy matter for Senator Kennedy.

The great-grandson of eight immigrants to America, the brother of two of America's most visionary leaders on fighting for a fair and just immigration system, Senator Kennedy was in his own right the architect of the modern struggle to honor America's legacy as nation built by, populated by, and defined by immigrants from around the world.

We will miss his humor, his strategic sensibility, and his ability to keep us moving forward whatever the obstacles. He taught us that the fate and possibilities of all of us are fully intertwined with the fate and possibilities of the least of us. Both political parties and every American, regardless of status or station, can honor Senator Kennedy's life and legacy by recommitting ourselves to making the United States of America the most welcoming, free, egalitarian, and successful nation on earth.



# # #


The National Immigration Forum is the leading immigrant advocacy organization in the country with a mission to advocate for the value of immigrants and immigration to the nation.
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Monday, August 24, 2009

Cato Institute: Legalization could boost prosperity for everyone

According to an editorial from The Oregonian from Friday, the right leaning Cato Institute addressed the topic of undocumented immigration.

The report, Restriction or Legalization? Measuring the Economic Benefits of Immigration Reform, makes the case that the U.S. actually would have much to lose from a massive crackdown on undocumented immigrants and that legalization would benefit citizens and documented workers.

Read what The Oregonian Editorial Board had to say about legalization and the CATO Institute Report by linking here.

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

Reform Immigration FOR America at Oregon Town Halls

In communities across Oregon, CAUSA and our allies mobilized immigrant rights supporters to attend Congressional Town Halls to urge support for Comprehensive Immigration Reform.

Watch our latest video highlighting that effort:



You can also watch the video on our CAUSA YouTube Channel

For more on how you can get involved, visit www.reformimmigrationforamerica.org

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Reform Immigration FOR America at DeFazio Town Hall

Eugene, Ore.--Constituents showed up today at a Eugene Town Hall to call on Congressman Peter DeFazio (D-OR) to support Comprehensive Immigration Reform. The Congressman spoke to a large crowd at the Hilton Eugene and Conference Center.

Although most questions were in regard to Healthcare Reform, one constituent urged the Oregon Congressman to support reform of the U.S. Immigration System making it more humane and just for immigrants coming to the country.

Congressman DeFazio is scheduled to speak later this evening at the Springfield City Hall.




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Photo: Waiting to get into DeFazio Town Hall

Eugene, Ore.--Constituent of Congressman Peter DeFazio waiting to get into Eugene Town Hall on Tuesday. Many in attendance were present to encourage Congressman DeFazio to support Humane and Just Comprehensive Reform.


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Asian American Community Supports Immigration Reform through National Week of Action

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 18, 2009

Contact:
Katherine Vargas: (202) 641-5198
Shuya Ohno (202) 309-5645

Asian American Community Supports Immigration Reform through National Week of Action

Events Highlight the Urgent Need for Moving Forward On Immigration Reform

Washington, DC -This week, in a national display of grassroots coordination, energy, and unity, our partner organizations in Asian American and Pacific Islander communities across the country will be organizing the first-ever National Asian American Week of Action for comprehensive immigration reform.

Activists across the country will hold press events, attend town hall meetings with members of Congress, and petition lawmakers in support of comprehensive immigration reform. Events are concentrated during the week of August 17-24 but the push will continue into the fall.

"Immigration reform is of critical importance to our nation's entire immigrant community. Asian Americans and their families look to our elected officials for leadership that serves all of America's interests, not one particular community" said Ali Noorani, Executive Director of the National Immigration Forum, one of the national leaders of the Reform Immigration FOR America campaign, a national campaign to get comprehensive immigration reform passed.

Noorani continued, "Immigrants of all nationalities seek an immigration system that is fair and that works for America. We are all anxious to see progress on comprehensive immigration reform because it is not only good policy, it's also good politics. The urgent need for reform is clear and politicians need to step up or face increasingly frustrated electorate."


# # #

CAUSA is a member of the Reform Immigration FOR America campaign, a coalition of more than 400 faith, labor, business, progressive, and immigration reform groups that have joined together to get comprehensive immigration reform passed. For more information please visit: www.reformimmigrationforamerica.org
or www.reformamigratoriaproamerica.org

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Monday, August 17, 2009

David Ostendorf: Roy Beck, Dairyman

Roy Beck, Dairyman
August 17, 2009

By Rev. David L. Ostendorf
www.imagine2050.net

The ever-media-hungry Roy Beck of NumbersUSA and The John Tanton Network hoisted on his virtual coveralls recently and pontificated on the growing number of immigrants whose labor puts milk on our tables every day. Roy—who likely doesn’t know a Holstein from a Jersey or a milk parlor from a Beltway parlor—ranted as usual about immigrants taking jobs on dairy farms at “… a time when we know it’s possible to find Americans to do this work.”

Roy definitely needs to get outside the Beltway more often…

The nation’s dairy farms are increasingly reliant on immigrant labor to do the hard work that, as most any farmer will tell you, “Americans won’t do.” Upwards of forty percent of the dairy workforce is comprised of immigrant workers, now responsible for two-thirds of the country’s milk production. As dairy farmer Ray Souza states in the same Wall Street Journal article citing Beck, “Once Americans get the job description, they lose interest real quick.”

Continue article at http://imagine2050.newcomm.org/2009/08/17/roy-beck-dairyman/

Rev. David L. Ostendorf is the managing editor for Imagine 2050. Contributors to the Imagine 2050 include activists, immigrants, artists and students who are invested in a future nation that embraces multiculturalism and tolerance.

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Thursday, August 13, 2009

Jewish Organization Launches Campaign for Immigration Reform

This week President Obama said we might not get Comprehensive Immigration Reform until next year. But families are suffering and they can't wait until next year.

Today, the Jewish Council on Urban Affairs (JCUA) released a thought-provoking video titled "We Were Strangers, Too". The video shows a Latino immigrant and Jewish immigrant telling similar stories. But there's a twist.

Members of the Jewish community understand what it's like to be a stranger in a distant land and the hardship and pain it can cause. Yet, in America, thousands of immigrants are caught in a broken system that tears families apart and threatens the pro-immigration values that made America a real home for so many, including our own families.
Comprehensive Immigration Reform can't wait until next year. Join the "We Were Strangers, Too" campaign by visiting www.jcua.org

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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Rev. David Ostendorf: White Hot -- The Health Care and Immigration Debacle

Rev. David L. Ostendorf is the managing editor for Imagine 2050. Contributors to the Imagine 2050 include activists, immigrants, artists and students who are invested in a future nation that embraces multiculturalism and tolerance.

White Hot: The Health Care and Immigration Debacle
August 12, 2009

By Rev. David L. Ostendorf
www.imagine2050.net

While not as crude as the raucous Rushian rabble with their swastika placards at town hall actions, serious white nationalists are unfolding their three-for-one strategy to derail health care and immigration reform, and the Obama Administration itself. In light of the tepid response of Administration and Congressional reformists to the health care debacle, the possibility of more setbacks on all fronts grows by the day: to wit, the President’s announcement this week that immigration reform will see action “when we come back next year.”

When Members of the U.S. House of Representatives lamely cut and run in the face of “angry crowds” screaming about the alleged repeal of Medicare, forced euthanasia of the elderly, and free health care for “illegal immigrants,” it’s clear that Congressional backbone replacement should be the health reform order of the day. One can scarcely imagine what the Members will do when the anti-immigrant crowds are cranked up and come out in force.

Continue article at http://imagine2050.newcomm.org/2009/08/12/white-hot-the-health-care-and-immigration-debacle/


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Saturday, August 8, 2009

Photo: Justice Sotomayor sworn in as America's 111th Supreme Court justice

Justice Sonia Sotomayor was sworn in today, becoming the 111th justice, first Hispanic and third woman to serve on the Supreme Court in United States history.

Photo from New York Times

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Friday, August 7, 2009

Support Students, Support the DREAM Act

This is the latest video from Campus Progress (www.campusprogress.org):

The DREAM Act is a bipartisan proposal that would create a pathway to citizenship for thousands of young students who were brought to the United States years ago as children.

If Congress fails to act this year, another entire class of outstanding, law-abiding high school students will graduate without being able to plan for the future, and some will be removed from their homes to countries they barely know.

This tragedy will cause America to lose a vital asset: an educated class of promising immigrant students who have demonstrated a commitment to hard work and a strong desire to be contributing members of our society.


After you watch the video, sign the petition at http://www.campusprogress.org/dreamact

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Thursday, August 6, 2009

Oregon's Immigrant Rights Coalition applauds historic Sotomayor Confirmation

For Immediate Release
August 6, 2009

Contact:
Francisco Lopez, Executive Director, 503.984.6816
Erik Sorensen, Communications Director, 503.488.0263


Oregon's Immigrant Rights Coalition applauds historic Sotomayor Confirmation

Justice becomes the first of Hispanic decent confirmed to the High Court

Salem, OR-In another historic day for the United States, Sonia Sotomayor has become the nation's 111th Supreme Court justice. She is also the third female and the first of Hispanic descent confirmed to the nation's highest court.

CAUSA, Oregon's Immigrant Rights Coalition and the largest Hispanic civil and human rights and advocacy organization in the Pacific Northwest, applauds the Senate for confirming this well-qualified judge to the Supreme Court of the United States.

In a vote of 68 to 31, Sonia Maria Sotomayor was confirmed today with two-thirds Senate approval following a morning debate. Of the 68 Senators who voted in favor of confirming her, there were only 8 Republicans. Roughly 80% of Republicans opposed her confirmation.

Justice Sotomayor, the daughter of Puerto Rican immigrants, was born in the Bronx, a borough of New York City. Before being confirmed today, she had been serving as a Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit.

"When President Obama nominated Sonia Sotomayor at the end of May", said Francisco Lopez, Executive Director of CAUSA. "He did exactly what he promised in last year's election by selecting a person who has demonstrated an abiding commitment to the core constitutional values of justice and equality under the law."

"This is a great day for America." Lopez added. "As a daughter of immigrants, Justice Sotomayor's confirmation to our nation's highest court is a great inspiration to those seeking the American Dream."

The confirmation of Sonia Sotomayor is also historic in the sense that Latinos now play important roles in the nation's three branches of government-as cabinet members, in Congress and now in the Supreme Court.

Justice Sotomayor will be sworn in on Saturday to replace Justice David Souter. She will join her colleagues on the Supreme Court when the new term begins in October.

CAUSA (www.causaoregon.org) is Oregon's statewide, grassroots immigrant rights coalition. We work to defend and advance immigrant rights through coordination with local, state, and national coalitions and allies.


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Obama Administration Addresses Detention Crisis with Change in Policy

The Department of Homeland Security announced today that it will change the way it conducts oversight and accountability in America’s immigration detention facilities. Specifically, it will make changes to policies regarding an immigrant detention facility in Texas.

In a press release, the National Immigration Forum, the leading immigrant advocacy organization in the country, expressed they were pleased that the administration will take important steps to address immigration detention conditions that are currently a "national embarrassment".

Ali Noorani, Executive Director of the National Immigration Forum, said that the “the single most important thing we can do with regard to immigrant detention is to reduce the need for its use for millions of non-criminals, families, and workers in the first place.”

Noorani added that the we need a functioning legal immigration system -- one that brings millions of immigrants living here illegally into legal status, rather than attempting to enforce our way out of our current situation.

He finished by saying that the Forum “is supportive of the changes announced to the detention system and hope this signals more oversight and accountability throughout DHS and our immigration enforcement system”.

According to the New York Times, among the changes DHS will make is to stop sending families to the notorious T. Don Hutto Residential Center, a former state prison near Austin, Texas. The facility was sued by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) after news coverage showed young children behind razor wire.

An ACLU lawsuit settled in 2007 brought to light how children under 10 years old were confined for up to a year in “family cells with open toilets, with only one hour of schooling a day”. Children said they were threatened by guards with separation from their parents--many asylum-seekers from around the world. Only after judicial enforcement of the settlement were children granted such “liberties" as "wearing pajamas at night and taking crayons into family cells" said the New York Times.

Although immigration reform advocates see the Administration’s action on the Detention Crisis as a step in the right direction, passage of humane and just immigration reform legislation will offer the only workable solution to our nation’s dysfunctional and unjust immigration system.

For more on the Administration’s immigration detention policy, read the full story at the New York Times by linking here. To read the full release from the National Immigration Forum, please link here

Additional Resources

The Math of Immigration Detention http://www.immigrationforum.org/images/uploads/MathofImmigrationDetention.pdf

Summaries of Recent Reports on Immigration Detention 2007 – 2009
http://www.immigrationforum.org/images/uploads/DetentionReportsSummaries2007-2009.pdf


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Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Rev. David Ostendorf: So Much for “Post-racial” America...

Rev. David L. Ostendorf is the managing editor for Imagine 2050. Contributors to the Imagine 2050 include activists, immigrants, artists and students who are invested in a future nation that embraces multiculturalism and tolerance.

So Much for “Post-racial” America…

August 5, 2009
by Rev. David L. Ostendorf
www.imagine2050.net

Last November’s post-election euphoria led numerous pundits of all political stripes to acclaim the dawn of a new, “post-racial” America—a nation that had finally beat back its sordid racial history by electing an African American to the White House. The acclamation was ludicrous then; it is utterly unimaginable now. The vicious dogs of racism are being unabashedly unleashed in countless ways that make the Cambridge Gatesgate look like the normal, everyday profiling it was and is for men of color in America.

The inane “birthers” lead the pack here, fronting the organized racist movement’s yen for obliterating the 14th Amendment to the Constitution (birthright citizenship) in its frenzy for the President’s Hawaiian birth certificate. The obnoxious “tea bag” protesters, fueled by the hate-filled Swift boaters, follow closely behind, swiftly destroying any iota of “non-partisan” credibility they may have claimed as they disrupt and destroy town hall meetings on health care reform during the Congressional recess. The anti-immigrant movement is part and parcel of the pack as well, cloaked in faux shirt-and-tie respectability as it attempts to mainstream its racist, eugenics roots and its dreams of a white nationalist future—an America of, by, and for white people.

Continue article at http://imagine2050.newcomm.org/2009/08/05/so-much-for-%E2%80%9Cpost-racial%E2%80%9D-america%E2%80%A6/#more-2646

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Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Poll Shows Majority of Oregonians support Tax Increase

Looks like bad news for the opponents of Tax Measures passed by the Oregon State Legislature this year.

According to the Oregon Center for Public Policy (OCPP), "By more than a two-to-one margin Oregonians favor the legislature's recently enacted tax increases on corporations and the wealthy"

OCPP says that a poll showed that "if the election were held today, 62 percent of likely voters would vote "yes" to uphold the legislature's actions, compared to 26 percent voting "no," with 11 percent being unsure how they would vote."

For more details, read OCPP's news release New Poll Shows Most Oregonians Back Legislature’s Tax Measures. The poll results can be found by linking here, or visiting Oregon Center for Public Policy's website at www.ocpp.org.

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Saturday, August 1, 2009

Op-Ed: Minimum-wage workers in Oregon are better off

by Larry Kleinman

On July 24, the minimum hourly wage increased to $7.25.

For Oregonians who earn, who pay or who pay attention to the minimum wage, that's strange to hear. Isn't the hourly minimum in Oregon $8.40?

Explanation: The federal minimum wage increased last week — from $6.55 to $7.25.

Oregonians rarely think about the federal minimum wage because, in practice, it's had virtually no meaning here for two decades. With the exception of a three-month period in 1996, Oregon's minimum wage has consistently been higher than the federal minimum. (Workers are entitled to receive the higher of the two.)

Today, Oregon remains one of 13 states that have a minimum wage which is higher than the federal one. On July 23, the day before the latest federal increase, 30 states had minimum wage rates higher than the federal one.

In 1989, a broad-based coalition of unions, social service groups, churches and community organizations tired of waiting for Congress to give low-wage workers a raise. The federal minimum wage had been $3.35 since 1981. In "real" terms, accounting for inflation, the minimum wage workers' pay went down 30 percent during those eight years.

The coalition lobbied the 1989 Oregon Legislature to pass SB 335; it raised Oregon's minimum from $3.35 to $4.75 by 1991. The federal minimum wage didn't catch up until 1996.

Organized labor played a dominant role in passing SB 335. In 1996 and again in 2002, signature gathering, funded and championed principally by organized labor, put minimum wage increase initiatives on the ballot. By wide margins, voters approved both initiatives which have ushered in 10 increases … and counting. The 2002 measure instituting "indexing" — small annual increases based on a cost-of-living formula.

Meanwhile, in 1997, the federal hourly minimum stalled at $5.15. This time, it took Congress 10 years to approve increases. The third of three annual steps was the increase to $7.25 that took effect July 24, 2009.

Few, if any workers under union contracts in Oregon are paid the minimum wage. Organized labor's role in raising the minimum wage demonstrates a commitment to boosting standards for all workers, not just union members. Like the bumper sticker says: "The weekend: brought to you by the labor movement."

In this case, it's $45,000. That's how much an Oregon minimum worker, employed full-time during the past 20 years, has earned above the federal rate.

Economists debate the effects of a higher minimum wage. In lower-income communities such as Woodburn, where I live and work, higher wages mean more economic activity because workers tend to spend most of their income at local businesses. In communities such as ours, an average of $2,250 more income per worker per year is multiplied as it circulates around town.

I hope that Congress follows Oregon's example by indexing the federal minimum wage. And, better yet, add increases to actually catch up to Oregon's standard. That way, when we read or hear that the minimum wage is going up, we'd know that workers throughout the country have what we, today, take for granted.

Larry Kleinman of Woodburn is the secretary-treasurer of Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN), Oregon's farmworker union. He can be reached at larrykleinman@pcun.org.

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