『Oregon's Economy Grows 1% in 2025 as Housing Reforms and Drought Challenges Reshape State』のカバーアート

Oregon's Economy Grows 1% in 2025 as Housing Reforms and Drought Challenges Reshape State

Oregon's Economy Grows 1% in 2025 as Housing Reforms and Drought Challenges Reshape State

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Oregon's economy grew modestly at 1 percent in 2025, lagging behind the national rate of 2.1 percent, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis as reported by Oregon Business and Industry. Labor force participation edged up to 62.9 percent from the prior year, offering a small bright spot amid slower growth. In politics, the 2026 legislative session wrapped up in early March with key housing reforms. Governor Tina Kotek signed Senate Bill 1521, fixing flaws in inclusionary zoning that had stalled development since Portland's 2016 policy, effective for rentals in 2028. House Bill 4037's Section 17 streamlines approvals for housing projects meeting clear standards, eliminating third-party appeals and boosting production, as noted by land use expert Ezra Hammer in the Rental Housing Journal. Other bills like HB 4035 and HB 4036 await signatures to expand urban growth boundaries and preserve existing affordable units.

Communities face drought challenges, with six more counties—Crook, Grant, Jackson, Jefferson, Morrow, and Wallowa—declaring emergencies due to record-low snowpack from the warmest winter on record, tying 1934, per the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. This heightens wildfire risks and strains water supplies, joining three earlier declarations. On lending, House Bill 4116 opts Oregon out of federal rules allowing cross-state interest rate exports, aiming to curb predatory loans but potentially shrinking credit access for vulnerable families, according to the Independent Women's Forum.

Education and infrastructure see steady progress, though prevailing wage disputes blocked Senate Bill 566, adding up to 30 percent to costs and halting projects, per Hammer. Recycling rules under the Plastic Pollution and Recycling Modernization Act are being clarified by the Department of Environmental Quality.

Looking Ahead: Watch for governor signatures on pending housing bills by June, BOLI prevailing wage negotiations in the next long session, and drought impacts on summer wildfires.

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