Archives

May 8, 2019 - Oregon no longer most-stoned workforce

By Oregon Small Business Association, Oregon’s workforce is no longer the country’s most stoned, but is still got higher than in 2017. The Quest Diagnostics Drug Testing Index™, a comprehensive analysis of workforce drug use trends released April 11, 2019, shows Oregon at number 2, behind Maine.


May 7, 2019 - DOL proposes new rules on overtime

By J. Kent Pearson, Jr. Bullard Law Oregon based law firm The federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) generally requires subject employers to pay non-exempt employees overtime at a rate not less than one and one-half times the employees’ “regular rate” of pay for hours worked in excess of 40 […]


May 6, 2019 - Oregon AG: Privacy rules for internet home devices

Oregon Attorney General, Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum testified before the Oregon Senate Judiciary Committee in support of HB 2395, which aims to better protect individual Oregonians’ privacy and personal internet-connected devices from cyberattack. The protections in the bill require manufacturers to provide reasonable security for the “Internet of Things” […]


May 3, 2019 - US Chamber on Trump-Pelosi infrastructure plan

By U.S. Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Thomas J. Donohue issued the following statement today in response to the White House meeting with Speaker Pelosi and Senator Schumer on infrastructure legislation.


May 2, 2019 - Wyden: Stopping algorithm discrimination

Oregon Senator Ron Wyden, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and Rep. Yvette D. Clarke, D-N.Y., introduced the Algorithmic Accountability Act, which requires companies to study and fix flawed computer algorithms that result in inaccurate, unfair, biased or discriminatory decisions impacting Americans. “Computers are increasingly involved in the […]


May 1, 2019 - NIKE wouldn’t have survived if $2B Tax was law

By Oregon Small Business Association, The $2 billion business sales tax (HB 3427) proposed by lawmakers would have made it impossible for companies like NIKE to exist if the law was in effect back in the 1960s and 1970s. The same might have been true for other Oregon success stories […]


April 30, 2019 - DeFazio unveils bipartisan infrastructure act

Congressman Peter DeFazio, Today, Chair of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Peter DeFazio (OR-04), introduced H.R. 2396 the Full Utilization of the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund Act, which would unlock billions in already-collected fees to maintain our nation’s federal ports and harbors. Currently, the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund […]


April 30, 2019 - 6 problems of a gross receipts tax

By Oregon Restaurant and Lodging Association, As representatives of Oregon’s leading private-sector employers, we recognize that the Legislature intends to pass significant new taxes this year, most of which will fall on Oregon’s businesses, small and large. As we consider tax proposals, our organizations will be guided by the following […]


April 29, 2019 - Court hears Title VII Gay and Transgender worker case

By Naomi D. Johnson & Benjamin P. O’Glasser Bullard Law NW Law Firm The U.S. Supreme Court announced its intent to decide whether gay and transgender employees can assert claims against employers for alleged discrimination on the basis of “sex.” The Court has agreed to hear Bostock v. Clayton County, […]


April 26, 2019 - Washington State’s Privacy Acts fails

By Rachel R. Marmor Davis, Wright, Tremaine LLP Despite support from the technology industry and almost unanimous support in the state Senate, the Washington Privacy Act (SB 5367) appears to dead after it failed to pass the Washington House before the April 17 deadline for the current legislative session. The […]