Our 2025 legislative agenda

As we face an uncertain economy and extreme weather, one thing remains true: Oregon has a strong track record of taking action to advance climate justice. This session, we have an opportunity to build on this momentum and strengthen the resilience of Oregon families.

Climate change is hitting our communities hard with extreme heat, high energy bills, and dirty air. But not everyone faces the same burden. People with disabilities, rural families, people of color, and working folks are getting hit the hardest. If we don’t put these communities first in our solutions, they'll fall even further behind.

As we build an affordable clean energy future that centers most impacted communities, we know that the challenges are connected, and so are the solutions.

Our main priorities

  • Energy Justice

    Oregonians need healthy, affordable homes that run on clean energy. We’ll get there by lowering utility bills, limiting what corporate utility expenses can be passed on to customers, and making it easier for us to access energy efficiency upgrades and rebates. Three bills advance energy justice by putting people over profit to ensure clean, affordable energy for all, regardless of income or race.

  • Transportation Justice

    As Oregon plans to fund our transportation system, every dollar must deliver on climate and air quality goals. When frontline communities don’t have safe streets and sustainable transportation, we suffer from pollution, poor health, and less economic opportunity. We can’t afford the status quo. We need a system that is safe, equitable, sustainable, and affordable for the long term.

Funding for Community Resilience Hubs (HB 3170)

Community Resilience Hubs are trusted places that activate before, during, and after wildfires, extreme weather, and other natural disasters. Each community designs its hub to reflect what they need, whether that’s basic medical supplies, communication equipment, emergency planning, or training.

In 2023, OJTA and a coalition of over 50 community groups secured $10 million for the bipartisan Resilience Hubs and Networks grant program. Because of extreme need, it only funded 69 out of over 700 applications, leaving $173 million worth of resilience projects without support.

HB 3170 requests an additional $10 million to fund a second round of the grant program. This investment in communities will provide the resources and connections needed to make it easier for Oregonians across the state to withstand disaster.

OJTA also endorses these policy solutions for resilient communities:

Other budget priorities

Our budget priorities are programs that increase resilience in low-income communities of color and have not been allocated funding this year:

Community Renewable Energy Program (bill number coming soon)

Community Heat Pump Program (SB 5518)

Rental Heat Pump Program (SB 5518)

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