Oregon Ballot Measure 57 (2008)
From Ballotpedia
Contents |
Oregon Ballot Measure 57 (2008) or Senate Bill (SB) 1087 was a legislatively-referred state statute that increased term of imprisonment for persons convicted of specified drug and property crimes under certain circumstances. The measure enacted law which prohibits courts from imposing less than a presumptive sentence for persons convicted of specified drug and property crimes under certain circumstances, and requires the Department of Corrections to provide treatment to certain offenders and to administer grant program to provide supplemental funding to local governments for certain purposes.[1]
2008 election results
See also 2008 ballot measure election results
These election results are based on the Oregon Elections Division.[2]
| Ballot Measure 57 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes or no | Votes | Percentage | ||
| | 1,058,955 | 61.38% | ||
| No | 665,942 | 38.62% | ||
| Total votes | 1,724,897 | 100% | ||
Official Ballot Title
Increases Sentences For Drug Trafficking, Theft Against Elderly And Specified Repeat Property And Identity Theft Crimes; Requires Addiction Treatment For Certain Offenders[3]
Background
Competing ballot measures
A similar measure, (Oregon Ballot Measure 61 (2008), proposed by Kevin Mannix, was also approved for the November election.
The main differences were:
1) Measure 61 has mandatory prison time for some first time felony offenders, while SB 1087 only does so for repeat offenders
2) SB 1087 significantly increases funding for drug treatment programs, while Measure 61 provides none.
3) Measure 61 will cost $250-$400 million per two year budget cycle, while SB 1087 would only cost $140 million.[4]
If both measures pass, the one with the most votes will go into effect.[5]
An increase in prison inmates since 1994
In 1994, Measure 11, an earlier initiative proposed by Kevin Mannix, was passed, which set mandatory minimum sentences for violent crimes. It is responsible for 28% of today's prison population. Oregon uses the highest percentage of its state budget to lock up criminals and supervise parole of any state. Oregon has seen a growth in prison inmates from about 4,000 to more than 13,500.
If SB 1087 or the initiative proposed by Mannix, is passed, Oregon's prison population and percentage of state budget will become more pronounced. However, Oregon has seen an even greater drop in violent crime than the rest of the country on average since Measure 11 passed.[6]
Support
Supporters include:
- Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, who said the legislative measure was widely supported by prosecutors, police and jail officials who know a lot more about fighting crime than Mannix.[5]
- Measure 57 or The Better Way to Fight Crime Committee, which was a broad coalition of police officers, police chiefs, sheriffs, district attorneys, business leaders, teachers, parents, advocates for children and seniors and many more.
- Oregon Council of Police Associations
- Oregon Police Chiefs for Safer Communities
- Oregon Assoc. of Community Corrections Directors
- Federation of Oregon Parole and Probation Officers
- Juvenile Parole Officers – AFSCME Council 75
- AFSCME Corrections United
- Association of Oregon Corrections Employees
- Oregon Attorney General, Hardy Myers
- Nominee, Oregon Attorney General, John Kroger
- AARP Oregon
- Stand for Children
- National Association of Social Workers-Oregon Chapter
- SEIU, Local 503, representing front-line workers at the Oregon Youth Authority, & 45,000 other workers
- Oregon Prevention Education and Recovery Association
- Oregon Business Association
- Oregon Education Association
- Save Oregon Seniors
- Oregon State Council for Retired Citizens
- Advocacy Coalition for Seniors & People with Disabilities
- Oregon Alliance for Retired Americans
- Rob Ingram, long-time youth advocate—Portland
- Partnership for Safety & Justice
- Former Supreme Court Justice Betty Roberts
- Elders in Action Commission
- United Way of the Mid-Willamette Valley
- Ainsworth United Church of Christ, Justice Commission
- Community Action Relationship of Oregon
- Community Alliance of Tenants
- Community Providers Association of Oregon
- Human Services Coalition of Oregon (HSCO)
- Multnomah County Democrats
- Northwest Oregon Labor Council
- One Voice for Child Care
- Oregon AFL-CIO
- Oregon Consumer League
- Oregon Health Action Campaign
- Oregon Nurses Association
- Rural Organizing Project
- SEIU Local 49
- Association of Oregon Counties
- SHERIFFS:
Sheriff Southwick, Baker County
Sheriff Diana Simpson – Benton County
Sheriff Craig Roberts – Clackamas County
Sheriff Tom Bergin – Clatsop County
Sheriff Dennis Dotson – Lincoln County
Sheriff Bob Skipper – Multnomah County
Sheriff Todd Anderson – Tillamook County
Sheriff John Trumbo – Umatilla County
Sheriff Rasmussen, Union County
Sheriff Jack Crabtree – Yamhill County
- DISTRICT ATTORNEYS:
Matt Shirtcliff, Baker
John S. Foote, Clackamas
Joshua Marquis, Clatsop
Steve Atchison, Columbia
R. Paul Frasier, Coos
Everett Dial, Curry
Michael T. Dugan, Deschutes
Timothy J. Colahan, Harney
Marion Weatherford, Gilliam
Ryan Joslin, Grant
Edwin I. Caleb, Klamath
Mark Huddleston, Jackson
Peter Deuel, Jefferson
Stephen Campbell, Josephine
David Schutt, Lake
Bernice Barnett, Lincoln
Jason Carlile, Linn
Walt Beglau, Marion
Elizabeth Ballard, Morrow
Michael D. Schrunk, Multnomah
John Fisher, Polk
Wade M. McLeod, Sherman
William Porter, Tillamook
Dean F. Gushwa, Umatilla
Mona K. Williams, Wallowa
Eric Nisley, Wasco
Bob Hermann, Washington
Brad Berry, Yamhill
- COUNTY COMMISSIONERS:
Commissioner Annabelle Jaramillo, Benton County
Commissioner Jay Dixon, Benton County
Commissioner Don Lindly, Lincoln County
Commissioner Mary Stern, Yamhill County
- CITY COUNCIL:
City Councilor Betty Boche, Beaverton
City Councilor Denny Doyle, Beaverton
City Councilor Doug Pugsley, Dundee
Mayor Robert Austin, Estacada
Mayor Julie Hammerstad, Lake Oswego
Councilor Deborah Barnes, Milwaukee City
Mayor Cheri Olson, North Plains
A full list of supporters is available at the campaign website [1].
Opposition
Kevin Mannix [2] continues to promote his Measure 61. “Either way, we make progress,” Mannix says. “I win some if [Measure] 57 passes, and the people win more if 61 passes.” [3]
Loren Parks [4] "With the financial help of Nevada medical-device millionaire Loren Parks, Mannix easily gathered 149,000 signatures to place Measure 61 on the ballot." [5]
Oregon Anti-Crime Alliance: The Oregon Anti-Crime Alliance is a new organization that brings together citizens with a mission of reducing crime in Oregon through reforms affecting prevention, investigation, prosecution, the courts, indigent defense, accountability, transition programs out of prison, prison work, treatment and rehabilitation.
Some Republicans attacked the measure for being "soft-on-crime". Kevin Mannix continues to promote his "tough-on-crime" initiative while pointing out the weaknesses of the competing measure. "We shouldn't be patsies and let drug dealers and identity thieves and burglars get a free pass on their first convictions, which is what they get on the legislative referral", he said. [5]
For a citizen-initiated measure in Oregon, the ballot title is determined by the state's Attorney General. In the case of this measure, the legislature chose to supplant this process by inserting its own title.[7],[8]
External links
- Better Way to Fight Crime Committee Yes on Measure 57
- Published in West Linn Tidings I urge you to support Measure 57
- 2008 General Election Measures: Voter Guide
- StatesmanJournal.com: "Kroger backs alternative to crime measure", July 17, 2008
- "Either anti-crime measure will cost over $1 billion, state says", Oregons Against Measure 11
References
- ↑ Official Summary of SB 1087
- ↑ Oregon Elections Division, 2008 Election Results
- ↑ Detailed information on SB1087 from the Secretary of State
- ↑ LaneBus.org: "Measure 40, SB 1087, Education and the Economy", Lane County Bus Project, February 14, 2008
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 OregonLive.com "Mannix's tough-on-crime measure will be on Oregon ballot", The Oregonian, April 11, 2008
- ↑ Prisons Lock in a Chunk of Budget from The Oregonian
- ↑ Developing hard, Democrats avoiding review process again! Ted Piccolo, February 16, 2008
- ↑ Salem Democrats to give Republicans the perfect issue
See also
- Oregon Ballot Measure 61 (2008)
- Oregon 2008 ballot measures
- List of Oregon ballot measures
- Procedures for qualifying an initiative in Oregon
- Laws governing the initiative process in Oregon

