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Against the Odds Rural Oregon Fought and Won

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By Samantha Bayer,
Oregon Property Owners Association [6],

Despite a Legislature dominated by a progressive supermajority and policy committees stacked against us, the Oregon Property Owners Association is proud to announce a series of victories for Oregon’s property owners. These weren’t just procedural wins, they were hard-fought triumphs for common sense, property rights, and the dignity of rural Oregonians who are too often overlooked in Salem’s policymaking.

Let’s be clear: this session was never supposed to go our way. The odds were steep. The institutional momentum favored regulatory expansion, tighter land use restrictions, and more statewide control. But rural Oregon showed up, stood firm, and spoke louder than the activists and bureaucrats. Because of that, OPOA didn’t just hold the line— we advanced it.

Passed SB 83 To Repeal the Wildfire Hazard Map

At the heart of this session’s victories was SB 83 [7], a bill that repeals the controversial state wildfire hazard map and its far-reaching mandates on defensible space and home hardening.

This was a major victory for rural communities who demanded respect for their land, their lives, and their liberty. The bill not only repeals the map, but strikes the burdensome statewide defensible space and home hardening mandates that came with it. At the same time, it keeps targeted funding for wildfire mitigation and returns power to local communities to make regulatory decisions based on their unique landscapes and realities.

This is what rural resilience looks like. Since 2021, OPOA fought shoulder to shoulder with landowners who refused to be scapegoats for the state and federal government’s mismanagement of our forests. And we won – finally!

 

Defended the Right to Live and Work Outside of Town

Rural living was under siege this Session from land preservation and environmental advocates who pushed for a series of bills that threatened the right to live, work, and thrive in rural Oregon. SB 79, 78, 77, and 73 [8] were all introduced as committee bills in the Senate Wildfire and Natural Resources Committee.

While those who supported these bills claimed they were intended to “close loopholes” in our planning system, these bills stood as shocking and direct threats to our rural communities and private property rights. Each of these bills would have put new restrictions on building and replacing homes, rezoning land, and running at-home businesses.

Because of strong grassroots pushback from rural Oregon, OPOA’s team was able to kill every single on of these bills in committee before they could even make it to the floor!

 

Tackled the Housing Crisis with Common Sense Solutions

In partnership with the Oregon Home Builders Association, OPOA helped pass SB 974 [9], a landmark win for smart, streamlined urban housing development. It’s a nod to our commitment not just to rural Oregon, but to the future of the entire state.

SB 974 breaks through red tape and helps bring shovel-ready projects to life faster by: (1) Establishing a 120-day “shot clock” for reviewing final engineering plans; (2) Expediting “upzoning” on land already planned or zoned for residential use inside the urban growth boundary; and (3) Eliminating certain aesthetic standards from the design review process, prohibiting bureaucrats from arbitrarily delaying construction and forcing every house to look the same.

 

The Full 2025 Session Recap

Now, take a moment to scroll through the full list of accomplishments below and recognize how much was achieved in one session. In a political environment stacked in the other direction, OPOA and our partners still managed to:

Bills Passed

Bills Made Better

Bills Killed

 

Support The Oregon Property Owners Association

This momentum is yours, rural Oregon. We will carry it forward into the next session with even more energy, more unity, and more resolve. Your voices, your stories, and your support were the fuel behind these wins— and we’ll need even more of it moving forward.

The Oregon Property Owners Association is a political advocacy organization that represents private property owners in the Legislature and its PAC makes contributions to candidates that support private property rights. The Oregon Property Owners Association is a 501(c)(4) non-profit social welfare organization.

If you want to support OPOA’s government affairs team and support expanding our efforts, please consider making a donation to OPOA below. If you want to support pro-private property rights candidates, please consider making a donation to our PAC below!