More Oregonians are working multiple jobs, showing need for a stronger tax credit for workers
The earned income tax credit will help families, columnist Tyler Mac Innis argues. (Getty Images)
'No amount of budgeting right now is going to make up for the fact that we do not make enough to make a living,' says Ashley Salazar. She recently took on a second job, baking in the early hours of the morning before heading to a full-time job as a pharmacy technician.
Ashley's story, featured in a recent KATU report, is an all-too-familiar refrain, especially at a time when the cost of living is rising and tariffs are supercharging the trend. In Oregon, there are thousands of Ashleys.
That's why one of the best investments the Oregon legislature can make this session is to renew and expand the tax credit for working families, the Oregon Earned Income Tax Credit. It would give a boost to Ashley and hundreds of thousands of other hardworking families struggling to make ends meet.
'In 2024, 127,000 Oregonians held more than one job in addition to their primary job,' according to a recent report by the Oregon Employment Department. Six percent of Oregon workers worked multiple jobs last year.
Even for many getting by on a single job, Ashley's story should feel familiar. The cost of affording basic needs continues to rise. Compared to other states, Oregonians spend the 8th most on groceries, according to a recent LendingTree report. Electric bills have soared in recent years, as much as 56 percent since 2021. And of course, the cost of housing is ever rising. A minimum wage worker in Oregon would need to work 74 hours a week just to afford a one-bedroom apartment, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition.
There is much to do to stem the tide of rising costs. But one proposal before the Oregon Legislature this session would help workers struggling to get by.
House Bill 2958 would make much-needed improvements to Oregon's Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). The EITC is a refundable tax credit that boosts the after-tax income of workers. The federal version of the credit lifts 68,000 Oregonians, including 34,000 children, out of poverty each year. In turn, Oregon provides a match of the federal credit worth 9 percent for most families, and up to 12 percent for families with young children, putting additional cash into the pockets of hardworking families.
Without action this session, Oregon's match of the federal EITC will disappear, as the tax credit is scheduled to expire.
HB 2958 would not only renew Oregon's credit, but double the match available to eligible Oregonians. It would make Oregon's tax credit twice as impactful.
Moreover, it would expand eligibility to childless workers under age 25 and older than 65, who are currently barred from claiming the credit even if their income would otherwise qualify them. HB 2958 recognizes that neither youth nor old age protects against economic insecurity, and that workers of any age may struggle to pay the bills.
What kind of impact would HB 2958 have on a family? Consider what it would mean for a family with three kids living off the wages of a full-time minimum wage worker. Under HB 2958, their Oregon EITC would increase from about $840 to $1,750. That additional $910 may be enough to help a family confront a sudden crisis, like the need to make a car repair, or it might help them buy clothes and school supplies for the kids, or help them catch up on rent.
Few bills before the Oregon Legislature this session stand to directly boost the incomes of Oregon workers like doubling the EITC would. Ashley and thousands of workers like her are already working their tails off in a valiant effort to just meet their basic needs. Oregon can ease a bit of their load by strengthening the tax credit for working families.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
23 minutes ago
- New York Post
White House staffer went on a revenge tour against Elon Musk, fanning flames with Trump — while bragging about Tesla stock drop
WASHINGTON — A top White House aide is taking the blame for helping trigger President Trump's fiery clash with Elon Musk — after speaking for months about giving the billionaire 'payback' and even gloating to colleagues when Tesla's stock price dropped, The Post has learned. Sergio Gor, Trump's director of presidential personnel, was instrumental in the president's decision late Saturday to yank the nomination of Musk's personal friend Jared Isaacman to be NASA administrator, turning a contained disagreement on legislation into a firestorm of insults, four sources inside or close to the White House tell The Post. 5 Sergio Gor, director of the White House presidential personnel office, during a Kennedy Center Board dinner with US President Donald Trump in Washington, DC, on Monday, May 19, 2025. Bloomberg via Getty Images Isaacman's donations to Democrats — including $100,000 in 2021 to a PAC linked to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) — would disqualify most nominees under Gor's standard vetting process. But Isaacman wasn't pulled by Trump until hours after Musk left his unpaid White House role, at Gor's urging. Musk was Trump's top financial backer in the 2024 election and this week's clash has put the president's legislative agenda at risk — and even threatens long-term political damage after Musk endorsed Trump's potential impeachment. Musk and Gor disliked each other since before Trump reclaimed power on Jan. 20 — with the Tesla and SpaceX CEO describing Gor as 'sleazy' during the transition and questioning his staffing picks. But the world's richest man had the president's ear and friendship through last week. 5 Donald Trump and Elon Musk watch the launch of the sixth test flight of the SpaceX Starship rocket on November 19, 2024 in Brownsville, Texas. Getty Images Simmering behind the scenes was a grudge nursed by Gor over a March 6 cabinet meeting, during which Musk 'humiliated' him by slamming the pace of staffing the administration, said the four sources, each of whom have interacted closely with Gor. 'He was bragging to other people that he was going to get one last shot at Elon out the door. He was going to get Elon back for making him look bad,' said one source. 'Elon was always telling the president 'Sergio's not moving fast enough to hire people. He's not the right guy for the job.' In front of the entire cabinet he said that. It's not just humiliating, but the president starts looking at him like, 'Why aren't you doing your f—ing job?'' Another said: 'Sergio was upset about Elon dressing him down at the meeting and said he was going to 'get him'. [Isaacman's nomination being pulled] was the modern-day equivalent of the assassination of Franz Ferdinand. Sure, Sergio got a scalp, but what did POTUS get?' Three sources say Gor's intensely personal dislike of Musk was illustrated by his periodic celebrations when Tesla's stock cratered. One source said that they were present when Gor laughed with satisfaction while showing off the dips in Musk's wealth. 'He'd go around showing Tesla stock prices going down and laugh about it, like he was responsible for taking the Tesla stock down,' one White House source revealed. The other said they heard from Gor repeatedly when Tesla stock tumbled. 5 White House Senior Advisor to the President and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk departs the U.S. Capitol Building on March 5, 2025 in Washington, DC. Getty Images 5 President Donald Trump and Elon Musk attend a press conference in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 30, 2025 REUTERS Gor denied to The Post that he ever sought revenge against Musk and insisted that claims he openly rejoiced at Tesla stock falling were false. Steve Bannon, a Gor supporter, told The Post that he believes that the breakdown had nothing to do with the relatively obscure White House aide — citing months of disagreements, including Musk's dislike of Trump's tariffs, Trump's cancelation of a planned Pentagon briefing for Musk about China and the president not acting to extend Musk's 130-day tenure as a special government employee. 'It's the president and Elon. This has nothing to do with Sergio Gor. Sergio Gor is a staffer that the president has to do things,' Bannon argued. 'Did Elon have a problem with Sergio? Yes, the fact that we are not hiring enough — guess what? — liberal f–king progressive Democrats.' Bannon, who has pushing for Musk to be deported despite him being a naturalized American citizen since 2002, added claims that Gor was at the root of the clash were 'absolutely ludicrous' 'This is all about the behavior … the incompetence, the lack of performance, the drugs which President Trump is very upset about, all of it, of Elon Musk,' Bannon said. Although the White House was rife with tension for months with Musk and Gor 'hating each other,' the bad feeling never spiraled out of hand until Thursday, when Trump and Musk went at each other with personal attacks. Although Musk's criticisms of the 'Big, Beautiful Bill' gained significant attention, the president was chummy with the tech mogul on his last day in government May 30 — despite clips circulating for three days of the billionaire telling 'CBS Sunday Morning' that 'I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful but I don't know if it can be both.' As part of the send-off, Trump and Musk praised each other in the Oval Office, with the latter receiving an ornate key to the White House. Only after Isaacman's nomination was pulled Saturday night did the tit-for-tat build, with Musk calling the bill a 'disgusting abomination' Tuesday. The fight erupted further Thursday as Trump contended he would have won the election even without Musk's help and the businessman firing back that the Jeffrey Epstein files contain information on the president. 'The NASA guy was the straw that broke the camel's back,' one White House source said, arguing that Gor wanted 'to bury the knife in [Musk's] back.' 5 Elon Musk embraces Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump during a campaign rally at the Butler Farm Show fairgrounds on October 05, 2024 in Butler, Pennsylvania. Getty Images Musk is not the only White House figure to cross Gor, according to this source, who added that the personnel boss helped far-right activist Laura Loomer gain a meeting with Trump in the Oval Office, after which six National Security Council officials were fired — while national security adviser Mike Waltz was moved out to become ambassador to the United Nations. 'There's just one staffer that's in the middle of every drama, leak and chaos that exists. It's been a detriment to the president and the organization,' they said. 'We've bounced basically two billionaires from the party and from the movement, because Sergio doesn't like them. And what does that do for anyone, or the cause?' White House Communications Director Steven Cheung called Gor 'a vital member of the team and he has helped President Trump put together an administration that is second to none.' But one source close to the White House said that illumination of the roots of the Trump-Musk feud could help prevent potentially devastating political consequences for Republicans. 'I think it will help,' the insider said. 'If Elon understands that this was not the president that was going after him and that the president was played by Sergio, I think Elon might look at it as an opportunity to say, 'Ok, let's put this s— to bed. And this guy thinks he's going to get me? I'm going to get him.''


New York Post
24 minutes ago
- New York Post
Huge pro-Israel summit in Texas canceled over threats
A massive pro-Israel conference in Texas has been canceled over 'threats from violent Jihadists' — even after changing venues over security concerns, organizers said. The Israel Summit, scheduled for next Monday through Wednesday in Dallas, switched locations due to 'indirect and direct threats made by American, pro-Hamas, Jihadist groups, who issued calls to 'target' the Israel Summit,' the organizers said in a statement. But anti-Israel activists outed the new venue and planned to protest the event, according to Luke Hilton from the Israel Guys, which was co-hosting the event. 'This is America in 2025,' former US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, who was one of the slated speakers for the event, wrote on X. AFP via Getty Images 'Honestly, it feels like it's no longer safe for Jews and Christians who support Israel to publicly,' he said. He said law enforcement uncovered other threats on the dark web to 'target' the event — which was set to host some 1,000 attendees. 'After the two Israeli embassy staffers were murdered in Washington, DC, two weeks ago and then last week people were firebombed in Colorado, to me and to all the rest of us on our team, the word 'targeting' — that's a call to violence,' Hilton said. The three-day summit is run by pro-Israel Christian organizations and was expected to feature former US officials, members of the Israeli government and survivors of Hamas' Oct. 7 terror attack. Ten days before the Israel Summit was set to kick off, Dallas authorities said the threat level had been elevated, said Josiah Hilton, also of Israel Guys, according to Jewish New Syndicate. That forced the event's organizers to come up with 'a mandatory security plan with a substantial budget estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars,' leaving them to find a new location. They then found a 'new and significantly safer location just north of Dallas' with 'top-tier private security, with additional support from local law enforcement and coordination with the Texas governor's office.' But ultimately they had to cancel after the Palestinian Youth Movement Dallas outed the new spot as 'an isolated compound owned by staunch Israel ally evangelical televangelist Kenneth Copeland' under the campaign 'Texas un-welcomes the genocide summit.' 'This is America in 2025,' former US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman, who was one of the slated speakers for the event, wrote on X. He added: 'Law enforcement was completely cooperative but the threats were of a nature that required cancellation. When @POTUS says we need to take our country back, this is a good example of what he means!'
Yahoo
42 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Length of Service Award program may increase volunteer firefighter, EMT participation
A row of firefighters' helmets, coats, and boots in suspendered pants hang at the ready at a fire station. (Stock photo by Doug Wilson via Getty Images) Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds has signed into law a bill allowing municipalities to establish a Length of Service Award program for members of volunteer first-responder organizations. Under the provisions of House File 1002, municipalities that establish such a program can apply for matching state funding. The state funding will be awarded on a dollar-to-dollar basis for awards of up to $500 per person. Volunteer firefighters, volunteer emergency medical care providers, and emergency peace reserve officers are eligible for a Length of Service Award. 'It's more like we're unpaid firefighters and first-responders,' said Kent Brix, first vice president of Iowa Firefighters Association. 'We all go through the same training as professionals, we deal with the same situations as professionals. It's just that small communities can't afford to hire people full-time.' According to Brix, volunteer participation is a major problem, with most volunteer departments down five to six people. Across the state, he estimates, 100 to 150 people are dropping out of volunteer first-responder programs each year. Many of the volunteers are age 50 to 70 — and sometimes older. Low volunteer rates mean that some communities are very short on people to respond to emergency calls. Brix believes that by providing an incentive for volunteers, it will increase participation in the programs. 'It takes so much of your time with all the training required by the state and new rules,' said Keith McDavid, a former Pleasantville volunteer firefighter of 33 years. 'It's a lot of time and effort. And the amount of time a volunteer puts in is crazy sometimes, especially if you become a volunteer EMT.' When McDavid became a volunteer, the fire and rescue teams in Pleasantville were separate with around 20 members each. Now both teams have been combined with only a total of only to 15 to 20 members. He also noted that participation on an individual basis is diminished, with many members unable to put in as much time. The result is a reduction in capability to address emergency situations in a timely manner. McDavid said he was never personally interested in a monetary reward, but notes that one of the biggest issues for volunteers is the cost of equipment. During his time in the service, his team would buy used firetrucks through eBay and refurbish them with the assistance of members who had experience as mechanics. Brix said that affording firetrucks, buildings and equipment is a major issue for organizations. Volunteer fire organizations get a certain amount of tax money from their community, he said, and they hold around two to three fundraisers each year, but even then it's a 'constant money chase.' 'It's something to protect a person's life, so it's not cheap,' Brix said. 'We always have different equipment we have to have to protect ourselves and protect our communities.' Reynolds also signed House File 969 on Friday, a bill dealing with cancer coverage for firefighters. The bill expands the definition of cancer for the Peace Officers' and 411 Retirement Systems so that it covers all forms of cancer.