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Oregon bill aims to curb rent price hikes, prohibit AI price-fixing

Oregon bill aims to curb rent price hikes, prohibit AI price-fixing

Yahoo20-03-2025
PORTLAND, Ore. () — Lawmakers in Salem are hearing testimony on a bill that would amend Oregon's rent increase law once again. Originally passed in 2019, changes to lower the rent cap were greenlit in 2023. However, renters say loopholes are driving prices up, leaving tenants without a place to live.
'I had no idea it was going to be so much, it was quite shocking. I immediately knew that I wouldn't be able to live there anymore,' said Judiaan Woo, one of the renters who joined the Community Alliance of Tenants advocating for the reforms proposed in .
The bill aims to reduce the number of buildings exempt from rent increase limitations and it would ban the use of AI .
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Woo is a mother and business owner. She said that because her Tigard apartment complex was built recently, property management was able to bypass the state's rent control law and raise her rent by nearly 15% in December. That's an increase of roughly $7,000 for the year.
'I believe in building, and I believe in providing new housing opportunities, but there should be a middle ground where people have some protections and some regulation. I don't feel like people should be able to just jack up the rent to anything they want,' said Woo, who was joined by several other tenants testifying in support of the bill at the Oregon State Capitol.
Advocates for investors and landlords also testified against the bill, arguing the change could deter much-needed development at a time when cities across the state are declaring housing emergencies.
'Developers must recoup their investments, and without a sufficient exemption period, they will be forced to have higher initial rents to recover costs more quickly,' said Multifamily NW Director of Public Affairs Zach Lindahl.
If passed, SB 722 would keep the current rent cap of 7% plus inflation or 10%. However, the bill would reduce the new build construction exemption from 15 years down to 7.
Those opposing SB 722 also argued the AI tools do not guarantee artificial rent inflation and that removing them would deter out-of-state investment and development.
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'Our office responds to frantic calls from tenants every day at risk of eviction and displacement because of rent increases,' said Oregon Law Center Director of Legislative Advocacy Sybil Hebb.
Hebb said the state saw an increase of more than 2,000 eviction filings every month last year, with more than 80% due to rent unaffordability.
'By reducing the new exemption, we'll cover an additional 40,000 units, which is approximately 80,000-100,000 Oregonians, meaning more families will have that greater stability, which is of such great importance right now in this housing crisis and this homelessness crisis,' Hebb said.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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The controversy over Canada's rules on military exports to Israel, explained
The controversy over Canada's rules on military exports to Israel, explained

Yahoo

time10-08-2025

  • Yahoo

The controversy over Canada's rules on military exports to Israel, explained

OTTAWA — A Canadian senator is calling on Ottawa to be more transparent on its policy to restrict arms exports to Israel, following contradictory reports about what manufacturers have been allowed to send to the Middle East. "I'm horrified to hear this news about certain arms exports and parts going to Israel, directly or indirectly," Sen. Yuen Pau Woo said in an interview with The Canadian Press. "Civilians are being killed and starved, and the Israeli government has only made things worse." Ottawa insists it hasn't been allowing exports of lethal weapons to Israel and has been blocking any military goods that could be used in Gaza. Here's a look at what we know — and don't know — about Ottawa's efforts to keep Canadian weapons out of Gaza while allowing Israel to import military goods for other purposes. What is Canada holding back from Israel? In March 2024, Parliament voted in favour of a non-binding motion to halt new arms permits for Israel. The government announced a review of export permits and suspended about 30 of them to determine whether they involved lethal uses. Ottawa has allowed all other military export permits for Israel to continue. There were 164 such permits used to export military goods to Israel in 2024, and some of them are valid for years. Of the 30 suspended permits, some have expired and the rest remain suspended, says Global Affairs Canada. In March 2024, the office of then-foreign affairs minister Mélanie Joly said that none of the valid permits allowed for the export of "lethal goods" to Israel, such as weapons technology and equipment. Her office also said Canada stopped approving permits for Israel on Jan. 8, 2024, citing human rights concerns. While Israel's foreign minister suggested at the time the decision would undermine Israel's ability to defend itself, Israeli Ambassador Iddo Moed said "we will be able to continue to defend ourselves." What is Canada still allowing into Israel? Ottawa has said its restrictions exclude "non-lethal" equipment. The government provided Parliament with a list of all existing permits in June 2024. The list mentions circuit boards well over a hundred times. In September 2024, after the U.S. State Department approved the purchase of mortar cartridges made in Quebec for Israel, Joly said Canadian-made weapons were prohibited from reaching the Gaza Strip. "We will not have any form of arms or parts of arms be sent to Gaza, period," Joly said at the time. "How they're being sent and where they're being sent is irrelevant." Anand said in an Aug. 1 statement that this pledge actually goes back to January 2024. Groups like Project Ploughshares argue the term "non-lethal" is poorly defined and misleading. Activists say Israel can use Canadian-made components such as lenses and cameras in the Gaza war and in military campaigns in the West Bank, despite Ottawa saying Israel is violating international law in both theatres. What does Israeli customs data say? In late July, pro-Palestinian activists reported that the Israel Tax Authority had listed publicly imports from Canada that were officially recorded in customs data as bullets, guns and other weapons. The data suggested 175,000 bullets were sent from Canada to Israel under the customs code that Israel uses for "munitions of war and parts thereof," with three similar shipments in 2024. Israeli customs agents recorded another Canadian shipment in the category of "tanks and other armoured fighting vehicles, motorized, whether or not fitted with weapons, and parts of such vehicles." It took the Canadian government three days to respond to the claims. Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand's office said it took the time "to verify if any of the serious allegations of wrongdoing were true.' In her reply, Anand said the report was flawed and its findings "are misleading and significantly misrepresent the facts." The bullets were "paintball-style projectiles" that cannot be used in combat, Anand's office said. Sen. Woo called that explanation trivializing and suggested Israel is likely using those materials to train its soldiers. Woo was among 32 senators — a third of the Senate — who called for a thorough investigation into what's reaching Israel from Canada. He called Anand's statement "very limited, slippery and highly defensive." "She missed an opportunity to grasp the gravity of the situation in Gaza," he said. What about aircraft? Advocates argue Canadian components are being used in Israeli fighter jets and drones, citing exports of items such as circuit boards and scopes or cameras. The July report noted that specific companies in Israel receiving Canadian imports have also been equipping Israel's offensive in Gaza. The report pointed to no direct, explicit evidence that Canadian arms had been used on the ground in Gaza. Ottawa insists it is doing everything it can to ensure Canadian components aren't used in Gaza. What about that parliamentary report? On Aug. 4, the Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council released a report assembled by the Library of Parliament that it said disproves much of what the government has claimed. The July 8 report is marked "not to be published" and the Library of Parliament said in a statement that it "provides impartial customized research services for individual parliamentarians," on the basis that the "client's research request (will) remain confidential." The government says the report is a rehash of publicly available information that doesn't contradict what the government has said publicly. Advocates seized on the portion of the report showing two arms permits to send goods to Israel were issued in 2024. Anand's office noted the permits were disclosed to Parliament last June and were issued on Jan. 8, 2024, the day Ottawa stopped issuing new permits. The advocates also noted that the report cited $2.3 million in Canadian sales to Israel listed as "bombs, torpedoes, rockets, missiles, other explosive devices and charges and related accessories, components and equipment." Anand's spokesman James Fitz-Morris wrote that these were "electronic components for detection equipment" in Israel's Iron Dome system, which intercepts and destroys incoming rockets. Did Carney change the Trudeau government's policy? While the government insists it hasn't changed policies, its language has shifted. Joly and her office spoke about non-lethal uses for arms. Anand has avoided that language. "For a year and a half, we have been clear: if an export permit for an item used to protect civilians is requested, it will be approved," her office wrote in a statement this week. "Canada has not approved the export of any lethal weapons or munitions to Israel since January 2024, and any such permit that could have allowed such items were suspended and remains inactive today." Woo said Anand is "prevaricating, with the shift in language and … an effort to try to be legalistic about the government's adherence to its own promise." Fitz-Morris wrote that it would be "a disingenuous claim, at best" to suggest Ottawa's language has been shifting. "The government's position has not changed. Minister Anand is not reading from a script. She uses different words sometimes to convey the same message or to add clarity, depending on the circumstances and what she is responding to," he wrote. "The only permits that may be granted are for the items used to defend civilians, such as the Iron Dome, and items that are transiting through Israel as part of the global supply chain such as items (whose) end-users include Canada and/or NATO allies." Why not end all arms exports to Israel? The government says it would compromise the complex supply chains that Canada and its allies rely on if Canada refused to export military goods to Israel, or to import them from that country. "Any consideration of a two-way arms embargo that would block Israeli-made components from entering Canada would need to take into consideration the impact that would have on Canada, including the (Canadian Armed Forces)," Fitz-Morris wrote. Sen. Woo said Anand should halt all military trade with Israel. "She's digging a deeper hole for herself and for our government, particularly if there are in fact legal consequences around complicity, aiding and abetting war crimes," he said. "We are witnessing, in the memorable words of Amnesty International, a live-streamed genocide. It's tearing at our souls." Israel says it's in an existential war of self-defence and blames Hamas for the high casualty count. What do Canadians want? In an online survey of 1,522 Canadians conducted by the Angus Reid Institute from July 31 to Aug. 5, 54 per cent said they want Ottawa to ensure Canada is not selling lethal military equipment to Israel. One-fifth of respondents said they want the restrictions dropped. Another 27 per cent said they were unsure or opted not to respond. Is the government being transparent? "The Government of Canada tables regular reports concerning arms exports and has provided thousands of pages of documentation to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs — which the committee then published to its website," Fitz-Morris wrote. That's not good enough, Woo said. "To play with words, when a genocide is happening before our very eyes … it's scandalous," he said. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 10, 2025. Dylan Robertson, The Canadian Press Sign in to access your portfolio

Kotek signs ‘middle housing' bills in Hillsboro ceremony
Kotek signs ‘middle housing' bills in Hillsboro ceremony

Yahoo

time31-07-2025

  • Yahoo

Kotek signs ‘middle housing' bills in Hillsboro ceremony

HILLSBORO, Ore. (KOIN) — In her bid to get more affordable built in Oregon, Gov. Tina Kotek on Monday signed several bills into law to do just that. At a ceremony in Hillsboro, the governor signed those bills that make it easier for developers and non-profit organizations to build this type of housing, expanding state laws to build more , often in existing neighborhoods. 'We know that too many Oregon families are struggling with the cost of living and are being forced to make really impossible choices: staying in the communities they love or where they work or their kids go to school,' Kotek said, 'or trying to find a place they can afford. We want them to not have to make those choices.' Portland extends paid parking hours in Central Eastside, but more changes on the way The governor has a goal of building 36,000 new homes a year. 'When Oregonians can not afford to live where they work or can not find housing options that align with their needs, our economy suffers and employers lose potential hires,'Kotek said. 'Basic services face chronic workforce shortages, and new industries in our state struggle to get off the ground. As you all know, the state has not produced enough housing at the right price points to match Oregon's needs.' is building more of those affordable-type homes. Concrete was poured on Monday at a site in the . In Hillsboro, other projects are taking shape. There are 18 family homes, each with 3 or 4 bedrooms, that are expected to be ready by fall for low- to moderate-income families to move in — but those are already taken. They're aimed at households making $40,000 to $50,000 a year But some communities are not onboard with building multi-plexes, especially in longtime single-family home neighborhoods. The governor heard the concerns but doesn't think property values would be affected. 'If you look around today, Habitat for Humanity has built homes that are for all kinds of different households that fit into the neighborhood,' the governor said. 'I don't think it's going to affect the property value. In fact, more people are going to live in this community. And when this is a vibrant community that increases, that increases everyone's property values. And I think that's what we're going to see.' A new homeowner in Bend shared his family's neighborhood experience as a first-time homebuyer getting help from a non-profit called Rooted Homes. 'I often hear fears that affordable housing automatically means the neighborhood will change in dramatic and unpredictable ways. But my experience has been the complete opposite. The families that have been living near a vacant lot for over a decade were curious and kind people who are supportive of our affordable development,' he said. 'And after my experience at Rooted Homes, I was rejuvenated, enjoying their board for four years and after all those years, talking with family after family, that is served by funding and legislation, like Gov. Kotek saying today, I only met people who are excited to fully join those communities.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword

Elavon and Woo Expand Payments Partnership to North America
Elavon and Woo Expand Payments Partnership to North America

Business Wire

time28-07-2025

  • Business Wire

Elavon and Woo Expand Payments Partnership to North America

ATLANTA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Elavon, a global payments leader, and WooCommerce, the ecommerce platform powering more than four million online stores globally, are expanding their successful European payments partnership across the Atlantic to North America. Installing the free-to-download Elavon extension from the WooCommerce Marketplace gives merchants instant access to Elavon's proven payment services, helping micro, small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) rapidly grow into additional markets. With a loyal base of more than two million users and a 4.3 Trustpilot customer satisfaction rating in North America, Elavon makes it simple for merchants to scale online. It will directly manage all merchants using the extension, meaning it can offer SMBs in the United States and Canada more value-added services as their businesses grow. Elavon's focus on integrating payments into software brings together a full suite of services for ecommerce platforms and independent software vendors (ISVs) to offer their clients. Elavon Payment Gateway can quickly integrate ecommerce platforms and ISVs to bring secure, fast and compliant payments wherever they are needed. For the last 12 months, Elavon and Woo have delivered secure and speedy online payments for small and medium-sized businesses in Europe. The new deal means merchants in North America join millions of Woo sellers across Europe who are able to access Elavon's reliable, flexible payment solution. Eva Paredes, Head of SMB, UK and Ireland at Elavon remarked, "Having proven the effectiveness of our payment services with WooCommerce merchants across Europe, we're excited to expand our partnership to support Woo customers throughout North America. With millions of online stores powered by Woo, this move enables us to help even more small and medium-sized businesses grow and thrive.' Pari Sawant, Chief Product Officer for Elavon, echoed this view: 'This agreement underscores the strength of our secure, reliable, and flexible payment solutions—designed to lower barriers and simplify operations. It reaffirms Elavon's position as a trusted global payments partner, committed to empowering merchants of all sizes with seamless integration and streamlined administration." 'After seeing the strong positive sentiment towards Elavon's payment processing in Europe, we're excited to extend this partnership and powerful solution to Woo customers across North America,' offered Web Griebel, Global Head of Payments at Woo. 'This expansion reflects our continued commitment to collaborating with trusted partners like Elavon to deliver seamless, high-performing payment solutions for merchants.' Elavon can be downloaded from the WooCommerce Marketplace at: About Elavon Elavon is owned by U.S. Bank (NYSE: USB), the fifth-largest bank in the United States. It provides end-to-end payment processing solutions and services to more than 1.3 million customers in the United States, Europe, and Canada. As the leading provider for airlines and a top five provider in hospitality, healthcare, retail, and public sector/education, Elavon's innovative payment solutions are designed to solve pain points for businesses from small to the largest global enterprises. About Woo Woo is the company behind WooCommerce, the open-source ecommerce platform powering more than 4.5 million online stores. Built on WordPress, WooCommerce offers unlimited extensibility and flexibility for store owners and builders. Woo is a fully distributed company with employees all over the world, dedicated to empowering success for merchants, developers, and anyone else making a living through ecommerce.

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