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Ben
Westlund to take state Senate post Representative
Ben Westlund is making a short but significant move across the Capitol to
take a seat in the Oregon Senate.
The Sisters-area legislator
won appointment from the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners to the
seat vacated by Bev Clarno. Clarno resigned August 1 to take a position
with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
In their unanimous decision,
the three commissioners cited confidence in Westlund's knowledge of the
state budget and his ability to be effective in the Senate.
"I am humbled, excited and
thrilled, all in the same emotion," Westlund said.
Westlund is looking forward
to bringing his budgetary expertise and his passion for structural tax
reform into the 30-member Senate where his voice and vote will carry more
weight than in the 60-member House, but his constituents shouldn't expect
much change in their representative.
"I am exactly the same person;
none of my positions, philosophies or ideologies have changed one iota,"
he said.
Those positions and philosophies
cost Westlund his position as chair of the influential House Ways and
Means Committee in favor of a more conservative member.
Westlund has pushed hard for
reform of Oregon's tax structure, arguing for a reduction of income and
capital gains taxes and the institution of a 5 percent consumption, or
sales, tax.
Under Westlund's conception,
the sales tax would be permanently capped by voters at 5 percent in a
constitutional revision; income taxes would also be placed under voter-approved
caps.
He believes that such a plan
would bring tax reductions to Oregonians, create incentives for business
that would stimulate the state's economy, and infuse stability into a
tax structure that is prone to crashing revenues when the economy goes
sour.
While he emphasizes that plans
for tax reform are in the draft stages, Westlund is anxious to get to
work.
"I am glad to be taking my
passion for this subject to the Senate," he said.
Westlund hopes to help pass
a joint resolution requiring both houses of the legislature to return
to work in mid-November -- after the current marathon session -- to tackle
tax reform.
The legislator is carrying
a heavy load of work in the face of a health crisis earlier this year.
Westlund had surgery to remove a portion of a lung due to lung cancer
and has undergone a regimen of radiation and chemotherapy to back up the
successful surgery.
He says the treatments have
not slowed him down at all.
"I just wish people could
see me," he said.
"I've been so blessed through
this whole process. I've just been charging at 110 percent like I always
do."
Westlund said he has not suffered
the fatigue and other symptoms often associated with chemotherapy.
Westlund credits his love
for his work with helping him overcome his illness and the potential side
effects of preventive treatments, which are nearly complete.
"I'm passionate about this
stuff," he said. "I love it. It keeps me going." |
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