HB 3443

Prohibits landlords from terminating lease or taking other specified actions due to status of tenant as victim of bias crime.

Status Chapter Number Assigned
Requested by (at the request of Attorney General Ellen F. Rosenblum)
Sponsors Khanh Pham (Democrat) (Chief), James Manning Jr. (Democrat) (Chief), Kayse Jama (Democrat) (Chief), Susan McLain (Democrat), Travis Nelson (Democrat), Wlnsvey Campos (Democrat), Michael Dembrow (Democrat), Elizabeth Steiner (Democrat), Mark Gamba (Democrat), Lisa Reynolds (Democrat), Tom Andersen (Democrat), Nathan Sosa (Democrat), Maxine Dexter (Democrat), Farrah Chaichi (Democrat), Jason Kropf (Democrat), Ken Helm (Democrat), Ben Bowman (Democrat), Dacia Grayber (Democrat), Annessa Hartman (Democrat), Hoa Nguyen (Democrat), Julie Fahey (Democrat), Pam Marsh (Democrat), Daniel Nguyen (Democrat), Janelle Bynum (Democrat), Rob Nosse (Democrat), Floyd Prozanski (Democrat)
Fiscal impact Has minimal fiscal impact
Revenue impact Has minimal revenue impact

Bill Text

Prohibits landlords from terminating leases or taking adverse actions against tenants based on their status as victims of bias crimes and provides tenant protections and lease release options.

Original Bill Text

Overview#

Prohibits landlords from terminating lease or taking other specified actions due to status of tenant as victim of bias crime. Provides that tenant who is bias crime victim is not responsible for damages resulting from commission of bias crime. Provides that perpetration of bias crime by tenant constitutes cause for termination of tenancy. Establishes process for victim of bias crime to be released from lease without penalty. Provides that release assistance officer and court enter order prohibiting defendant charged with crime involving bias from contacting victim. Provides that information reported to hate crimes hotline that might reveal identity of individual is confidential. Provides that victims of bias crime in the first degree must be consulted during plea negotiations. Expands Address Confidentiality Program to include victims of bias. Expands eligibility for protected leave to bias crime victims. Provides that Department of Justice employee who staffs hate crimes hotline is eligible to request that records kept by Department of Transportation contain employer address instead of home address. Directs Department of Justice to develop and deliver training program for district attorney victim assistance programs to assist with providing services to bias crime victims.

Public Testimony

Name Organization Position Date
Margot Martin Basic Rights Oregon Support 2023-03-16
Kimberly McCullough Department of Justice Support 2023-03-17
Kimberly McCullough Oregon Department of Justice Support 2023-03-17
Randall Blazak Portland Support 2023-03-17
Kimberly McCullough Oregon Department of Justice Support 2023-03-17
Aaron Knott Multnomah County District Attorney Support 2023-03-19
Rep Khanh Pham State Representative Support 2023-03-20
Amanda Dalton OR District Attorneys Association Support 2023-03-20
Amy Sacks Pacific Green Party Unknown 2023-03-21
Kevin Starrett Canby Neutral 2023-04-26
Tracy Young Falls city Oppose 2023-04-28
Ralph Newton Grants Pass Oppose 2023-04-28
Sardar Khalsa Portland Oppose 2023-04-28
Royce Pierce Klamath Falls Oppose 2023-04-30
Todd Jay Vaughn Tiller Oppose 2023-05-02
Kimberly McCullough Oregon Department of Justice Support 2023-05-02
Kimberly McCullough Oregon Department of Justice Support 2023-05-02
Evyn Mitchell City of Portland Support 2023-05-03
Dani Ledezma Portland Public Schools Support 2023-05-04

Legislative History

Date Chamber Action
2023-02-28 H First reading. Referred to Speaker's desk.
2023-03-03 H Referred to Housing and Homelessness.
2023-03-07 H Work Session held.
2023-03-09 H Without recommendation as to passage and be referred to Judiciary.
2023-03-09 H Referred to Judiciary by order of Speaker.
2023-03-20 H Public Hearing held.
2023-03-27 H Work Session held.
2023-03-28 H Recommendation: Do pass with amendments and be printed A-Engrossed.
2023-03-29 H Second reading.
2023-03-30 H Rules suspended. Carried over to April 3, 2023 Calendar.
2023-04-03 H Rules suspended. Carried over to April 4, 2023 Calendar.
2023-04-04 H Rules suspended. Carried over to April 5, 2023 Calendar.
2023-04-05 H Rules suspended. Carried over to April 6, 2023 Calendar.
2023-04-06 H Rules suspended. Carried over to April 10, 2023 Calendar.
2023-04-10 H Potential conflict(s) of interest declared by Elmer.
2023-04-10 H Third reading. Carried by Pham K. Passed.
2023-04-10 H Vote explanation(s) filed by Levy B.
2023-04-11 H Vote reconsideration failed.
2023-04-11 S First reading. Referred to President's desk.
2023-04-12 S Referred to Housing and Development.
2023-04-19 S Work Session cancelled.
2023-04-24 S Work Session held.
2023-04-26 S Recommendation: Without recommendation as to passage and be returned to President's desk for referral. Referred to Judiciary by order of the President.
2023-04-26 S Referred to Judiciary.
2023-05-02 S Public Hearing held.
2023-05-09 S Work Session held.
2023-06-15 S Recommendation: Do pass the A-Eng. bill.
2023-06-15 S Second reading.
2023-06-16 S Carried over to 06-20 by unanimous consent.
2023-06-20 S Carried over to 06-21 by unanimous consent.
2023-06-21 S Carried over to 06-22 by unanimous consent.
2023-06-22 S Third reading. Carried by Manning Jr. Passed.
2023-06-22 S Vote explanation(s) filed by Findley.
2023-06-24 H Speaker signed.
2023-06-24 S President signed.
2023-07-31 H Governor signed.
2023-08-15 H Chapter 549, (2023 Laws): Effective date January 1, 2024.

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