• Wyden Visits with Students at Oregon High Schools

    Some people say that young people today are disengaged from politics, but if Oregon high school students are any indication, that just isn't so. 

    In Oregon this past month, Senator Wyden visited with students at Southridge, Tigard, Franklin, and Wilson High Schools. Students asked and Senator Wyden answered. Questions were thoughtful, provocative, and on a variety of issues including the NDAA, foreign and domestic policy, and access to education. 

    Senator Wyden appreciated and gained valuable insight by hearing policy ideas, prescriptions, and questions from the next generation of leaders. Can’t wait for the many more high school visits to come!

  • Wyden Letter to the Editor: China’s subsidy of solar panels

    (Note: this letter was originally published in the Washington Post on October 28, 2012)

    A federal investigation has proved that China is subsidizing its solar panels and dumping those panels in the U.S. market. The Oct. 19 editorial “A cloud on trade” said there’s a good reason to let China continue to do this. I disagree.

    World trade is governed by well-defined rules. Allowing China to break those rules at the whim of certain lobbying groups would turn the rules-based trading system into one based on politics. The world tried that system before. It failed. Under that system, trade was neither free nor fair, to the detriment of the United States and global economy.

    Failure to address China’s practices will undercut U.S. innovation. It will also make it more difficult for the United States to act against China’s cheating in other areas on everything from the manipulation of its currency to its export restraints on resources such as rare earth minerals.

    China has been clear that it is seeking to be a dominant provider of the world’s solar panels, and it is accomplishing this by breaking the rules. To accept these actions because it is helpful to consumers (for now) is to accept a world in which China chooses the industries it wishes to dominate and the

    United States is forced to take what’s left. How long after the last U.S. solar manufacturer has shut its doors will China wait to use its monopoly power to raise prices for U.S. consumers?

    Ron Wyden, Washington

    The writer, a Democrat from Oregon, is a member of the U.S. Senate.

  • Wyden and Landrieu Tour Energy Infrastructure in Louisiana

    Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) returned from a two-day tour of Louisiana over the weekend, where he visited energy industry infrastructure and coastal restoration efforts Friday and Saturday at the invitation of Senator Mary Landrieu (D-La.).

    Wyden and Landrieu toured Louisiana’s costal marshes by helicopter and examined the web of energy industry facilities and support services at Port Fourchon, on the Gulf Coast, among other activities, during the two-day visit.

    “I’m glad Senator Landrieu invited me to tour her home state– I saw a lot in Louisiana that I'm going to take back to Washington,” Wyden said. “The uniqueness of the state’s energy industry and the special nature of its coastal environment proved to me once again that we can’t rely on a one-size-fits-all energy policy.”

    Slideshow:

     

    Tags:
    Coast
    Energy
    Louisiana
  • Wyden Hails Opening of Shepherds Flat Wind Energy Project

    This past Saturday, Shepherds Flat Wind Energy project came online in Gilliam and Morrow counties in Central Oregon.

    Shepherds Flat is one of the world’s largest wind farms generating 845 megawatts of power – enough to power more than 200,000 homes. The wind farm was developed by Caithness Energy and boasts 338 wind turbines made in the U.S. by General Electric which are creating emissions-free power.

    “Shepherds Flat shows all of us what renewable energy in the 21st Century looks like, with electricity flowing, real steel in the ground, real jobs, and real economic growth,” Wyden said, in a statement.


    Check out Senator Wyden’s op-ed on the Production Tax Credit for wind power which helps make projects like Shepherds Flat possible: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/81570.html


    Tags:
    Energy
    Wind
  • An Alaskan Adventure

    This past week, Senator Wyden travelled up to Alaska where he toured several of Alaska’s energy projects and spoke of the need for comprehensive tax reform with Alaskan Senators Lisa Murkowski and Mark Begich.

    First, was an energy tour on the invitation of Senator Murkowski, a colleague and top-ranking Republican on the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.  Stops on the tour included the Chena Renewable Energy Fair, a geothermal plant at Chena Hot Springs, a liquefied natural gas terminal in Kenai, and an offshore oil platform in Cook Inlet.

    Next up Senator Wyden and Senator Begich toured the Fire Island Wind Project in Anchorage and celebrated UPS’s 105th Birthday with a tour of their planes and facilities. The trip ended with Senator Wyden and Senator Begich talking about their Bipartisian Tax Fairness and Simplification Act on the Mike Porcaro show and at a roundtable hosted by the Anchorage Economic Development Corporation.

    "This has been helpful," Wyden said of the trip, his first in Alaska focused on energy issues. "Alaska has been a major energy producer for decades and it’s now in transition to new energy opportunities including natural gas and renewable energy.  Senator Murkowski and Senator Begich showed me firsthand how energy independence and creating more good-paying jobs go hand in hand."

    Slideshow:

  • Oregonians in the Olympics


    There are 28 Olympians with Oregon ties on Team USA. Check here for updates!


    KEVIN LOVE @KevinLove
    Men's Basketball
    Local tie: Lake Oswego High School

    CHRIS HORNER @Hornerakg
    Cycling- Men's road race
    Local tie: Bend

    RICH FELLERS 
    Equestrian- Individual and team jumping
    Local tie: Sherwood/Wilsonville

    WESTON 'SETH' KELSEY 
    Fencing- Men's individual epee
    Local tie: Oregon Episcopal High School

    MEGAN RAPINOE  @mPinoe
    Women's Soccer
    Local tie: Portland Pilots

    RYAN BAILEY 
    Men's Track and Field- 100 meters
    Local tie: McKay High School, Salem

    MARIEL ZAGUNIS  @marielzagunis
    Women's individual saber
    Local tie: Valley Catholic High School

    MATTHEW CENTROWITZ  @MattCentrowitz
    Men's Track and Field-1,500 meters
    Local tie: Oregon Ducks, Nike Oregon Project, Portland

    ASHTON EATON @AshtonJEaton
    Men's Track and Field- Decathlon
    Local tie: Mountain View High School, Bend; Oregon Ducks; OTC/Eugene

    CYRUS HOSTETLER @chostetler15
    Men's Track and Field- Javelin
    Local tie: Oregon Ducks, OTC/Eugene

    EVAN JAGER  @EvanJager
    Men's Track and Field- Steeplechase
    Local tie: OTC/Portland

    LOPEZ LOMONG  @lopezlomong
    Men's Track and Field- 5,000 meters
    Local tie: OTC/Portland

    DATHAN RITZENHEIN @djritzenhein
    Men's Track and Field- 10,000 meters
    Local tie: Nike Oregon Project, Portland

    GALEN RUPP   @G_Rupp
    Men's Track and Field- 5,000 and 10,000 meters
    Local tie: Central Catholic High School, Oregon Ducks, Nike Oregon Project, Portland

    NICK SYMMONDS  @NickSymmonds
    Men's Track and Field- 800 meters
    Local tie: Willamette Bearcats, OTC/Eugene, Springfield

    MATT TEGENKAMP  @MattTegenkamp
    Men's Track and Field- 10,000 meters
    Local tie: OTC/Portland

    ANDREW WHEATING  @AndrewWheating
    Men's Track and Field- 1,500 meters
    Local tie: Oregon Ducks, OTC/Eugene

    JESSE WILLIAMS  @Jessehj1
    Men's Track and Field- High jump
    Local tie: OTC/Eugene

    KESHIA BAKER @Keshia_Baker
    Women's Track and Field- 4x400 relay pool
    Local tie: Oregon Ducks

    SHALANE FLANAGAN  @ShalaneFlanagan
    Women's Track and Field- Marathon
    Local tie: OTC/Portland

    BRIDGET FRANEK @blfranek
    Women's Track and Field- Steeplechase
    Local tie: OTC/Eugene

    GEENA GALL @GeenaGall
    Women's Track and Field-800 meters
    Local tie: OTC/Eugene

    KARA GOUCHER @karagoucher
    Women's Track and Field- Marathon
    Local tie: OTC/Portland

    BECKY HOLLIDAY
    Women's Track and Field- Pole vault
    Local tie: Oregon Ducks, Eugene

    SALLY KIPYEGO  @sallykipyego
    Women's Track and Field- 5,000 and 10,000 meters
    Local tie: OTC/Eugene

    LISA UHL @lisa_uhl
    Women's Track and Field- 10,000 meters
    Local tie: OTC/Portland

    RACHEL YURKOVICH @RachY1022
    Women's Track and Field- Javelin
    Local tie: Newberg High School, Oregon Ducks, Eugene

    ELSIE WINDES 
    Women's Water Polo
    Local tie: Beaverton High School

  • Amendments offered to the Cybersecurity Act of 2012


    UPDATE: Wyden Statement on Vote Against Cloture of the Cybersecurity Act


    GPS Act

    Press Release Text of Amendment | U.S News and World Report Op-Ed

    U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and U.S. Representative Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) teamed up to write the Geolocation Privacy and Surveillance (GPS) Act, which is now being offered as an amendment to the Cybersecurity Act of 2012.

    Currently, laws pertaining to geolocation tracking have not kept pace with technology.  Judges in different jurisdictions have issued conflicting rulings about what procedures law enforcement must follow – and how much evidence is necessary – to obtain individuals’ geolocation data from private companies.  This lack of clarity creates problems for law enforcement agencies and private companies, as well as uncertainty for customers. 

    The bipartisan legislation creates a legal framework designed to give government agencies, commercial entities and private citizens clear guidelines for when and how geolocation information can be accessed and used. 

    The GPS Act requires government agencies to get a probable cause warrant to obtain geolocation information in the same way that they currently get warrants for wiretaps or other types of electronic surveillance. It also requires private companies to get customer consent before sharing their customers’ information outside the normal course of business, and outlaws “cyber-stalking” by making it a crime to secretly track someone’s movements electronically

    Click here for more information on the GPS Act

    “Stay Off My Cloud” Amendment

    Press Release | Text of Amendment

    Stay Off My Cloud puts in place several privacy protections to ensure that the government stays off your personal cloud.

    Many private companies contract with government agencies to provide information services to “continuously monitor” their networks and report to the federal government agencies in “real time or near real time” cyber incidents that jeopardize the “integrity, confidentiality, or availability of information or an information system.”

    The amendment makes it clear that service providers need only provide information about cybersecurity incidents if they pose a threat to the government’s information. Importantly, with respect to continuous monitoring and reporting requirements, operators of government information are allowed to use processes that will protect the privacy of individual or non-government, customer specific data.  

    Stay Off My Cloud prohibits individuals’ private data from being accessed by the government solely because it’s stored by a company who provides information services to a government agency.


    No Binding International Cyber Treaties without Senate Approval Amendment

    Press Release | Text of Amendment

    Title VI of the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 calls upon the Secretary of State to “develop and lead Federal Government efforts to engage with other countries to advance the cyberspace objectives of the United States, including efforts to bolster an international framework of cyber norms, governance and deterrence.”

    The administration had used similar language found in the Pro IP Act of 2008 to justify entering into binding international agreements on intellectual property as part of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement without the advice and consent of the Senate. This amendment makes it clear that nothing in the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 shall be construed to enable the president to enter the U.S. into a binding international agreement on cybersecurity without the advice and consent of the Senate. 

  • An Oregon Fourth of July: Fireworks, Farmers Markets, and Track and Field

    Like so many Oregonians, Senator Wyden made the trip to the Oregon Coast to see the state’s newest piece of property – the Japanese dock that washed ashore last month near Newport – and joined Congressman Kurt Schrader in leading a meeting of fishermen, tug boat operators and steamship operators on the hazards to navigation posed by debris from last year’s tsunami in Japan.

    From there it was on to the Olympic Track and Field Trials in Eugene and then Portland to urge reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act. VAWA was also the topic at events in Medford, Eugene and Bend, while still stopping at the Applegate Trail Museum in Sunny Valley, giving the keynote speech at the annual Veterans Dinner hosted by the Cow Creek Tribe in Canyonville and dropping by Harbick’s Store in Rainbow.

    The 4th of July brought him to Southern Oregon to march in Ashland’s annual parade. Also, in Bend, he paid tribute to Debra Klecker, a civilian police officer killed in Iraq in 2005, by presenting her brother with The Defense of Freedom Medal. Then, it was off to the Portland Farmers’ Market to talk with local growers about the farm to school program

    Slideshow:

  • Clear Geolocation Guidelines Are Needed to Protect Privacy Rights

    (Note: This editorial piece was originally posted on US News & World Report as part of their Debate Club series wherein lawmakers answered the question, "Should Probable Cause Be Required for Police to Use Cell Phone Location Data?")

    Before cellphones were commonplace, law enforcement's ability to track your movements was largely limited to the natural human powers of observation. As long as tracking you around the clock meant following you around the clock, it was generally safe to assume that law enforcement would only dedicate the time, energy, and resources necessary to follow you if they had a good reason. In other words, there was little risk that overreaching law enforcement would abuse its surveillance powers to track law-abiding citizens.

    Things have changed.

    Thanks to technological advancements, police departments no longer have to pay overtime or divert resources from other projects to find out where someone goes. Tracking suspects or law-abiding individuals is now as easy as accessing their GPS signals or asking a cellphone company for its customers' location records.

    While having access to geolocation data is clearly useful for law enforcement agencies, without the resource limitations that used to discourage the government from tracking you without good reason, the limits on when and how geolocation data can be accessed are unclear. A police department, for example, might not have the resources to follow everyone who lives within a city block for a month, but without clear rules for electronic tracking there is nothing to stop it from requesting every resident's cellphone location history.

    Obviously, we expect people to see us when we step out onto the street each morning, but we don't expect those people to track all of our movements over the course of days, weeks, months, or even years. A lot can be learned from our location histories, like where we go to church, what doctors we see, what political organizations we belong to, and who we spend our time with.

    Earlier this year, the Supreme Court ruled that law enforcement must to get a warrant before secretly tracking an individual with an electronic monitoring device. While it seems likely that the majority of the court would agree that secretly turning someone's cellphone into a tracking device would be similarly intrusive, law enforcement shouldn't have to go all the way to the Supreme Court every time it needs direction on how it can use tracking technology.

    Clear guidelines for accessing geolocation data won't just protect the privacy rights of law-abiding Americans—much like warrant requirements for wiretaps—they will make it possible for law enforcement to use geolocation tools with confidence that the evidence they gather will be admissible in court. Clear rules will also reassure cellphone companies that they can comply with government requests without violating their customers' privacy, and the justice system can create criminal penalties for stalkers who use geolocation tools to secretly track their victims.

    A lot has changed since 1986, when Congress last set rules for electronic privacy. It's time for Congress to step in and set a modern standard.

  • Wyden Calls for Digital Bill of Rights at #PDF12

    Kicking off Personal Democracy Forum 2012 (known as #pdf12 on Twitter), Senator Wyden joined his OPEN Act co-author Representative Darrell Issa on stage with PDF founder Andrew Rasiej to discuss the “Internet’s New Political Power.”  In the 30 minute conversation, Wyden recalled the challenges over the past two years with legislating Internet policy—evoking COICA, PIPA/SOPA, ACTA, TPP, and CISPA.  He then highlighted the lessons learned on January 18th, 2012 when 15 million Americans spoke out to protect a free and open Internet, saying “the middle men got beat.”  Wyden also made news when he called for  the creation of a digital bill of rights when he said, “What we need is a way to measure how the voice of networks is protected and what I hope will happen out of this meeting is  that we will start a grass roots drive, really a net roots drive to create a digital bill of rights for this country..that would be a way to measure and check to make sure the Internet stays free.

    And today @RonWyden sent this tweet encouraging the convocation of an open, online digital bill of rights convention.

    Watch the full interview:

    Other notable tweets:

    Tags:
    ACTA
    SOPA/PIPA