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Oregon Gov. Kotek will let expanded self-serve gas become law, veto Salem transit and sex work studies

Gov. Tina Kotek wont veto a hotly debated bill to let more Oregonians pump their own gas, but she does plan to nix funding for studies on a Salem streetcar and decriminalizing prostitution.

Oregon Gov. Kotek will let expanded self-serve gas become law, veto Salem transit and sex work studies
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This story originally appeared in the Oregon Capital Chronicle and is republished here under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. Read more stories at oregoncapitalchronicle.com.

Gov. Tina Kotek wont veto a hotly debated bill to let more Oregonians pump their own gas, but she does plan to nix funding for studies on a Salem streetcar and decriminalizing prostitution.

Kotek on Friday released a list of bills she is considering vetoing and spending items she plans to run her red pen through, a notice shes required to provide under the state Constitution. Shell make her final decision by Aug. 4, the date by which she must sign or veto all bills passed by the Legislature or let them become law without her signature.

In a statement, Kotek said she spent the past month reviewing every bill, agency budget and appropriation. Lawmakers passed about 600 bills and approved a $31.9 billion budget this year, and Kotek has already signed most measures.

While I understand and support the intent behind several of the items Im considering vetoing, I am weighing concerns about implementation and budget prioritization, she said.

The legislation and spending she intends to veto include:

Many Oregonians were more focused on a bill that didnt make the veto list: House Bill 2426, which would allow gas stations throughout the state to offer self-service gas on up to half of their pumps, with the same prices for self-service and full-service pumps. Kotek has played coy for weeks about whether she supported the bill, asking for feedback from Oregonians and telling reporters Thursday to wait until her veto list came out Friday.

Lawmakers can override a veto with a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate.

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