The meeting will be in person and on Zoom. In-person is at 66 SE “D” Street, Madras, which is the County Annex / County Administrative Building across from City Hall. The room can take at least 8 members of the public with social distancing, on a first-come, first-serve basis. We don’t expect that many to show up.
Time: Feb 17, 2021 08:00 AM Pacific Time
UPDATE: The County commissioners will discuss other issues, then take citizen comments (even from Zoom) at 9am, and then discuss other issues, then take a presentation from Move Oregon’s Border from 10-10:15. If you would like to comment, do so at 9am.
Join Zoom Meeting (Jefferson County)
https://zoom.us/j/96866813383?pwd=aU9aTXgxL0VFT0I1cEZ4KzV0U282QT09
Meeting ID: 968 6681 3383 Passcode: 381849
One tap mobile +12532158782,,96866813383# US (Tacoma)
Dial by your location +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)
You can tell the county commissioners why you favor moving the border.
At the end of your comments, ask your county commissioners to request that the government of Idaho publish an report on how Idaho state government departments would handle the relocation of the border, and a report on a comparison of how rural county governments are funded in Idaho and Oregon.
In Jefferson County, there are special questions because we expect that part of the county would remain in Oregon.


This map shows the results of the Trump vs Hillary election in 2016 in Jefferson County. Any election map that shows precinct data will show that the west edge of Jefferson County votes like Oregon, and the rest of Jefferson County votes like Idaho.
So we are predicting that if the border moves, that Idaho would want everything east of this line, and Oregon would want everything west of this line. So this is the line that we are currently proposing to both state legislatures. But we’d like the input of the Board of Commissioners on this topic.

This map shows the election results from our ballot initiative. The only precincts that voted against the measure aren’t supposed to join greater Idaho anyway. It’s not really a partisan issue though, because Warm Springs and Camp Sherman might welcome the border relocation if Warm Springs gets to stay in Oregon because without eastern and southern Oregon counties, Oregon would be a more liberal state that is more giving toward Native Americans. The ballot question didn’t explain that these areas could remain in Oregon though, so I think that’s why our ballot measure didn’t do well in these two precincts.
How Commissioners can help
We plan to ask the legislatures in January to pass a resolution to start negotiations to move the border, so we’d like Jefferson County to provide input this year on several questions, and we’d like to know what kind of process you would envision for answering these questions this year.
The rest of the questions we have for the commissioners don’t need to be answered until sometime next year at the earliest, because they are about how Idaho should adjust county boundaries when it finally accepts territory from Oregon.



