Oregon Code § 244.250·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Oregon
Government Ethics Commission; appointment; term; quorum; compensation; legal
counsel.
(1) The
Oregon Government Ethics Commission is established, consisting of nine members.
The appointment of a member of the commission is subject to confirmation by the
Senate in the manner provided in ORS 171.562 and 171.565. Members shall be
appointed in the following manner:
(a) The Governor
shall appoint eight members from among persons recommended, two each by the
leadership of the Democratic and Republican parties in each house of the
Legislative Assembly. If a person recommended by the leadership of the
Democratic or Republican party is not approved by the Governor, the leadership
shall recommend another person.
(b) The Governor
shall appoint one member without leadership recommendation.
(2) A person who
holds any public office listed in ORS 244.050 (1) except as a member of the
commission may not be appointed to the commission. No more than three members
may be members of the same political party.
(3) The term of
office of a member is four years. A member is not eligible to be appointed to
more than two full terms but may additionally serve out an unexpired term.
Vacancies shall be filled by the appointing authority for the unexpired term.
(4) The
commission shall elect a chairperson and vice chairperson for such terms and
duties as the commission may require.
(5) A quorum
consists of five members but a final decision may not be made without an
affirmative vote of a majority of the members appointed to the commission.
(6) Members shall
be entitled to compensation and expenses as provided in ORS 292.495.
(7) The
commission may retain or appoint qualified legal counsel who must be a licensee
of the Oregon State Bar and who is responsible to the commission. The
appointment of legal counsel under this subsection may be made only when the
commission finds it is inappropriate and contrary to the public interest for
the office of the Attorney General to represent concurrently more than one
public official or agency in any matter before the commission because the
representation:
(a) Would create
or tend to create a conflict of interest; and
(b) Is not
subject to ORS 180.230 or 180.235.
(8) The Attorney
General may not represent before the commission any state public official who
is the subject of any complaint or action of the commission at the commissions
own instigation. [1974 c.72 §12; 1977 c.588 §6; 1987 c.566 §18; 1991 c.770 §3;
1993 c.743 §17; 2007 c.865 §1; 2015 c.619 §1; 2021 c.266 §1; 2025 c.32 §104]
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Oregon
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Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 244.250
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
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