Posted October 7, 2017 3:00 pm by Comments

By Chris Eger

Gov. Kate Brown, a Democrat, signed the measure into law in August after it squeaked through the legislature, which gave opponents just weeks to gather enough signatures send the issue to voters. (Photo: Gov. Brown’s office)
A drive to overturn Oregon’s new Extreme Risk Protection Order statutes failed to gain the needed signatures to be placed in front of voters.
Republican House members Bill Post and Mike Nearman along with 2016 House candidate Teri Grier filed Referendum 302 in August with the Oregon Secretary of State’s office. Termed the “Say No to 719” initiative, it aimed to push repeal the Senate bill of the same in its entirety, but organizers fell short of the 58,789 signatures from registered voters no later than Thursday to qualify for the 2018 general election ballot.
“It wasn’t for lack of support,” said Nearman in a statement. “We just simply did not have enough time. I blame Governor Kate Brown for that,” he said, explaining that since they could not begin gathering signatures until Brown signed the measure on Aug. 15, and as they had 90 days from the end of the session on July 7 in which to circulate petitions, were constrained by a very short window.
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Source: Guns.com

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