If you know someone is a Republican or Democrat, then you might assume you know exactly where they stand on whether local jails need to be expanded.
But if recent experience in the rural, southwest Oregon county where I live is any guide, it’s not that simple.
The economy in Jackson County, Oregon, is dominated by mostly low-wage jobs in tourism, health care, agriculture and forestry, yielding a median income 24 percent lower than the national average. Yet the median home price is 9 percent higher than the national average, and one out of three households pays more than half of what they earn just for housing.
Republicans win every county commissioner election. In 2020, those commissioners asked voters to authorize a new jail with three times the capacity of the old one. The local newspaper came out in favor of the new jail, publishing a three-part series and a positive editorial as well.
But voters in this “red” county said no by nearly 3 to 1. How did this happen?