2025 Legislative Update

As many in our community know, this has been an eventful and impactful legislative session. Thank you to everyone who joined us in advocating for survivor services! We appreciate knowing that when we put out a call for support, you answer.

While we didn’t get everything we asked for, we know that it was an unprecedented moment in our state history. In addition to the incredibly challenging funding landscape, the state’s budget forecast that was released mid-May was $500 million less than anticipated.

The legislature this session had 3,317 bills introduced, the most ever in a session. There were also a significant number of policy bills brought forward by legislators that impact survivors of domestic and sexual violence. It’s fair to say that it’s been a busy first half of the year.

We wanted to highlight some of the bills that impact survivors in this post-session legislative update.

Funding for Survivor Services

After a valiant effort to secure funding to maintain the current level of services, we had a partial success in HB 5014. The ODSVS fund is the only source of general fund revenue for the confidential, trauma-informed, community-based, non-profit and Tribal survivor service and shelter programs across the state was funded at 50%, receiving half of the requested amount of $10M as in years prior. This results in a cut of $5M for programs throughout the state.

We are grateful that the Survivor Housing Fund (SHF) was granted the full requested amount of $6M. This fund allows survivors to access critical support to stabilize their housing when navigating domestic violence. This was a big win for survivors.

Oregon—along with every other state in the nation—was recently notified of a pending 42% reduction in its federal Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) allocation. These critical funds support victim services in every county through nonprofit organizations, child abuse assessment centers, district attorneys’ offices, and more. HB 3196 was introduced to prevent disruptions in these essential services by bridging the gap while bipartisan efforts continue at the federal level to address the root cause of the shortfall.

Unfortunately, the bill did not pass, and Oregon is now facing an $18.5 million cut to these vital programs. This reduction will significantly affect staffing and service capacity statewide—putting survivors’ access to support, safety, and justice at risk.

We are deeply grateful to everyone who sponsored and advocated for the passage of HB 3196, including: Representatives Kropf, Hartman, Wallan, Grayber, Helfrich, Neron, Senator Taylor, and the many sponsors who supported this bill.

Additionally, rental assistance was cut from the Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS) budget, representing a loss of services to stabilize housing for survivors and community members throughout the state.

The silver lining is that HB 3070 which allocated $400,000 for the SAE/SANE Certification Committee (SCC) passed through the end of session bill HB 5006. Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANE) in Oregon are specially trained to understand the dynamics of sexual assault, the unique healthcare needs of sexual assault victims, and proper collection of forensic evidence that may be used by law enforcement in sexual assault investigations. The SCC helps support access to trauma-informed and trained medical forensic sexual assault nurse examiners across the state.

Thank you to Representatives Kropf, Andersen, Gamba, Grayber, Hartman, Mannix, Munoz, Neron, Nguyen H., and Pham H. for sponsoring HB 3070.

Department of Human Services victim-specific programs escaped without cuts. SB 5526, the agency budget bill, together with the end-of-session bill (HB 5006), maintained funding levels for this biennium for survivor-specific DHS programs

SB 180 – anti-SLAPP bill

This bill expanded the anti‐Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation law (commonly known as SLAPP) to specifically include any true public disclosure of sexual assault, including on social media. Previously, SLAPP protected sexual assault disclosures to police or another investigative agency. We celebrate this expansion of protections for survivors choosing to disclose their experience. SB 180 passed unanimously in the legislature and takes effect on January 1, 2026.

Thank you to the Senate Interim Committee on Judiciary for requesting this bill be considered by the legislature.

Read more about the bill and the efforts to get it passed here.

SB 599 – Prohibits Bias by Landlords

This legislation prohibits landlords from inquiring about or discriminating on the basis of a tenant’s or applicant’s immigration or citizenship status. This means that a landlord cannot ask a tenant their immigration status, or threaten to disclose a person’s immigration status to ICE, or reject an applicant based on their immigration status. This is crucial for immigrant survivors of domestic and sexual violence because abusers often use immigration status as a means of control and isolation. This bill took effect on May 28, 2025.

Thank you to Senators Campos and Ruiz for being the Chief Sponsors on this important legislation, and the many co-sponsors who supported it.

SB 710 – Judicial Training

This legislation represents a huge win for survivors. It requires that state court judges meet ongoing learning requirements related to domestic and sexual violence. Our community has been advocating for judicial training for decades and we are incredibly grateful for its near unanimous support in both chambers. This bill will take effect on January 1, 2026, and begin with studying training options.

Thank you to Senators Sollman, Weber, and Neron for being the Chief sponsors, and the many Senators and Representatives who co-sponsored it. We are also grateful to The Family Justice Center of Washington County for their strong advocacy on this bill.

SB 867 – Addresses Sexual Conduct in Schools

This bill helps to create a culture of safety in Oregon’s education system first by providing students who suffer discrimination with student specific services, and second, by closing a safety gap relating to sexual conduct reports involving students and seasonal contractors, agents, and volunteers. It further clarifies the process related to disclosure in sexual conduct investigations. This bill takes effect January 1, 2026.

Thank you to Governor Tina Kotek for Department of Education for bringing this legislation forward.

SB 1121 – Makes Doxxing a Misdemeanor

Building on a previous law that empowered victims to sue, this bill makes the act of doxxing a misdemeanor by creating the crime of unlawful disclosure of private information. Punishment is up to a maximum of six months’ imprisonment, $2,500 fine, or both.  This law took effect on June 24, 2025.

Thank you to the Senate Judiciary Committee for sponsoring this legislation.

HB 2299 – Prohibits Unlawful Dissemination of Digital Intimate Images

This legislation modifies the crime of unlawful dissemination of an intimate image to include the disclosure of digitally created, manipulated or altered images. This bill also increases the penalty to a maximum of five years’ imprisonment, $125,000 fine, or both, or 10 years’ imprisonment, $250,000 fine, or both, if the person has a prior conviction. It additionally creates the crime of unlawful dissemination of an intimate image in the second degree with a punishment of a maximum of 364 days’ imprisonment, $6,250 fine, or both, or five years’ imprisonment, $125,000 fine, or both, if the person has a prior conviction. This bill passed both chambers with unanimous support and takes effect January 1, 2026.

Thank you to Representatives Mannix, McLain, Hartman, and Senator Sollman for being the Chief Sponsors on this legislation, and the many co-sponsors who supported it.

HB 2456 – Modification of the S.A.V.E Fund

The Sexual Assault Victims’ Emergency (S.A.V.E.) Medical Response Fund. Because of the S.A.V.E. Fund, survivors can access essential medical care, forensic evidence collection, and mental health support after experiencing sexual violence. No survivor should ever have to pay for the cost of their own victimization. And, all survivors, regardless of their financial resources, should have access to the care they need. This bill takes effect January 1, 2026.

Thank you to Attorney General Dan Rayfield for bringing this legislation forward.

HB 2492 – DV Lookback

This bill extends the expungement waiting period for restraining orders from one year to five years. This allows the pattern of abuse to be preserved in the record and considered in relation to expungement requests for domestic and sexual violence cases. This is another big win for survivors!

CWS previously gave testimony on this bill during our Advocacy Day in April. See the testimony here.

Thank you to the House Interim Committee on Judiciary and Representative Kropf for bringing this legislation forward.

HB 2975 – DV Loophole

This bill restores the courts’ ability to impose separate sentences for certain acts of violence, including strangulation and assault, in domestic violence cases. The bill aims to address the 2024 Oregon Court of Appeals decision in State v. Miles per the Democratic Senate Majority Office. That decision ruled that in cases relating to domestic violence and abuse, all charges must be merged into one single charge. There is no other category of crime for which this happens. This bill will take effect on the 91st day following adjournment of the legislative session and is an important victory for survivors!

We are grateful for the unanimous support for this legislation. A big thank you to Representative Hartman for being the Chief Sponsor of this bill, and the many co-sponsors who supported it. Read more about this bill here.

HB 3582 – Statute of Limitations

The bill to eliminate the statute of limitations for civil actions based on sexual assault or child sexual abuse passed both chambers unanimously. This means that survivors of sexual assault and child sexual abuse can file a civil suit against their perpetrators and/or entities that allowed, permitted, or encouraged the assault or abuse to occur at any time after the abuse occurs. This legislation took effect immediately on passage.

Thank you to Representatives Hartman, Taylor, Meek, Bowman, Nguyen H., Owens, Manning Jr., Neron, and Misslin for being Chief Sponsors of the bill, and all the many co-sponsors who supported it.

HB 3766 – Civil Action for Intimate Images

This legislation allows a plaintiff to bring a civil action against a person who transmits an intimate image to the plaintiff’s computer or electronic device in certain circumstances. This means that if someone sends a nude or sexually explicit image without the consent of the recipient and with the intent of harassing or harming the recipient, the recipient may take bring a civil suit within two years. This applies to adults over the age of 18 only. This bill passed with unanimous support.

Thank you to Representatives Chaichi, Hartman, and Tran for being the Chief Sponsors for this legislation on behalf of survivors, and the many co-sponsors who supported it.

HB 3816 – Funding for Victim Services

This bill provides for 50 percent of awards of restitution ordered to an insurance carrier to be paid to the Department of Justice for purposes of victim services funding. This means that when the victim is an insurance provider and chooses to utilize public resources, such as a District Attorney, to obtain restitution through criminal court instead of civil court, a portion of the collection will be shared with victim services.

We are grateful for the legislature’s work in trying to find creative solutions to the funding issues victim services are facing. A big thank you to Representative Kropf for being the Chief Sponsor on this bill and to Senators Broadman and Girod for their advocacy and support in the Senate.

The Take It Down Act

This federal measure was aimed to address the nonconsensual distribution of intimate imagery (NDII) (often historically referred to in public discourse as “nonconsensual pornography” or “revenge porn”). The law represents a long-awaited step forward in establishing nationwide protections for victims of image-based sexual abuse.

For survivors—especially those navigating the intersecting harms of domestic violence and digital exploitation—this moment is both deeply significant and fraught with questions. While the law provides powerful new tools to pursue justice and seek the removal of nonconsensual intimate images, it may also introduce challenges for survivor privacy and protected expression.

The Act makes it a federal crime to publish nonconsensual intimate imagery using an interactive computer service – any website, app, or platform that lets people share, post, or respond to content from others. The Act also establishes a rapid takedown process, requiring certain platforms that host user-generated content to remove reported material within 48 hours of receiving a complaint. Failure to do so could be considered an unfair or deceptive practice under the jurisdiction of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

Read more from the National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV) through their Tech Safety website.

It was a full agenda for this year’s long session in Salem. CWS continues to be at the seat of many tables to ensure that the nuanced and complex issues that relate to survivors of domestic and sexual violence are better understood in the context of policy and the potential implications, both intended and unintended, that occur. Here’s a recap of our engagement as well as some of the specific bills we want to highlight.

CWS Participation

Our public policy efforts are primarily done in coalition with The Oregon DVSA Legislative Alliance to End Violence Against Women, as well as others such as Our Children Oregon, Stable Homes Coalition

We started a CWS Staff Public Policy Workgroup this year and members from that group provided testimony and went to the Capital participating in meetings with elected officials. The Board is also engaged in our policy work through a Public Policy Committee. Both the workgroup and committee give input, weigh the pros and cons of legislative work, and engage in advocacy. We are grateful for this participation because public policy is best shaped with input and engagement from multiple perspectives.

Our agency has participated in policy and ballot measure campaigns (like HereTogether, Safe Kids Coalition), speakers’ events, reaching out to elected officials, and more.

  • Some of the ways that we participate:
    • Action Alerts
    • Lobbying and direct advocacy
    • Testimony
    • Campaign engagement
    • Awareness raising
    • Education
    • Defend survivor rights and the policies that protect them
    • Conduct policy analysis
    • Collect and analyze data
    • Meet with implementers and decision-makers
    • Conduct study tours—giving tours to elected officials, policy makers, and legislative staff
    • Evaluate outcomes
    • Policy monitoring and tracking

Our Executive Director also sits on various workgroups and engages with elected officials for them to learn more about the issue of domestic violence and our work, including:

Bills and Policy

We want to highlight and celebrate a few of our successes from Oregon’s 2023 legislative session:

  • This year, the focus was on continuing critical ODSVS and SHF funding (SB 5506).
    • Oregon Domestic and Sexual Violence Services (ODSVS) received $10M and helps fund 60 community-based organizations and Tribal communities across the state for basic domestic and sexual violence and trafficking services.The Survivor Housing Fund (SHF) received $6M and is highly flexible general funding for housing.CWS hosted education sessions for lawmakers and participated in lobby days. ODSVS funds help us fund Latina services, outreach and education, prevention programming, and youth services. SHF funds support survivors to meet housing needs in a variety of ways. We are glad these were approved!
    • Passing these crucial funding bills was a bipartisan effort, and there are many more who helped make this happen than we can thank here. A few we want to highlight are: Sen. Sara Gelser Blouin, Sen. Kathleen Taylor, Sen. Wlnsvey Campos, Rep. Jason Kropf, Rep. Lily Morgan, Rep. Bobby Levy, and Dacia Grayber, as well as Gov. Kotek who included the funding in her budget.

  • Campus DVSA Response (HB 3456): Requires college campuses to conduct a climate survey of students to understand sexual misconduct taking place in addition to schools being required to have confidential advocates on campus or partner with a local victim advocacy organization. This was a huge win and gratitude goes to Rep. Annessa Hartman for her unwavering commitment to survivors in addition to Rep. Mark Gamba, Sen. Dembrow, the Oregon Sexual Assault Task Force and Every Voice Coalition for ensuring the passage of this bill.

  • Crime Victim’s Compensation Bill (HB 2676): Crime victims of all types can mitigate the cost of experiencing a crime (like lost wages or medical bills).
    • Some important changes were made with this bill, including:
      • Eliminates the requirement that victims and survivors cooperate with law enforcement investigations and prosecutions in order to receive compensation; they can apply directly through the DOJ
      • Provides access to S-KITS (Strangulation Kits)
      • Access to benefits were expanded
  • FAPA Expansion (SB 816A) extended restraining orders from one to two years; this will go in effect January 1st, 2024. A big thank you to Senator Thatcher and others who championed this bill.

  • Shelter Pet Assistance Bill (HB 23395 & 5511): This bill provides funds for companion pets, in addition to policies to reduce barriers to access shelter programs. It established an emergency grant program ($1M). Thank you to Senator Patterson for bringing this bill forward and Senator Jama for ensuring it passed.

  • Traumatic Brain Injury Bill (SB 420): More research/investment in human services statewide to help people with traumatic brain injuries and how it impacts Oregonians; has component of it that is specific to DVSA. Read more here

  • Trafficking Education (SB 473): Adds trafficking education to Erin’s Law. Thank you to the Sexual Assault Task Force for their work.

  • OHA Public Health Funding:
    • Community Health Equity Coalition is an ad hoc advocacy group comprised of CBOs advocating for OHA funding (CWS is a member). This funding supports our work in school-based health centers. We are pleased that current statewide funding levels were maintained and increased some. Domestic and sexual violence are public health issues, and these funds are important for the work we do.

  • Our Children Oregon
    • Several wins for children in Oregon:
      • Oregon Kids’ Credit: A tax credit for every child aged 0 to 5 to qualifying low-income families.
      • Investments in early learning and care infrastructure and facilities (SB 599, HB 2727, HB 3005, HB 2991).
      • Elevating Student Voice Act (HB 2656).
      • Racism is a Public Health Crisis Task Force (HB 2925): Funds a task force to develop strategies.
      • Child Advocacy Center Funding (HB 2732): Supports centers across the state, including our partner agency Children’s Center.
  • Stable Homes Coalition
    • Governor’s Emergency Order and Housing Package: $200M invested to build more affordable housing, rehousing, and homelessness prevention.
    • Eviction Reform and Reduction (HB 2001 & HB 5019)
    • Stable Homes Reasonable Rent (SB 611)
    • Funding in OHCS Budget (HB 511)