To better understand the high stakes of the final days of the 2025 legislative session, itโs useful to consider one fact that was largely absent from the debate over House Bill 2025, the multibillion-dollar transportation funding measure that failed in numerous incarnations: The biggest immediate loser will be the members of Service Employees International Union who are set to be laid off later this week.ย
Fully half of ODOTโs nearly 5,000 employees are SEIU members: 1,700 in maintenance, operations and headquarters jobs and about 800 at the DMV, Oregon Driver & Motor Vehicle Services.ย
Immediately after the session ended, ODOT director Kris Strickler sent an email to all employees, warning of 600 layoffs. That message was consistent with agency messaging over the past year, but still came as a jolt.ย
โODOT is finalizing the list, and we expect hundreds of workers to receive layoff notices on July 7,โ SEIU spokeswoman Pati Urias tells OJP.ย
The ODOT budget bill, which was separate from HB 2025, showed that layoffs would fall most heavily on ODOTโs maintenance workers, who perform the basic, essential duties of keeping the stateโs 8,000 miles of highway and 2,700 bridges in good working order.ย
The agency is a vast presence across Oregon. It owns or leases 1,200 buildings, including 88 maintenance stations and 59 DMV field offices.ย
In the legislative sessionโs final week, Democratic leaders worked themselves into a frenzy, trying unsuccessfully to pass some versionโany versionโof a multibillion-dollar transportation funding package that was supposed to be the centerpiece of the 2025 session and stave off cuts to ODOTโs current service level.ย
Lawmakers focused enormous amounts of energy on the departmentโs budget, even though polling conducted on the funding package showed Oregonians ranked transportation far down their lists of concerns.
All those efforts failed, despite a last-minute push by Gov. Tina Kotek. Formerly the longest-serving House speaker in Oregon history, Kotek worked the building furiously in the sessionโs final hours, to no avail.ย
In a post-session press conference, the governor bashed legislators for leaving two days before the statutory end of session, calling their failure to fill ODOTโs funding gap โdisappointing.โ
โThe Legislature adjourned two days before constitutional sine die without meeting even the basic needs of our transportation system,โ Kotek added in a June 28 statement, using the Latin term for sessionโs end.ย
Melissa Unger, executive director of SEIU Local 503, used the same word repeatedly in an interview with OJP about the looming ODOT layoffs.ย
โOur members are disappointed generally that we didnโt figure out how to pass this package,โ Unger says.ย
โAs a union we often try to do hard things. Oregonians expect our elected officials to do hard things. Did elected officials do what they needed to do to keep our roads, highways and bridges safe and our traffic moving? The answer is no.โย
SEIU, the stateโs largest public employee union, with more than 72,000 members, wields enormous clout in Salem. The unionโs main political action committee spent $2.2 million supporting Democratic candidates in 2022 and $1.8 million last year. Its ability to mobilize members for door-knocking, phone-banking, and other activities adds additional value.
The unionโs support helped elect Kotek and gain Democrats the supermajorities in both chambers required to pass new taxesโlike the transportation bill, which in its largest incarnation would have yielded about $15 billion over the next decade.ย
That amount and skinnier versions ultimately proved too much for lawmakers to swallow, but Unger says sheโs hopeful Kotek and legislative leaders will find a way to create a more palatable package, either in a special legislative session or in next yearโs short session. In the meantime, SEIU is scrambling, hoping ODOT will cut only vacant positions and find every penny of savings it can.ย
โWe are trying to do everything we can to save these jobs right now,โ Unger says. โWorkers are very stressed out.โ
This article appears in Source Weekly July 3, 2025.







