Home » News » Oregon’s BOLI Investment: Addressing Wage Claims and Backlogs

Oregon’s BOLI Investment: Addressing Wage Claims and Backlogs

by David Harrison – Chief Editor

OregonBOLI Highlights Progress, Persistent Challenges​ in 2025 ‘State of the Worker’ Report

SALEM, Ore.⁣ – Oregon’s Bureau of Labor⁤ and Industries (BOLI) released its 2025 report detailing a “notable first step forward”​ despite ongoing challenges stemming from a gap between new ⁢worker protections enacted by the legislature and the resources allocated to enforce ⁣them.‌ The report, released September ‌17, 2025,⁤ outlines recent investments and future plans to address a growing⁣ backlog ⁣of cases and reduce ‍wait times‌ for Oregonians⁢ seeking assistance.

The agency’s budget bill, House ‌Bill 5015, provided funding for 34 new ​positions, prompting BOLI to anticipate “real, sustained progress” as staff are onboarded. These positions will⁣ be⁣ reclassified across the agency,⁢ with 15‍ additions to the civil rights division, 21 in wage and hour, and 14 ‍in business operations. BOLI is directed ​to report to the ⁣Joint Committee on ⁢Ways and Means during the 2026 legislative​ session on the ⁣impact of these investments, including updates on staffing, ‌workload, and backlogs.

Lawmakers passed 22⁤ bills ⁤with a fiscal impact ‌on BOLI in the ⁢last session. While ​the agency has launched⁤ a website to track these new laws ⁤and their ‍effective dates (https://www.oregon.gov/boli/employers/Pages/Legislative-Updates.aspx),BOLI estimates that 10 will have a “significant impact,” ‍but ⁣only three were fully funded.

“this mismatch between new ⁤protections on paper and resources allocated to the Bureau creates a dangerous gap: Oregonians⁢ believe their rights are protected ⁣under ⁣new laws, but ‍the enforcement ⁢capacity doesn’t exist,” the report stated. This pattern has contributed to the​ ongoing backlog, with over 70⁤ new laws related to BOLI’s responsibilities passed since 2015, but only 10 accompanied by necessary funding, according to BOLI’s testimony​ in‍ a March‌ hearing.

Looking ahead, BOLI anticipates investments will continue to roll out through 2025 and early‌ 2026. A new case⁤ management system is expected ⁢to be⁤ operational by 2028. ⁤The agency also plans to ‌collaborate with the legislature, stakeholders, and the governor to secure additional funding during⁤ the 2026 legislative session.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.