---
kind: section
source_pdf: oregon-prosperity-council-report-june-2026.pdf
fingerprint: 8ac9aef8ca1b
page_range: [292, 294]
breadcrumb: ["Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback", "30. Coalition of Oregon Employer and Business Associations (Oregon Employer Coalition)"]
source_links:
  pdf: "https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=292"
  raw_pages:
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0292.txt"
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0293.txt"
    - "../../.extracted/pages/page-0294.txt"
---

# 30. Coalition of Oregon Employer and Business Associations (Oregon Employer Coalition)

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## TL;DR  *(generated · confidence: high)*

The Coalition of Oregon Employer and Business Associations urges the Governor's Prosperity Council to preserve Oregon's workers' compensation system and SAIF Corporation. The coalition argues Oregon's system is a competitive economic asset—ranking 38th nationally for premium costs—and that SAIF's not-for-profit model has enabled stable premiums, strong worker benefits, and broad coverage for high-hazard and public-sector employers.

**Key points** *(each cites a PDF page)*:

- Oregon ranks 38th nationally for workers' compensation premiums; only twelve states have lower average rates ([p. 292](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=292))
- SAIF Corporation operates as Oregon's not-for-profit public insurer, with all funds held in the Industrial Accident Fund exclusively for workers' compensation purposes ([p. 293](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=293))
- Since 1990 system reforms, pure premium rates declined 83% while claims per 100 workers fell 73% ([p. 293](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=293))
- SAIF insures nearly all public employers statewide, including school districts and the vast majority of first responders ([p. 293](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=293))
- SAIF provides coverage for high-hazard, hard-to-insure industries: construction, agriculture, logging, trucking, and wood products ([p. 293](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=293))
- SAIF operates at a loss using investment earnings to moderate premiums without compromising worker protections ([p. 293](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=293))
- Coalition requests preservation of the current system and SAIF's role to maintain affordability and economic competitiveness ([p. 294](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=294))

Amounts: 38th · twelve states · 83% · 73% · Dates/FTE: May 4, 2026 · 1990 · Programs: workers' compensation system · SAIF Corporation · Industrial Accident Fund · Prosperity Roadmap · Parties: Coalition of Oregon Employer and Business Associations · Governor Tina Kotek · Tim Knopp · Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services

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> **Source:** PDF [pp. 292-294](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=292) · raw: [292](../../.extracted/pages/page-0292.txt) · [293](../../.extracted/pages/page-0293.txt) · [294](../../.extracted/pages/page-0294.txt)

Breadcrumb: Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback > 30. Coalition of Oregon Employer and Business Associations (Oregon Employer Coalition)

---
May 4, 2026
Ofϐice of Governor Tina Kotek
Attn: Tim Knopp, Chief Prosperity Ofϐicer, and Members of the Governor’s Prosperity
Council
900 Court Street, Suite 254
Salem, Oregon 97301
Re: Preserving Oregon’s workers’ compensation advantage and system stability
Dear Mr. Knopp and Members of the Governor’s Prosperity Council,
On behalf of a broad coalition of Oregon employer associations and business
organizations—representing thousands of employers across every region and industry—
we write to underscore the importance of preserving a workers’ compensation system that
is stable, predictable, and affordable. Many of our member organizations participate in SAIF
group insurance programs, giving us direct insight into how the system affects hiring,
investment, and long-term business decisions.
We appreciate the Governor’s Prosperity Council’s role in advising the Governor on
strategies that advance the Prosperity Roadmap, strengthen Oregon’s economy, and
support sustainable business growth. As you consider recommendations that will shape
Oregon’s long-term competitiveness, we urge you to consider the beneϐits of Oregon’s
current workers’ compensation system. Oregon’s workers’ compensation system is not
merely a regulatory requirement, but a proven economic asset that supports job retention,
investment, and statewide economic resilience.
Oregon’s workers’ compensation system provides employers with a meaningful cost
advantage relative to many other states. The Oregon Department of Consumer and Business
Services (DCBS) publishes a nationally recognized biennial study comparing workers’
compensation premium rates across all 50 states and Washington, D.C. According to the
most recent edition, Oregon ranks 38th overall, meaning only twelve states have lower
average premium rates. By comparison, California ranks among the most expensive states
in the nation; Washington remains signiϐicantly more costly than Oregon; and while Idaho
is lower-cost than many states, it still ranks higher than Oregon.
For employers, workers’ compensation is a foundational cost that directly affects
competitiveness and business planning. Stable and predictable premiums allow employers
to plan, hire, and invest with conϐidence. When costs remain steady, businesses are better

positioned to expand and create jobs; when systems become more volatile or expensive,
growth slows—particularly in labor-intensive industries operating on narrow margins.
Across our coalition, employers consistently identify Oregon’s workers’ compensation
stability as an important factor in their ability to remain competitive nationally.
Oregon’s success in maintaining an affordable and stable workers’ compensation system is
closely tied to SAIF Corporation. As Oregon’s not-for-proϐit public insurer, SAIF was
designed to serve as a stabilizing force in the system, ensuring broad access to coverage,
disciplined pricing, and long-term ϐinancial reliability during both routine economic cycles
and extraordinary events. All funds paid to SAIF are held in trust within the Industrial
Accident Fund and used exclusively for purposes authorized under Oregon’s workers’
compensation laws, keeping system resources focused on injured workers, employers, and
long-term system integrity.
SAIF’s strong capital position and mission-driven pricing model have helped keep Oregon’s
workers’ compensation premiums among the lowest in the nation while maintaining strong
beneϐits for injured workers. Since system reforms in 1990, pure premium rates have
declined 83% while claims per 100 workers fell by 73%, thanks in large part to the safety
efforts of Oregon employers and carriers like SAIF.
SAIF uses its investment earnings to operate at a loss, helping moderate premiums and
supporting predictability for employers without compromising worker protections. SAIF’s
ϐinancial strength also allows Oregon’s workers’ compensation system to withstand
catastrophic events that could generate widespread claims and economic disruption,
providing critical stability at moments when employers, workers, and public entities are
most vulnerable.
SAIF also plays an essential role in supporting Oregon’s public sector, insuring nearly all
public employers statewide, including school districts. SAIF also takes care of the vast
majority of ϐirst responders, who all Oregonians rely on to be healthy and ready to assist
when the state needs them the most.
By maintaining broad participation and a long-term approach to pricing, SAIF helps limit
volatility for employers whose budgets are particularly sensitive to cost swings. In addition,
SAIF provides essential coverage for high-hazard and hard-to-insure industries that are
foundational to Oregon’s economy, including construction, agriculture, logging, trucking,
and wood products. Beyond insurance coverage, SAIF’s investment in workplace safety and
return-to-work programs contributes to long-term cost control, workforce stability, and
improved productivity statewide.

Oregon’s workers’ compensation system is one bright spot in the current business climate.
Our current workers’ compensation system reϐlects decades of labor-management
collaboration and disciplined policy choices that transformed one of the nation’s most
expensive systems into one of its most competitive.
As the Prosperity Council develops recommendations to strengthen Oregon’s economy, we
respectfully encourage an approach that builds on what is working. This includes
preserving SAIF and therefore affordability for employers. The current system maintains
the ϐinancial and structural foundations that support economic growth, resilience, and a
healthy workers’ compensation system that serves Oregon workers and businesses.
Respectfully,
Coalition of Oregon Employer and Business Associations

---

Parent: [Appendix E: Submissions & Feedback](./INDEX.md) · PDF: [pp. 292-294](https://www.oregon.gov/gov/Documents/Oregon%20Prosperity%20Council%20Report_June%202026.pdf#page=292)
