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Financial Wellness Quarterly – Summer 2025

Financial Wellness Quarterly – Summer 2025

 Content Editor

July 27, 2025



Thank you for your interest in financial wellness in Oregon. Supported by Treasury’s Financial Empowerment Advisory Team, this collaborative newsletter highlights efforts statewide to help Oregonians on their paths to financial security, solvency, and success. Interested in being added to our financial wellness mailing list? Submit your request to: Eric.Engelson@ost.state.or.us


From Treasurer Steiner


Image of Treasurer Steiner

Summer is a prime time to explore our beautiful state, from the coast to the starry skies of southeast Oregon. Wherever you like to take a break, remember to not take a vacation from financial savviness.

No matter the season or where your summer adventures take you, bad actors want to separate you from your money. It pays to stay alert - Americans reported losing more than $12 billion to fraud last year, according to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. Taking a moment to be skeptical can mean the difference between an exciting adventure and a bad trip.

As your State Treasurer, I’m excited to convene the Oregon Financial Empowerment Advisory Team (FEAT) at our annual in-person meeting on Tuesday, August 5, at Treasury’s Tigard office. In addition to highlighting and advancing financial wellness statewide, the Team also helps guide Treasury’s efforts to make financial empowerment tools more prevalent, relevant, and accessible when Oregonians need them.

I encourage you to join us at next month’s meeting! More details about the upcoming meeting are shared below. I hope to meet you there!

Noteworthy State News


Growing Financial Coaching Program Looks To Expand In Mid-Valley

Stand By Me Logo

In its first five years, a one-to-one confidential financial coaching program in the mid-Willamette Valley has given 169 Oregonians a free personal guide to improve their financial situations. Simply put:

It’s helping.

A majority of participants – 73% of whom are women and 27% are Latino – reported creating spending plans (91%), increasing savings (80%) and reducing debt (61%). In addition, two thirds of participants took steps to improve their credit scores, leading to an average increase of 57 points.

Now, after initially serving Linn, Benton and Lincoln counties, the $tand By Me Oregon program is expanding into Marion County this year – and hopes someday to facilitate financial coaching statewide, said program manager Alicia Lucke.

The nonprofit program is based on a model in Delaware, and early Oregon efforts have been supported by a number of grants, including from the Oregon Community Foundation. The program is administered through the Oregon Cascades West Council of Governments, which helps train volunteers and connect them to clients.

Most people meet with coaches for about three months, but there is no cut-off date, Lucke said. “We will be with you as long as you want us to be.”

Albany mother Melissa Wright, a two-year client, said: “My coach, Rob, has been an asset to me over the past year. I picked some financial goals and he has coached and supported me all along the way. I’m so thankful! “

Training for financial mentors will be in August in Corvallis, and both English and Spanish speaking volunteers are needed.


FEAT Update


Financial educators and advocates invited to in-person meeting on August 5

Financial Empowerment Logo

Do you help improve financial confidence in Oregon?

The Oregon financial Empowerment Advisory Team’s annual in-person meeting will be Tuesday, Aug. 5 from 2 – 4 p.m. at the Oregon State Treasury office in Tigard. The address is 16290 SW Upper Boones Ferry Road.

A public-private partnership and chaired by State Treasurer Elizabeth Steiner, the Advisory Team augments and amplifies financial education and wellbeing programs, seeks to improve equity and accessibility of financial education, and advances public policy improvements.

As part of the agenda, attendees will be invited to introduce themselves and their efforts.


Community Spotlight


Bend Educator, Portland Nonprofit Honored As 2025 Financial Champions

OFEA winners Bekki Tucker and Commmunity champion UPLIFT

Every Oregonian benefits from financial learning, financial inclusion and financial confidence. The annual Financial Empowerment Awards recognize champions who go the extra mile to help put students and our neighbors on more stable financial footing.

The 2025 honorees were announced as part of Financial Literacy Month.

Financial Empowerment Educator of the Year: Bekki Tucker, Caldera High School (Bend). Tucker is lauded for her work in developing personal finance curricula for the Bend-La Pine School District and for contributing to statewide guidelines for the new personal finance graduation requirement.

Financial Empowerment Community Champion: UPLIFT Leadership (Portland). This nonprofit empowers teens with career exploration, employment skills, and budgeting knowledge, helping them assess job market realities and manage future finances.

Treasurer Steiner emphasized the vital link between financial know-how and overall wellbeing, stating, " Because of the continued passion and expertise of our Financial Empowerment Award honorees, we can see firsthand how investing in financial knowledge pays dividends for all Oregonians."

Nominations came from across the state and the winners were selected by a subcommittee of the Financial Empowerment Advisory Team. Nominations for the 2026 awards will open in November.


State of Oregon Happenings


Down Payment Assistance Helped 269 People Buy Houses In 2024

Homeownership helps Oregonians to invest in themselves, their families and their communities. A state-backed financing program helped to make that dream possible for 269 Oregonians in 2024.

Administered by Oregon Housing and Community Services in partnership with housing agencies across the state, the Down Payment Assistance (DPA) program disbursed almost $10 million to homebuyers, with an average of $28,315 per homebuyer for homes across Oregon that cost, on average, $339,689.

Of those homebuyers, 56% identified as first-generation and 55% identified as people of color.

The program was created in 2011 and has helped 1,543 households since. Learn more from Housing and Community Services.



Free Resources Being Submitted For New Personal Finance Class

Starting with the class of 2027, Oregon students will need to complete a semester or equivalent of personal financial education instruction, under legislation that passed in 2023. Districts can seek a waiver to delay the requirement for a year due to lack of adequate staffing.

While the new law requires students take a course, it did not include funding to buy curriculum. The Oregon Department of Education has created a shared “Oregon Open Learning Hub” site where the public and curriculum writers can submit materials that are “openly licensed” -- and can be used by educators for free.

Department content specialists are curating submitted materials to ensure they are appropriate for students and align to the state’s framework for the courses.

As of July 3, there were more than 400 different resources submitted. They include lectures, news articles, lesson plans, videos and even a “Shady Sam” arcade game. The public is also welcome to view the materials … and possibly learn a thing or two.



Division of Financial Regulation launches investor education guide

The Oregon Division of Financial Regulation’s new Investor Guide is a useful resource for both new and experienced investors, with accurate, unbiased, and easy to understand information to help people make the best decisions about investing.

In addition to the new guide, agency employees are available to provide presentations on investment topics such as understanding differences between investment products, key investing principles, how to save for retirement, understanding differences between types of investment professionals, and how to spot and avoid investing fraud.

Email the agency to schedule an investing basics presentation, and visit the website to explore other financial education resources.



DHS Tax Filing Program Helps Record Number Of Participants

The Oregon Department of Human Services Tax Infrastructure Grant Program offered free preparation help to a record number of low-income Oregonians, with 20,000 returns filed – a five-fold increase from three years ago.

The program partners with culturally specific and responsive organizations, universities, high schools and tribal governments to provide free tax services, with grants and the help of more than 600 volunteers. The average income of clients is around $30,000.

In 2025, the participating filers claimed $30 million in federal and state refunds, including almost $15 million in federal Earned Income Tax Credit and child tax credits. (Oregon is among the poorest-performing states for tax credit redemptions, and agencies working to help more Oregonians understand and claim their rightful credits.)

In addition, 23 teachers across Oregon assisted with filing for high school students, who qualified for refunds between $80 and $1200.


Oregon State Treasury News


New Savers Can Now Get A $100 Start Toward Future Education

OCSP Logo

To help more families start saving for a better future, the Oregon College Savings Plan has quadrupled the value of two incentive programs for new participants.

Families opening a new account for their newborn or kindergartener now can receive a $100 deposit – up from the previous $25 offered via the popular Baby Grad and Kinder Grad programs.

Research shows that children with dedicated college savings are significantly more likely to pursue higher education. Recognizing this connection, the Baby Grad and Kinder Grad programs were designed to encourage early savings habits, allowing investments more time to grow tax-free.

Oregon Financial Empowerment Roundup



Calendar


Date Event

July 28

Webinar: Government Imposter Scams, 9 a.m., AARP Oregon

July 31

NextGen Educator FinCamp, 8:30 a.m., NextGen Personal Finance, University Place Hotel at Portland State University, Portland

Aug. 2

Webinar: Fundaciones Financieras (Spanish), 9 a.m., DevNW

Aug. 5

Public meeting: Financial Empowerment Advisory Team, 2 p.m., 16290 SW Upper Boones Ferry Road, Tigard

Aug. 14

Class: Small Business Builder - Banking Backup, noon, Zoom, MicroEnterprise Services of Oregon

Aug. 14

Class: Quick Tips for Managing Your Mortgage, 6 p.m., Virtual, NeighborImpact HomeSource

Aug. 27

Webinar: Employer payroll submission for OregonSaves, 11 a.m., OregonSaves

Sept. 10

Workshop: Social Security Planning, 5:30 p.m., webinar, DevNW

Sept. 11

Class: Quick Tips for Managing Your Mortgage, 6 p.m., Virtual, NeighborImpact HomeSource

Sept. 18

2025 Age-Friendly Oregon Summit, 8:30 a.m., Portland State University, AARP Oregon

Sept. 18-19

Forum: Pathways to Financial Belonging, University of Washington, Tacoma, BankOn Washington

Sept. 24

The Working Struggle (Understanding ALICE statistics), 9 a.m., United Way of Linn, Benton & Lincoln Counties, 505 Mullins Dr., Lebanon

Oct. 8

Workshop: Home Energy Savings, 5:30 p.m., webinar, DevNW

Oct. 9-10

Conference: Oregon Business Educators Association, Boulder Falls Inn Conference Center, Lebanon, Oregon

Oct. 16

National Get Smart About Credit Day, American Bankers Association Foundation

Nov. 3-6

Class: Youth Financial Foundations, 4 pm, Zoom, DevNW

Nov. 19

Fall Education Summit, The Aerie at Eagle Landing, 10220 SE Causey Ave, Happy Valley

Dec. 2

Public meeting: Financial Empowerment Advisory Team, 2 p.m., virtual meeting

Please let us know if you have financial-focused events to list in the statewide calendar.

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