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Governor Kate Brown hopes to make an impact on education during her final four-year term.
Governor Kate Brown hopes to make an impact on education during her final four-year term. GOVERNOR KATE BROWN'S OFFICE

Good morning, Portland! Bundle up because it's cold out there today! It's cold out there every day—what do you think this is, Miami Beach?

Here are the headlines.

Super, Major: Governor Kate Brown was sworn in for her final four-year term yesterday, and indicated in her speech that she wants to make a major impact on education and the environment. She'll have supermajorities in both houses this legislative session, giving Democrats a strong chance of passing meaningful legislation.

Pro/Con: Oregon Speaker of the House Tina Kotek and Senate President Peter Courtney gave master classes in how leaders should and should not address sexual misconduct in the workplace. After being re-elected speaker, Kotek gave a speech that addressed the capitol's harassment problem head-on.

Courtney, meanwhile, ignored the issue—and one Democratic lawmaker refused to vote for him as senate president.

Unsticking to Their Guns: The 2019 state legislative session officially begins next week, and gun control is poised to be one of this year's major issues. Among the bills being considered: changing the minimum age to buy a gun from 18 to 21, and compelling gun owners to safely secure their gun when not in use.

Whose Knife Is It Anyway? It's been just nine days since a Portland police officer shot and killed Andre Gladen. Now, there is reportedly a question of whether the knife Gladen allegedly was carrying actually belonged to police.

Quaking: As Portland's new ordinance requiring certain buildings to be prominently labeled as not earthquake-safe starts going into effect, many Portland parents now have to send their kids to schools with that label—despite the fact that Portland Public Schools has spent millions on seismic upgrades in recent years.

Censuring Trump's Census: Moving on to national news, a federal judge has ruled that it would be unconstitutional for the Trump administration to include a question of citizenship on the upcoming 2020 census. A citizenship question hasn't been on the census since 1950, when America was allegedly great.

The Purr-est Content: Cleanse your brain's palette with this hypnotic cat rap.