Initial Posting Date:
05/22/2026
Application Deadline:
06/08/2026
Agency:
Office of the Legislative Counsel
Salary Range:
$4,860 - $7,288
Position Type:
Employee
Position Title:
Editor / Analyst 1
The Office of the Legislative Counsel is seeking up to four (4) talented and motivated Editors to join its editorial team. This is a full-time, limited duration position scheduled to start September 8, 2026, and last through March 1, 2028, and may be extended.
Editorial staff in Publication Services provide nonpartisan editorial, technical and publication expertise and services to assist the Office of the Legislative Counsel and the Legislative Assembly.
This recruitment announcement will remain open until filled. We encourage you to submit your application by June 8 to be considered in the first round of application reviews.
Do rainy days and Mondays put you in the mood for a cup of tea and a long legal treatise? If so, then this job may be the one for you! The Office of the Legislative Counsel in Salem, Oregon, invites you to put your excellent copyediting, analytical and written and oral communication skills to work as part of our editorial team.
In this nonpartisan role, you will learn concepts of statutory construction and legislative drafting, principles of legal writing and the nuts and bolts of legislative form and style. You will combine these with your know-how to read documents for logic and flow, to correct errors in grammar, syntax, punctuation and formatting and to conduct research. Our work is teamwork, and you will collaborate with other Editors and with drafting attorneys to ensure each document or publication has reached its full potential before being delivered to the legislator or agency that requested it.
Who You Are:
You are organized and logical and know how to structure your work to meet a series of deadlines each day. You possess the flexibility to shift your attention from draft documents to prepress work and back again. You have the ability to balance attention to detail with awareness of the deadline-driven nature of legislative work. You appreciate careful process documentation and can find your way through complex and intricate workflow processes. You seek mastery of the nuances of new style guides and love Merriam-Webster’s Unabridged. You back your editorial decisions with logic and knowledge. You communicate effectively, enjoy collaborating with others and can work with peers who apply a broad range of skills and approaches in problem-solving.
What You Will Do:
What You Will Not Do:
This is a hybrid (remote and in-office) position located in the Capitol building in Salem, Oregon.
While working from home, personal, stable and high-speed Internet access will be required to perform the functions of this position. There will be times when employees scheduled to be working from home will be required to report to the Capitol. Every effort will be made to provide reasonable notice; however, employees may be required to report to the building under short notice. The Capitol is located at 900 Court Street NE, Salem, Oregon, 97301.
To view the position description in its entirety, click here We encourage you to explore the position description provided to determine whether your skills and interests align with the nature of the position. If your goals align with our mission, we welcome the opportunity to meet you.
HOW TO QUALIFY:
Your application must demonstrate:
Bachelor’s degree and at least one year of experience that demonstrates the ability to perform the duties of the position.
WHY THE OREGON STATE LEGISLATURE?
Considering a move to Oregon? Check out what living, working and playing in Oregon is like
TO APPLY:
SPECIAL INFORMATION

Official LinkedIn page for the state of Oregon. Oregon is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is located on the Pacific coast, with Washington to the north, California to the south, Nevada on the southeast and Idaho to the east. The Columbia and Snake rivers delineate much of Oregon's northern and eastern boundaries, respectively. The area was inhabited by many indigenous tribes before the arrival of traders, explorers, and settlers who formed an autonomous government in Oregon Country in 1843. The Oregon Territory was created in 1848, and Oregon became the 33rd state on February 14, 1859.