I'm not familiar with the deer situation in Oregon - drove down the coast and was suitably impressed with the most beautiful land I've ever seen, but never hunted there.
Unless there is a long history of poorly managed deer population, I would support the wildlife biologists if they have any say in the setting of quotas. Michigan, for some time now, has had an overabundance of deer in the southern lower peninsula, while the UP deer herd has been struggling just to survive. The doe harvest has been cut to practically nothing up North after this last exceptionally hard winter and it's still questionable whether the herd will recover without more intervention. There are liberal doe tags available in those areas where the herd is solid, or still overpopulated.
I'd talk to the DNR (or whatever they are called in Oregon) about what can be done to improve habitat and build the herds to a level that will support some doe harvest. These things don't normally run a 1-year cycle.