March 11, 2016, eClips (2024)

State Library eClips

* 150 lucky Portlanders win FEMA funding in case of The Big One
* Portland gets call from EPA to review lead-prevention efforts
* Bars less likely to be held liable for drunken driving injuries with Supreme Court ruling
* Broken government promises leave four tribes waiting for better housing
* Kate Brown has signed Oregon’s historic, contentious anti-coal bill
* These 25 jobs pay the most nationwide: how does Oregon compare?
* Confederate emblem outside Oregon’s Capitol has been removed
* Salmon hatchery findings should inform a top-to-bottom review: Editorial — Opinion
* Subsidizing home retrofits should not be a priority for earthquake funds OPINION — Guest Opinion
* Looking back on a year as secretary of state OPINION — Guest Opinion
* Mississippi flag removed from Oregon Capitol
* Lane County’s January unemployment rate drops to 5 percent, lowest since before the Great Recession
* University of Oregon: Students hold 9-to-5 sit-in at presidents office
* Address high school crisis — Opinion
* Oregon benefits if Uncle Phil focuses on Salem — Opinion
* Late Republican shuffling may spurn election hopes
* Experts assess state, Deschutes County
* Editorial: Don’t hide complaints against lawyers — Opinion
* Editorial: TSA should serve Klamath Falls — Opinion
* 4 Key Details Revealed By LaVoy Finicum Investigation Report
* Oregon Tests Tsunami Walkout Friday
* Western land managers strategize on battling invasive weeds
* Another case of EPA overreaction — Opinion
* Nuance can’t replace yes or no on national monument — Opinion
* Volunteers needed: Local groups see decline
* Our view: Tips and kicks — Opinion
* Pot fences make good neighbors
* Voters will be asked to allow liquor sales at grocery stores
* A question of intent
* Our View: The Whitsetts’ cynical back-room deal — Opinion
* Election filing fallout
* State official briefs commission on dam removal
* C Canal irrigators back $10 million loan
* Short legislative sessions don’t fit well with big issues — Opinion
* Oregon’s minimum wage hike based on deception — Guest Opinion
* Congress offers hope for air service return — Opinion
* Linn County moves forward with forest trust lawsuit
* With more oil ships on the Columbia, DOE will study risk of spills – WA
* Linn County files $1.4B breach of contract lawsuit today
* Editorial: Wage increase will punish students, state — Opinion
* Olson calls session ‘most challenging’
* Local lawmakers tally wins in Salem
* State approves Umpqua Community College funding; board member Joe Pospisil resigns
* Douglas County lacks affordable housing, report says
* Has Oregon Coast Dodged the Bullet on Invasive Species?
* Oregon Legislature boosts brownfields cleanups
* New Oregon Motor Voter numbers show dramatic increase in registered voters across Oregon– Blog
* Rep. Shemia fa*gan Wont Seek Re-Election, Will Try to Anoint Successor
* Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries Will Investigate Whistleblower Complaint Against Sheriff Dan Staton
* Bill extends TV and film production incentives
* Oregon adds 15,502 voters since ‘Motor Voter’ law began Jan. 1
* Ohio, Oregon and Washington Join Innovation Pilot to Modernize Public Health
* Teens challenge US government for not protecting them from climate change

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150 LUCKY PORTLANDERS WIN FEMA FUNDING IN CASE OF THE BIG ONE (Portland Oregonian)

As the rest of the region fearfully awaits The Big One, some lucky Portlanders have been given grant money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help prepare their homes for an earthquake.

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PORTLAND GETS CALL FROM EPA TO REVIEW LEAD-PREVENTION EFFORTS (Portland Oregonian)

With a renewed sense of vigilance in the wake of the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, federal regulators are reaching out to water providers nationwide including in Portland to review safeguards to prevent lead poisoning.

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BARS LESS LIKELY TO BE HELD LIABLE FOR DRUNKEN DRIVING INJURIES WITH SUPREME COURT RULING (Portland Oregonian)

The Oregon Supreme Court made it tougher Thursday for some victims of drunken drivers to sue the bars that kept the drinks coming.

The high court ruled that not only must victims prove that bar employees were careless in serving alcohol to a “visibly intoxicated person,” but that the employees should have “foreseen” that the drunken person was going to get into a car and maim or kill somebody.

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BROKEN GOVERNMENT PROMISES LEAVE FOUR TRIBES WAITING FOR BETTER HOUSING (Portland Oregonian)

Decades ago, the federal government wiped out thriving Native American settlements along the Columbia River to make way for three dams. The villages were later replaced with 31 designated encampments.

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KATE BROWN HAS SIGNED OREGON’S HISTORIC, CONTENTIOUS ANTI-COAL BILL (Portland Oregonian)

Oregon’s most consequential energy bill in decades a nationally ambitious plan to wean the state off coal and boost renewable sources has become law.

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THESE 25 JOBS PAY THE MOST NATIONWIDE: HOW DOES OREGON COMPARE? (Portland Oregonian)

Top paid jobs nationwide and in Oregon.

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CONFEDERATE EMBLEM OUTSIDE OREGON’S CAPITOL HAS BEEN REMOVED (Portland Oregonian)

A Confederate-marked flag that had flown outside Oregon’s Capitol for a decade was quietly taken down early this week, state officials have confirmed.

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SALMON HATCHERY FINDINGS SHOULD INFORM A TOP-TO-BOTTOM REVIEW: EDITORIAL — OPINION (Portland Oregonian)

Fitting out the Columbia Basin with hydroelectric dams transformed the Pacific Northwest. Abundant, clean and cheap electricity would drive business growth and settlement, while an elaborate system of river locks allowed barges to connect the ocean with ports far inland. What was once a wild and rocky waterway teeming with salmon became a series of slackwater lakes yoked in service to development and the economies of Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana.

But even the best things can bring corollary damage.

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SUBSIDIZING HOME RETROFITS SHOULD NOT BE A PRIORITY FOR EARTHQUAKE FUNDS OPINION — GUEST OPINION (Portland Oregonian)

This week’s news that the Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA has granted the city of Portland and the nonprofit Enhabit $500,000 to do seismic retrofits on 150 homes raises the question of who is setting the priority for expenditures on earthquake preparedness.

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LOOKING BACK ON A YEAR AS SECRETARY OF STATE OPINION — GUEST OPINION (Portland Oregonian)

Friday, March 11, marks one year since I took the oath of office as Oregon’s secretary of state. This unexpected privilege has deepened my appreciation for Oregon and for the work of this agency. It has also given me a taste of what the political limelight feels like when it’s focused on you.

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MISSISSIPPI FLAG REMOVED FROM OREGON CAPITOL (Salem Statesman Journal)

One Mississippi … zero Mississippi. The state flag of Mississippi has been removed from the Oregon Capitol grounds.

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LANE COUNTY’S JANUARY UNEMPLOYMENT RATE DROPS TO 5 PERCENT, LOWEST SINCE BEFORE THE GREAT RECESSION (Eugene Register-Guard)

Lane County’s January unemployment rate was the lowest it has been since before the Great Recession, according to state Employment Department figures released Tuesday.

The seasonally adjusted rate was 5 percent in January, less than a revised 5.6 percent in December, and down significantly from 6.3 percent in January 2015.

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UNIVERSITY OF OREGON: STUDENTS HOLD 9-TO-5 SIT-IN AT PRESIDENTS OFFICE (Eugene Register-Guard)

-They’re asking for the UO endowment to be cleared of fossil-fuel stocks-

Emma Gjerdseth and Amber Erkan compared the pro-environmental image the University of Oregon projects with the UOs actions. And they say they detected a smidge of hypocrisy.

UO leaders talk about sustainability. Yet they cling to the income yielded by fossil fuel investments, the two students discovered. Gjerdseth quoted the UOs freshly crafted mission statement to the UO Board of Trustees at a recent meeting.

We value our shared charge to steward resources sustainably and responsibly, she read from the document. The UOs brand positioning includes statements such as green is in our DNA and sustainability runs through the heart of everything we do.

Why then, Erkan asked the trustees, does the UO Foundation the UOs nonprofit fundraising arm hold investments in fossil fuel companies?

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ADDRESS HIGH SCHOOL CRISIS — OPINION (Eugene Register-Guard)

At 72 percent, Oregon’s high school graduation rate is among the nations lowest. Too many of those who do graduate lack the skills for success, with 75 percent of those entering community colleges needing remedial education in reading or math.

The states political and education leaders should be treating it as a crisis. Instead, the only comprehensive proposal to increase graduation rates and student achievement is coming from an advocacy group and its allies.

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OREGON BENEFITS IF UNCLE PHIL FOCUSES ON SALEM — OPINION (Eugene Register-Guard)

The University of Oregon and mega-donor Phil Knight should declare a one-year separation mutual, amiable and temporary.

To focus on their individual goals and to strengthen their relationship in the long run, they should spend some time seeing other people. The university’s money woes cant be solved by one donor, no matter how deep his pockets are.

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LATE REPUBLICAN SHUFFLING MAY SPURN ELECTION HOPES (Bend Bulletin)

-Doug Whitsett announces retirement from Central, Southern Oregon Senate district-

In a move that surprised Oregons political world, state Sen. Doug Whitsett, whose district sprawls from Southern Oregon to eastern Deschutes County and all of Crook County, and his wife, state Rep. Gail Whitsett, announced this week they would retire.

The announcement itself wasn’t as shocking as how the two Klamath Falls Republicans went about making it.

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EXPERTS ASSESS STATE, DESCHUTES COUNTY (Bend Bulletin)

-Job growth boosts county, but state tax structure needs improvement-

The Bend-Redmond Metropolitan Statistical Area has performed well economically in recent years compared to other small metro areas, but Oregon’s tax structure could hinder development in the future, according to the two keynote speakers at the Economic Development for Central Oregon annual luncheon Thursday.

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EDITORIAL: DON’T HIDE COMPLAINTS AGAINST LAWYERS — OPINION (Bend Bulletin)

Sometime this afternoon the Oregon State Bar Associations governing body is scheduled to decide whether or not to make changes in the way the bar handles discipline of lawyers in the state. While some of the recommendations from the Discipline System Review Committee make good sense, some are troubling.

The rules governing Oregon’s lawyers are unique in one important way: Only in this state are complaints filed against lawyers a matter of public record from the get-go.

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EDITORIAL: TSA SHOULD SERVE KLAMATH FALLS — OPINION (Bend Bulletin)

Even the most bitterly divided Congress should be able to come together on this one: The Treating Small Airports with Fairness Act TSA Fairness Act would assure that lack of airport security did not stand in the way of attracting commercial air service to Klamath Falls and other small communities.

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4 KEY DETAILS REVEALED BY LAVOY FINICUM INVESTIGATION REPORT (Oregon Public Broadcasting)

Several new details came to light Thursday regarding the circ*mstances of the officer-involved shooting death of Robert LaVoy Finicum.

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OREGON TESTS TSUNAMI WALKOUT FRIDAY (Northwest Public Radio)

At 11 o’clock Friday morning, Florence residents on the Oregon coast will hear sirens. The drill will test the states new Tsunami Blue Line Project on the 5th anniversary of the Tsunami and Earthquake that hit Japan.

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WESTERN LAND MANAGERS STRATEGIZE ON BATTLING INVASIVE WEEDS (Capital Press)

-The report released Monday by the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies says piecemeal efforts must be replaced by landscape-wide strategies stretching across Western states.-

Public lands managers have released an outline for creating a decades-long strategy to combat wildfire-prone invasive weeds considered a main threat to Great Basin sagebrush ecosystems.

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ANOTHER CASE OF EPA OVERREACTION — OPINION (Capital Press)

-The EPA has shown its tendency for overreacting yet again.-

This is a story about a farmer who thought he was doing the right thing. To prevent flooding from washing massive amounts of trees and dirt into the North Santiam River, Bill Case put rock along the banks. To make sure it was OK, he checked with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Oregon Department of State Lands. Once they gave him the thumbs up he thought he was home free.

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NUANCE CAN’T REPLACE YES OR NO ON NATIONAL MONUMENT — OPINION (Capital Press)

-The administration needs to give Malheur County residents a definitive answer on the Canyonlands monument question.-

Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell, responding to questions from Rep. Greg Walden during hearings March 1, said shes unaware of any active plan in the administration to designate an Owyhee Canyonlands national monument.

That’s good news, as far as it goes.

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VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: LOCAL GROUPS SEE DECLINE (East Oregonian)

-Area organizations are having trouble finding new volunteers to replace those who are stepping back from public service.-

When the announcement came that Umatilla’s Landing Days were being scaled back significantly this year due to lack of volunteers, it signaled a growing problem.

We usually have between 30 and 40 volunteers and last year we got about 15, Umatilla Chamber of Commerce director Karen Hutchinson Talaski said.

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OUR VIEW: TIPS AND KICKS — OPINION (East Oregonian)

-A kick in the pants to public agencies dragging their feet into the 21st century, especially when it comes to public records.-

Whether its intentional obfuscation or simply bureaucratic ineptitude, when a taxpayer-funded office cant provide a basic record to a taxpayer efficiently and affordably, it makes the system appear less trustworthy.

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POT FENCES MAKE GOOD NEIGHBORS (Medford Mail Tribune)

-OLCC members toured pot grows Thursday to learn about security measures-

Tall fences are sprouting all over the Rogue Valley as pot growers gear up for tough new security measures required by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission this year.

OLCC officials toured the area Thursday to learn what they might expect during inspections and in the process they learned that the inspections themselves might help spread russet mites from crop to crop.

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VOTERS WILL BE ASKED TO ALLOW LIQUOR SALES AT GROCERY STORES (Medford Mail Tribune)

-Owners of liquor stores and wine shops say the measure would reduce choices for consumers-

When the latest effort to privatize Oregon’s liquor sales appears on the November ballot, it will again pit corporate America versus the moms and pops.

The last effort, the Oregon Liquor Control Modernization Act, backed by the nation’s billion-dollar grocery chains, was withdrawn a month before the November 2014 election.

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A QUESTION OF INTENT (Medford Mail Tribune)

-Buckley, Bates say Jackson County is misinterpreting new marijuana law-

Jackson County’s senior Democratic leaders in the Oregon Legislature say Jackson County is misinterpreting a new law regarding medical marijuana growing on rural residential land.

“Right now, legislative council is not in agreement with how the law was interpreted here in Jackson County,” Rep. Peter Buckley of Ashland told about 90 people packed into the Mail Tribune conference room Thursday.

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OUR VIEW: THE WHITSETTS’ CYNICAL BACK-ROOM DEAL — OPINION (Medford Mail Tribune)

In one of the more cynical moves in Oregon politics in recent memory, Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-Klamath Falls, and his wife, Republican Rep. Gail Whitsett, announced their retirements from the Legislature the morning after the filing deadline for the May primary, effectively bequeathing their seats to the only other candidate to file for either position.

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ELECTION FILING FALLOUT (Herald and News)

-Hakanson calls Whitsett withdrawal ‘boon’ to campaign-

An independent candidate running for state representative in Klamath County said he is looking forward to no longer challenging an incumbent after Rep. Gail Whitsett withdrew Wednesday.

Jonah Hakanson, who announced his candidacy in January, said Whitsett’s withdrawal was good news in an area where sitting officers are re-elected about 80 percent of the time.

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STATE OFFICIAL BRIEFS COMMISSION ON DAM REMOVAL (Herald and News)

-Money remains committed toward a 2020 deadline-

Oregon Gov. Kate Browns natural resource director met with Klamath County commissioners Tuesday to ask them to decide whether there are unresolved issues or impacts the state can address while considering removing four Klamath River dams.

Three of the dams are located in California; one, the J.C. Boyle dam is in Klamath County. The dams are owned by PacifiCorp.

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C CANAL IRRIGATORS BACK $10 MILLION LOAN (Herald and News)

Klamath Project irrigators are one step closer to replacing the C Canal flume.

At a Klamath Irrigation District KID meeting Thursday, Board Chairman Brent Cheyne said irrigators voted 269-16 in favor of accepting a low-interest loan from the Bureau of Reclamation BOR to fund the $10 million project.

It was a landslide, Cheyne said.

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SHORT LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS DON’T FIT WELL WITH BIG ISSUES — OPINION (Herald and News)

When Oregon decided in 2010 to hold annual legislative sessions the idea was sold to voters as being aimed at cleaning up budget problems and handling emergencies. That made sense since Oregon state budgets have to be projected more than 18 months ahead. A month-long session each February seemed like a better approach.

We agreed and recommended it to voters. Silly us. It only works that way if the political parties let it.

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OREGON’S MINIMUM WAGE HIKE BASED ON DECEPTION — GUEST OPINION (Herald and News)

Passed by voters nearly 14 years ago, Measure 25 promised to take the minimum-wage issue out of politics for good, by linking it forever to annual increases in the federal Consumer Price Index.

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CONGRESS OFFERS HOPE FOR AIR SERVICE RETURN — OPINION (Herald and News)

-Legislation moving forward to put TSA in Klamath Falls-

It may take some political arm-twisting to get the Transportation Security Administration to come to its senses and we hope a growing coalition of Congress members can supply it.

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LINN COUNTY MOVES FORWARD WITH FOREST TRUST LAWSUIT (Daily Astorian)

-Linn County officials say the state has mismanaged forestland, and owes 15 counties $1.4 billion.-

Linn County Board of Commissioners announced Thursday it is ready to file a class action suit seeking more than $1.4 billion damages from the state for breach of contract in management of forestland in 15 counties.

The county notified the state of its intent to file the lawsuit Jan. 13 on behalf of 150 taxing districts that benefit from sales receipts from harvests off of Oregon Forest Trust Lands.

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WITH MORE OIL SHIPS ON THE COLUMBIA, DOE WILL STUDY RISK OF SPILLS – WA (Daily Astorian)

-The DOE will evaluate the risk of oil spills on the Columbia River.-

With greater numbers of vessels transporting oil through state waters, the risk of a catastrophic oil spill is increasing.

With that in mind, the Washington Department of Ecology has hired the Norway-based maritime consultancy Det Nosrke Veritas USA Inc., to study vessel traffic in and around the Columbia River, and evaluate the risk for potential oil spills, according to a March 3 press release.

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LINN COUNTY FILES $1.4B BREACH OF CONTRACT LAWSUIT TODAY (Albany Democrat Herald)

Linn County Commissioners Roger Nyquist, John Lindsey and Will Tucker plan to file a $1.4 billion breach of contract class action lawsuit today against the State of Oregon in Linn County Circuit Court.

The commissioners are seeking compensation for 15 Forest Trust Counties and some 150 other local taxing districts.

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EDITORIAL: WAGE INCREASE WILL PUNISH STUDENTS, STATE — OPINION (Albany Democrat Herald)

If you’re wondering how Oregon’s recent decision to increase the minimum wage will play out in the real world, you might take a look at the decisions facing the states public universities.

As you might imagine, Oregon’s four-year universities employ thousands of students in a variety of jobs, and a lot of those jobs pay the minimum wage.

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OLSON CALLS SESSION ‘MOST CHALLENGING’ (Albany Democrat Herald)

The next time Oregon holds an even-year short session, Rep. Andy Olson, R-Albany, said he’d like to see some limits on what can be introduced.

For starters, the Oregon representative said, the ability to field two bills per lawmaker plus three bills per committee plus unlimited bills from the rules committee is just out of control.

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LOCAL LAWMAKERS TALLY WINS IN SALEM (Corvallis Gazette-Times)

The 2016 legislative session that wrapped up last week was a largely successful one for Corvallis-area lawmakers, who saw many of their top priorities enacted into law.

Both District 8 Sen. Sara Gelser and District 16 Rep. Dan Rayfield are Democrats, who held solid majorities in both chambers of the Legislature and managed to push through a number of significant bills, including a minimum wage increase, a clean energy measure and a package of affordable housing legislation.

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STATE APPROVES UMPQUA COMMUNITY COLLEGE FUNDING; BOARD MEMBER JOE POSPISIL RESIGNS (Douglas County News-Review)

Recovery at Umpqua Community College will continue, following the states approval of a UCC funding request for the renovation of Snyder Hall.

The request had been submitted to the short Oregon state legislative session that came to a close last week.

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DOUGLAS COUNTY LACKS AFFORDABLE HOUSING, REPORT SAYS (Douglas County News-Review)

Douglas County is in the midst of an affordable housing crisis, according to the latest annual report from the county’s housing authority.

The report, released last week by the Housing Authority of Douglas County, said there is a glut of residents in search of low-income housing throughout the county, but vacancies are so low that they are being wait listed for six months to two years.

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HAS OREGON COAST DODGED THE BULLET ON INVASIVE SPECIES? (Oregon Coast Beach Connection)

Researchers from OSU in Corvallis and the Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport say it’s quite possible the region has dodged the bullet, as one scientist put it. Yet they admit it’s still too early to be sure.

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OREGON LEGISLATURE BOOSTS BROWNFIELDS CLEANUPS (Oregon Business Journal)

The Oregon Legislature has passed a statute putting another arrow into the quiver of municipalities aiming at remediation of local brownfield sites.

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NEW OREGON MOTOR VOTER NUMBERS SHOW DRAMATIC INCREASE IN REGISTERED VOTERS ACROSS OREGON— BLOG (Oregon Secretary of State)

-Oregon’s pioneering automatic voter registration system adds historic numbers to Oregon’s voter rolls-

The Elections Division of the Secretary of States Office released the first monthly report of the Oregon Motor Voter program today. The data from the first two months of implementation show 15,502 new voters were added to the rolls since Oregon Motor Voter was implemented on January 1, 2016.

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REP. SHEMIA fa*gAN WONT SEEK RE-ELECTION, WILL TRY TO ANOINT SUCCESSOR (Willamette Week)

-The second-term representative attempts to hand her seat to a hand-picked successor.-

State Rep. Shemia fa*gan D-Happy Valley is ending her legislative career after two sessions.

fa*gan, a business lawyer and mother of a young son born shortly after her election in 2012, cited business and family reasons for her decision not to run again.

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OREGON BUREAU OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIES WILL INVESTIGATE WHISTLEBLOWER COMPLAINT AGAINST SHERIFF DAN STATON (Willamette Week)

The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries will investigate a whistleblower complaint filed by former Multnomah County Sheriff’s Lt. Brent Ritchie.

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BILL EXTENDS TV AND FILM PRODUCTION INCENTIVES (KGW)

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown signed a bill Thursday extending incentives for television and film businesses who bring their productions to the state.

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OREGON ADDS 15,502 VOTERS SINCE ‘MOTOR VOTER’ LAW BEGAN JAN. 1 (KTVZ Bend)

-Now all who interact with DMV, are eligible are registered to vote-

The Elections Division of the Secretary of States Office released the first monthly report of the Oregon Motor Voter program on Thursday.

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OHIO, OREGON AND WASHINGTON JOIN INNOVATION PILOT TO MODERNIZE PUBLIC HEALTH (Government Technology)

Public health departments are about to get a booster shot of their own.

Thanks to a three-year $3 million investment from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Public Health National Center for Innovations an organizational and funding hub aimed at modernizing public health that was created on March 4 by the Public Health Accreditation Board PHAB is launching a three-state pilot in Ohio, Oregon and Washington.

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TEENS CHALLENGE US GOVERNMENT FOR NOT PROTECTING THEM FROM CLIMATE CHANGE (The Guardian UK)

-If allowed to go forward, plaintiffs in Oregon will ask court to hold government responsible for violating their rights to life, liberty, property and equal protection-

Twenty-one teenagers appeared in an Oregon courtroom to challenge the federal government over what they claim is a failure to protect them from the impacts of climate change, while several hundred schoolchildren protested outside.

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