Willamette Valley News, Friday 6/30 – United Way Gives More Than $600,000 In Grant Funding to Local Programs, WasteWise Lane County Launches Commercial Food Waste Prevention Campaign

The latest news stories and stories of interest in the Willamette Valley from the digital home of Southern Oregon, from Wynne Broadcasting’s WillametteValleyMagazine.com

Friday, June 30 2023

Willamette Valley Weather

United Way Gives More Than $600,000 In Grant Funding to Local Programs

Officials at United Way of Lane County announced this week that more than $600,000 in grant funding will be distributed to several local programs starting on July 1th.

United Way officials said they will be distributing two different types of grants, with Community Transformation grants providing $63,000 to $70,000 per year over three years funding cross-sector, multi-agency collaborative programs working to create systemic change in Lane County.

“We couldn’t be more excited about these grantees,” said Chris Martin, United Way board member and co-chair for United Way’s Community Investment Steering Committee, which oversees the investment process. “We worked very intentionally to find partners who were serving every corner of Lane County and who are improving the lives of children across several spectrums, including food insecurity, youth mental health, early literacy, and educational supports. Leveraging our learnings from the pandemic, we also worked to improve and accelerate the funding process for partners, getting these investments into the community quickly so our nonprofit partners can continue to do their critical work.”

These collaboratives include the School Food Security Coalition (FOOD for Lane County, 15th Night, The Arc of Lane County), the Violence Prevention Coalition (Hope and Safety Alliance, 90by30 Initiative, Kids FIRST, Sexual Assault Support Services, Siuslaw Outreach Services), Greatness Discovered in Our Time (Lane Community College Foundation, Lane Education Service District, the Lane African American Black Student Success program, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Lane Community College), and the Upriver Siuslaw Vision Team (Mapleton School District, Siuslaw Watershed Council, Siuslaw Vision).

United Way officials said Ophelia’s Place will receive $20,000 for programs that empower teenage girls in Lane County.

There are also 24 Community Support grants that will provide $5,000 to $20,000 per year over two years for organizations dedicated to the needs of children and families. These organizations include:

  • Black Cultural Initiative
  • Bohemia Food Hub
  • Boys & Girls Clubs of Western Lane County
  • Community Sharing Program
  • Creswell Family Resource Center
  • Daisy C.H.A.I.N.
  • Eugene-Springfield NAACP
  • Family Relief Nursery
  • Florence Food Share
  • FOOD for Lane County
  • Friends of the Children-Lane County
  • H.O.N.E.Y Inc.
  • Junction City Local Aid
  • Mapleton Food Share
  • Oakridge Food Box
  • Ophelia’s Place
  • OSLC Development – 15th Night Initiative
  • Our Community Birth Center
  • Parenting Now
  • Pearl Buck Center
  • Relief Nursery
  • SMART Reading
  • South Lane Mental Health Services
  • Xcape Dance Company’s Tip Tap Grow Preschool

Donations from individuals, employees and Lane County organizations made the grant funding possible, United Way officials said. The organization said they received 81 grant requests totaling $3.4 million, more than five times what was available in funding.

More information on the grants can be found here: https://www.unitedwaylane.org/community-investments

WasteWise Lane County Launches Commercial Food Waste Prevention Campaign In Springfield

WasteWise Lane County—part of the Lane County Waste Management Division—recently hired an Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) Climate Corps Fellow to kick off a new commercial food waste reduction effort in Springfield.

This initiative will be the County’s first dedicated outreach in Springfield to large food businesses to promote food donation, food scrap collection, and provide technical assistance.

“Commercial food waste prevention is one of those issues that can truly enhance the ‘triple bottom line’ for food businesses, such as grocery stores and restaurants,” said Lane County Waste Reduction Specialist Maya Buelow. “It’s good for business profits because food waste prevention can save organizations lots of money; it’s good for people because significant quantities of food can be diverted to community members in need; and it’s good for the planet because it can minimize food in landfills, helping to reduce greenhouse gases. A true win-win-win.”

This fellowship—which will run until early August—will help Lane County measure commercial food waste in Springfield and better understand concerns or barriers that large food waste generators have when donating or composting their wasted food. This commercial outreach effort closely follows the Sanipac policy introduced last year to accept food waste in Springfield residential yard waste bins.

The newly hired EDF Climate Corps Fellow is Tatum Flowers, a graduate student at the University of South Florida. Tatum will lead outreach efforts, provide information and technical assistance, as well as conduct site visits to interested organizations. Springfield food businesses can reach Tatum at foodwaste@lanecountyor.gov

Fast Facts

  • $149 billion worth of food in the U.S. never gets eaten or sold
  • Restaurants can save roughly $8 for every $1 invested in food waste prevention

About WasteWise Lane County

WasteWise Lane County offers education, tools, and resources that residents, schools, and businesses can use to reduce waste, conserve resources and live more sustainably. Follow WasteWise Lane County on Facebook and Instagram.

About the Environmental Defense Fund Climate Corps

EDF Climate Corps is a unique summer fellowship program where EDF trains and matches top-tier graduate students with host companies and organizations to advance environmental and sustainability goals. Learn more at edf.org/approach/edf-climate-corps-making-sustainability-work

Lane County Environmental Health Mosquito and Tick Surveillance In Full Swing

Summer is officially here, and so are the mosquitos and ticks that accompany the warm weather here in the Willamette Valley. Since Lane County does not spray to minimize vector (mosquitos, ticks) populations, Lane County Environmental Health (LCEH) utilizes trapping and surveillance, as well as community education to reduce the likelihood of vector-borne illnesses in humans and animals.

The LCEH Vector Surveillance program sets traps at vector “hot spots” around Lane County, collects the samples, sorts them by species, and finally sends the sample to a lab that is able to detect the presence of pathogens like West Nile Virus, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, anaplasmosis, and Lyme Disease. When these pathogens are detected, LCEH notifies the community. 

“The surveillance program helps us detect the presence of diseases which may be harmful to humans and animals, as well as informs us as to the changing demographics of vector species,” said Lane County Environmental Health Supervisor, Erik Nebeker. “Much like the restaurant inspections we preform, it’s designed to safeguard the many communities of Lane County from preventable illness.”

West Nile Virus, Lyme Disease and anaplasmosis have historically been detected in Lane County, underscoring the importance of prevention efforts. 

To prevent exposure to mosquitos, LCEH recommends: 

  • When outdoors, use repellents containing DEET. DEET-free alternatives, such as lemon eucalyptus oil and citronella, are also effective.
  • Mosquito species that carry West Nile Virus are most active from dusk to dawn. Mosquito species that carry Zika are most active during daylight hours. Use insect repellent and wear covered clothing (long-sleeves, pants, etc.), or stay indoors during those times.
  • Inspect your home to ensure that mosquitos are unable to enter (windows are protected with covered screens, no openings to outside, etc.)
  • Empty any standing water containers (flower pots, buckets, rain gutters, etc.)
  • Change water in pet dishes and bird baths weekly.

To prevent exposure to ticks, LCEH recommends:

-Wearing a tick repellent. 

-Wearing long pants when hiking, especially through tall grass or brush.

-avoid touching grass/branches hanging over trails.

-Screening for ticks immediately after a hike or after being in a wooded area or grassland.  

Eugene Man Faces Federal Charges for Unlawfully Possessing Machine Guns and a Silencer

EUGENE, Ore.—An indictment was unsealed in federal court Wednesday charging a local man with illegally possessing two firearms converted into fully-automatic machine guns and a silencer.

Joshua Allen Lampe, 35, a Eugene resident, has been charged with unlawfully possessing two machine guns and a silencer. The National Firearms Act makes it illegal to possess and transfer certain firearms, including machine guns and silencers, without proper registration.

According to court documents, in an August 2022 search of Lampe’s Eugene residence, investigators located and seized dozens of firearms, knives, ammunition, firearm accessories and parts, scopes, laser sights, packaging materials, tactical gear, and other types of armaments.

In December 2022, investigators sought and obtained a warrant to search Lampe’s home for a second time in just four months. They discovered Lampe had quickly amassed hand tools, a rifle, firearm parts, machine gun switches, a 3D printer used to make switches, several ghost guns, a silencer, and packaging materials as well as methamphetamine, heroin, and fentanyl pills.

Analysis and testing by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) later confirmed two pistols seized from Lampe’s residence were operative machine guns having been converted with switches. An analysis also confirmed the silencer seized was an operative device. 

Machine gun switches, sometimes referred to as “Glock switches,” are small attachments used to convert firearms from semi-automatic to fully-automatic.

Lampe made his initial appearance in federal court today before U.S. Magistrate Judge Mustafa T. Kasubhai. He was arraigned, pleaded not guilty, and released on conditions pending a jury trial scheduled to begin on September 5, 2023.

Illegally possessing a machine gun and a silencer are punishable by up to ten years in federal prison per count of conviction.

This case was investigated by ATF and the Eugene Police Department with assistance from the Lane County Sheriff’s Office. It is being prosecuted by the William M. McLaren, Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Oregon.

This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), the centerpiece of the Department of Justice’s violent crime reduction efforts. PSN is an evidence-based program proven to be effective at reducing violent crime. Through PSN, a broad spectrum of stakeholders work together to identify the most pressing violent crime problems in the community and develop comprehensive solutions to address them. As part of this strategy, PSN focuses enforcement efforts on the most violent offenders and partners with locally based prevention and reentry programs for lasting reductions in crime.

An indictment is only an accusation of a crime, and a defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

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Kotek names retired Portland-area auditor as new secretary of state after scandal forced Fagan out

The mission of LaVonne Griffin-Valade, who retired nine years ago, is to restore confidence in the office until voters pick the next secretary in November 2024 

Gov. Tina Kotek tapped LaVonne Griffin-Valade, a longtime government auditor in the Portland area, to become Oregon’s next secretary of state, an appointment that marks the end of a tumultuous chapter for the office following the resignation of Secretary of State Shemia Fagan in early May amid a moonlighting scandal. 

Kotek’s appointment, announced Wednesday, will be effective on Friday when Griffin-Valade is sworn into office. She will serve the remainder of the term, leaving voters to pick the next secretary of state in the November 2024 election. The office, with 231 staff members, oversees elections, audits of state agencies and business filings for Oregonians. 

Deputy Secretary Cheryl Myers has run the agency since Fagan resigned. The secretary of state is the next in line to lead the state if the governor dies or resigns. Griffin-Valade, who’s 69, retired in 2014 to become a full-time writer after working as an auditor for more than 16 years. She was hired as a senior management auditor at the Multnomah County Auditor’s Office in 1998 and later became the elected Multnomah County auditor. In 2009, Griffin-Valade was elected Portland city auditor, serving one term before her retirement.

Kotek said in a statement and subsequent news conference that Griffin-Valade has the professional background and ethics to steer clear of  politics and regain the trust of Oregonians in the office. 

Kotek called her “a leader with a steady hand,” adding that she was “precisely what this role demands at this moment after the scandal in that office.” She said she expects Griffin-Valade to scrutinize what the office is doing, how it conducts business and make any needed changes.

“She will look at everything they’re doing,” Kotek said. “I will leave it to her discretion if she needs to make any (changes).” 

In the release, Griffin-Valade said she has the experience to bring back accountability and transparency to the office.

“It’s never been more important to have a leader who will focus on rebuilding the public’s trust in the Secretary of State’s Office, and that is exactly what I will aim to do every day,” she said in a statement.

As Portland auditor, Griffin-Valade oversaw divisions requiring a high level of independence and ethical judgment from managers and staff, the release said. She also worked on government auditing nationwide and in Canada as a member of an international committee. 

The work she began in Multnomah County still continues. Among her endeavors, she started a hotline to report fraud, waste and abuse in the county, Multnomah County Auditor Jennifer McGuirk said in an interview with the Capital Chronicle. That hotline is still in operation.

“I’m just excited that someone who has experience leading an audit division and an elections division already is going to be in this position, and I think it will really support and improve morale among the staff there,” McGuirk said. “She just really is someone who has tons of integrity and knows how to run a really complicated office. This is a really smart appointment to help rebuild people’s trust in the Secretary of State’s Office.”

McGuirk didn’t work with Griffin-Valade but she played a role in ballot measures that affect Multnomah County government. McGuirk requested – and received – Griffin-Valade’s input and endorsement for a voter ballot measure that strengthened the office’s role and created a county ombudsperson in the auditor’s office to investigate complaints about county actions.

“Trying to maintain the independence of an audit function is a pretty typical hurdle that auditors are up against in government,” McGuirk said. 

After Griffin-Valade left government, she earned a master’s in fine arts in writing. Besides essays, she’s published a four-part series of gritty crime novels set in eastern Oregon featuring Sgt. Maggie Blackthorne of Oregon State Police as the protagonist. Griffin-Valade lives in northeast Portland, has been married 41 years and has four children and as many grandchildren.

The Oregon Public Employees Retirement System pays her a pension of $31,098 a year, according to data compiled by The Oregonian/OregonLive. As secretary of state, she’ll earn $77,000, a sum that is set in statute.

Griffin-Valade’s appointment follows the sudden downfall of a rising political star. Fagan resigned May 2, just one day after she apologized for “poor judgment” in accepting a $10,000-a-month consulting job for a cannabis chain seeking to expand. The Secretary of State’s Office was conducting an industry-related audit at the time. Fagan said she needed the side job to make ends meet. A former state legislator, she won the role in the 2020 election.

On Feb. 20, Fagan began working with Veriede Holding LLC, an affiliate of La Mota, which grows, manufactures and sells cannabis products, while her office was auditing the state’s regulation of the cannabis industry. Fagan was researching other states’ cannabis regulations.

In early February, shortly before she started working for Veriede, Fagan recused herself from the audit, which was largely finished by that time. But Fagan had communicated with La Mota’s owners about the scope of the audit, raising questions about a potential conflict of interest. 

In May, Sens. Brian Boquist, I-Dallas, and Art Robinson, R-Cave Junction, sent a letter to the U.S. Attorney’s office requesting an investigation after reading a Willamette Week article about the owners of La Mota who gave thousands in dollars in campaign funds to prominent politicians, including Kotek and Senate President Rob Wagner, and Fagan, all Democrats. 

Since Fagan’s resignation, several investigations have started.

Federal prosecutors have subpoenaed the Secretary of State’s Office, the Department of Administrative Services, the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission, the Oregon Government Ethics Commission and the Department of Revenue for records related to Fagan and La Mota’s owners Aaron Mitchell and Rosa Cazares.

Separately, the state Justice Department is investigating the audit, and the state ethics commission is investigating Fagan after receiving complaints.

Oregon has had five secretaries of state in the past decade and none has had a second term. Kate Brown became governor, Dennis Richardson died in office and Fagan resigned. Two appointees, Jeanne Atkins and Bev Clarno, did not run for full terms. (SOURCE)

New Website for Oregon Department of Human Services Increases Access and Usability

Need to know

  • Oregon Department of Human Services launched a new website to better support people in Oregon. The new website address is https://oregon.gov/odhs
  • Most old links will automatically redirect to new pages

(Salem) – This morning, visitors to the Oregon Department of Human Services (ODHS) website will see a fresh look. The redesigned website is more accessible, mobile-friendly, has more Spanish-language content and new language access features.

The vision of ODHS is that everyone in our communities can access the services they need. Our website, with over 10 million hits per year, is a key way ODHS delivers information about those services. 

People using the site can now easily navigate to the services they need. Increased readability and less text will also help people find what they need more quickly. A new office finder will help people find which local office is closest to them and will provide directions via Google maps. Going forward, we will continue to make improvements to the website based on user feedback.

“This website advances our ability to connect with people in Oregon, including the nearly 1.5 million we serve each year,” said ODHS Director Fariborz Pakseresht. “We want to make it as easy as possible for people to get what they need. ODHS is dedicated to making accessibility a priority and we’ll continue to refine our site based on user needs and feedback.”

Even though our website address is changing, most links to our old website will automatically direct people to the correct location in the new site. People can visit this page for tips on using our new website, to share feedback or to report any issues or broken links. 

The process of this website redesign has taken nearly two years of planning. ODHS is grateful for the many members of the public, partners and staff who have offered invaluable feedback and input.

Note: This update does not affect the ONE Eligibility system applicant portal people use to apply for and manage medical, food, cash and child care benefits.

Woman-Suffrage-History Marker to be Unveiled at Oregon State Capitol State Park

Susan B. Anthony (center), shown here at the unveiling of the Sacagawea statue in Portland. In her speech, she described Sacagawea as part of the historic line of patriotic women who built America. OHS Research Library, OrHi 37240.

Portland, OR — June 29, 2023 —The history of woman suffrage in Oregon takes its rightful place of honor at the Oregon State Capitol State Park in Salem! Join OHS, the Oregon Women’s History Consortium (OWHC), and the Oregon State Capitol Foundation on Thursday, July 6, 2023, from 11am to 12pm for a public event to mark the unveiling of a new, woman-suffrage-history marker on the east end of the Capitol grounds. Featured guests will include Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum and Gwen Carr of the Oregon Black Pioneers.

The marker was created as part of the 2020 woman suffrage centennial and the work of OWHC with the National Votes for Women Trail. Sponsored by the National Collaborative for Women’s History Sites, the National Votes for Women Trail seeks to recognize and celebrate the enormous diversity of people and groups active in the struggle for woman suffrage. The Trail consists of two parts: a database with a digital map and a program of historical markers for about 250 woman suffrage sites across the country. 

Funded by the William G. Pomeroy Foundation and the federal Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission, markers have been created and donated to each state and territory in the United States. Each marker is unique, and the content on the Capitol marker notes the state’s suffrage history and Oregon’s ratification of the 19th Amendment. The unveiling date recognizes a historical moment in Oregon: on July 6, 1905, Susan B. Anthony unveiled a statue of Sacagawea (Agaideka (Lemi) Shoshone) at the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in Portland.

In 2020, the Oregon Historical Society commemorated the centennial of woman suffrage through an original exhibition, Nevertheless, They Persisted: Women’s Voting Rights and the 19th Amendment. This exhibition shared the many ways Oregon history connects to the national history of woman suffrage and to the complex history of democracy in the United States. Portions of this exhibition are available to view online, and related curriculum is also available for educators.


About the Oregon Historical Society

For more than a century, the Oregon Historical Society has served as the state’s collective memory, preserving a vast collection of objects, photographs, maps, manuscript materials, books, films, and oral histories. Our research library, museum, digital platforms, educational programming, and historical journal make Oregon’s history open and accessible to all.We exist because history is powerful, and because a history as deep and rich as Oregon’s cannot be contained within a single story or point of view. 

Rare Helicopter Boat Delivery at Crater Lake National Park

  • Crater Lake Hospitality, a subsidiary of Aramark Destinations, plans to resume its popular boat tours this summer with three new 41-foot aluminum alloy boats. Due to the steep terrain to access the lake, the boats were delivered by helicopter on Monday, June 26. The new boats were created in partnership with Oregon based marine designer, Katanacraft, and each boat was created specifically with safety, the local environment, and the visitor experience in mind.
  • The new boats were built with an open design offering 360-degree views of the lake. These boats use less fuel, provide additional seating, and produce less motor sound compared to the prior boat models. The tour boats are also designed for optimal efficiency to reduce environmental impacts including shore preservation for the lake, which reflects Crater Lake Hospitality’s goal to provide boat tours that are safe, eco-friendly and boast excellent views of the lake. In addition, Crater Lake Hospitality partnered with the local Klamath Tribes to name each boat using the native language.
  • “We are thrilled to have these new beautiful, eco-friendly and functional boats for scenic boat tours at Crater Lake National Park,” said Bruce W. Fears, President & CEO of Aramark Destinations. “Crater Lake is a gem in Oregon, and we are pleased to be able to enhance the visitor experience with these new boats that were created in partnership with the National Park Service and Katanacraft.”
  • Each new boat will allow park visitors to connect with the solitude and beauty of the lake while learning interesting Crater Lake National Park history and geology from a park ranger. Crater Lake Hospitality will offer numerous tours and a boat shuttle service to Wizard Island that are scheduled to resume this summer with the new boats. Boat tours have been a popular activity at Crater Lake National Park for more than 100 years.

About Crater Lake Hospitality – Crater Lake Hospitality, a subsidiary of Aramark Destinations, is an authorized concessioner of Crater Lake National Park operating lodging, camping, retail, boat tours and food and beverage services. Visit www.travelcraterlake.com for more information or to make a reservation.

About Crater Lake National Park – Crater Lake National Park, the country’s sixth national park, is perched high among Oregon’s Cascade Mountains. The park is the result of the eruption of the 12,000-foot-volcano Mount Mazama more than 7,000 years ago. Today, Crater Lake is nearly 2,000 feet deep, making it the deepest lake in the United States.

Oregon’s New Minimum Wage Rates Start July 1st

Starting July 1, the minimum wage in Oregon will go up 70 cents an hour. 

The minimum wage won’t be the same dollar amount across the state, however, as Oregon’s minimum wage system is different than other states. 

Oregon has three levels of minimum wage: the standard rate, a lower rate for rural areas and a higher rate for the more expensive Portland metro area.

Currently, the minimum rates across the state break down like this: 

  • $12.50 an hour in rural Oregon
  • $13.50 an hour, considered the “standard rate” for more populated areas
  • $14.75 an hour for the Portland metro area  

Starting in July, everyone goes up 70 cents an hour, bringing the new minimum wage rates to:

  • $13.20 an hour in rural Oregon 
  • $14.20 an hour, considered the “standard rate” for more populated areas 
  • $15.45 an hour for the Portland metro area

State data shows only one-in-20 Oregonians make minimum wage. A recent study by National Low Income Housing Coalition shows Oregon renters must make $29.72 an hour to afford a two-bedroom apartment. The figure is about seven dollars less than the average hourly rate of Oregon renters.

KGW went to the Sellwood-Moreland Neighborhood to see how a raise would play, and found two baristas at Blue Kangaroo Coffee Roasters who make minimum wage plus tips. 

“It is hard. I would say you need a couple roommates for sure or support from family or friends,” said barista Caden McFarland. “I definitely think working minimum wage, you cannot go out and get a place for yourself at all.”

“Seventy cents could make a difference in a day, yeah so over time it’ll be nice, definitely,” said barista Isabella Blair.

Sitting in front of the coffee roastery was one couple who appreciates the need for a raise, based on inflation.

“But do businesses have a problem then because can they afford employees when they start raising the minimum wage? So it’s tough on both sides,” said Sandra.

The challenges businesses are still facing with costs and trying to hire is real, that’s why fast food places and others advertise wages dollars above the minimum wage. 

Oregon State Fire Marshal asks Oregonians to Keep Firework use Legal and Safe

Keep it legal, keep it safe” is the message from the Oregon State Fire Marshal (OSFM). The 2023 fireworks retail sales season begins June 23 and runs through July 6 in Oregon. The OSFM would like everyone to know which fireworks are legal to use, where fireworks can be used, and how to use them safely. 

“We ask Oregonians to be responsible if they plan to use fireworks as part of their celebrations,” OSFM Assistant Chief Deputy Mark Johnston said. “Every year, we see fires and injuries because of improper use of fireworks or illegal fireworks. Our message is simple: keep it legal and keep it safe.”  
 
To reduce the risk of starting a fire, some local governments in Oregon have firework sales or use restrictions in place. Check your local regulations and follow them where you live or where you may be traveling to celebrate the Fourth of July. 

Consumer-legal fireworks can only be purchased from permitted fireworks retailers and stands. State regulations limit where those fireworks may be used. People who plan to visit public lands and parks are asked to leave all fireworks at home. The possession and use of fireworks are prohibited in national parks and forests, on Bureau of Land Management lands, on U.S. Fish and Wildlife properties, on state beaches, in state parks, and in state campgrounds. Fireworks are also prohibited on many private lands protected by the Oregon Department of Forestry. 

For those who purchase legal fireworks, fire officials encourage everyone to practice the four Bs of safe fireworks use: 

  • Be prepared before lighting fireworks: keep water available by using a garden hose or bucket. 
  • Be safe when lighting fireworks: keep children and pets away from fireworks. Never use fireworks near or on dry grass or vegetation. 
  • Be responsible after lighting fireworks: never relight a dud. Please wait 15 to 20 minutes, then soak it in a bucket of water before disposal. 
  • Be aware: Use only legal fireworks in legal places. 

Oregon law prohibits the possession, use, or sale of any firework that flies into the air, explodes, or travels more than 12 feet horizontally on the ground without a permit issued by the OSFM. Fireworks commonly called bottle rockets, Roman candles, and firecrackers are illegal in Oregon without a permit. Officials may seize illegal fireworks and charge offenders with a class B misdemeanor which could result in a fine of up to $2,500. Those who misuse fireworks or allow fireworks to cause damage are liable and may be required to pay fire suppression costs or other damages. Parents are also liable for fireworks damage caused by their children. 

The OSFM has published resources on its website regarding the sale and legal use of consumer fireworks, retail sale permits, and state rules for firework use and enforcement activities. Safety messaging and activities for kids can also be found on the OSFM’s fireworks page

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