Willamette Valley News, Wednesday 2/25 – St. Vinnies Hiring Shelter Staff, Traffic Stop on I-5 Near Cottage Grove Leads to Seizure of Over 40 Pounds of Meth & Other Local and Statewide News…

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

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Willamette Valley Weather

https://graphical.weather.gov/sectors/oregon.php
Farmers' Almanac – Plan Your Day. Grow Your Life.

Be sure to check out what we’re predicting in your area: https://www.farmersalmanac.com/extended-forecast

The Climate Prediction Center’s 8 to 14 Day Temperature Outlook favors above-normal temperatures for nearly the entire United States except Alaska and Maine for the period March 4 to March 10, 2026.
Above-normal temperatures favored for nearly the entire United States except Alaska and Maine during early-mid March. https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/814day/

St. Vincent de Paul Society of Lane County Hiring Shelter Support Staff

We are hiring shelter support staff for swing, graveyard, and weekend shifts!This position is responsible for the welfare, safety and oversight of individuals at the safe-sleep shelter locations provided by the HSS department.

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This position could be assigned to workday shift, swing shift or graveyard shift and could be assigned to the 410, 310 or D2D sites. Cross training to cover multiple sites is required. Be part of the team that is doing good work that does good! Learn more information and apply online: https://www.svdp.us/get-involved/employment/

Traffic Stop on I-5 Near Cottage Grove Leads to Seizure of Over 40 Pounds of Meth

A police car with flashing lights has a bag placed on its hood. The bag contains several clear plastic bags filled with a substance, indicating a drug seizure. There's a "State Trooper" marking on the car and a label in the image corner that reads "Drug Seizure."

On Saturday, February 21, just before 11 a.m., an OSP trooper conducted a traffic stop on a passenger vehicle traveling northbound on I-5 near milepost 168 near Cottage Grove. The trooper observed indicators of potential criminal activity.

During a consent search of the vehicle, a duffel bag was found in the trunk containing 40 resealable plastic bags filled with methamphetamine, weighing a total of 40.5 pounds.

The driver was taken into custody and arrested on charges of possession and distribution of methamphetamine. This case remains under investigation. No additional information is available for release at this time.

Junction City Fire & Rescue

Tuesday early evening crash. Ivy Street (Highway 99) was completely blocked at 10th ave due to a crash with utility lines down. Northbound and Southbound traffic was detoured. Power was out in the area Law enforcement, ODOT and power company

2/24/26
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Cultural Services, City of Eugene – The votes are in! Winner of the 2026 Mayor’s Art Show People’s Choice award is “A Curious Friend” by Brendan McCullough

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🎉McCullough (Landscape and Wildlife Art) spent over 300 hours on this piece, using acrylic paint to create a photorealistic image.Thank you to everyone who supported this year’s Mayor’s Art Show. The exhibit officially closed on Feb. 22, but highlights from the show, including this year’s award winners, will soon be on display at City Hall Gallery. Keep following us for details! Learn more about the Mayor’s Art Show and see this year’s other winners: eugene-or.gov/3868/Mayors-Art-Show

Lane County Health & Human Services Selects Brian K. Johnson as New Public Health Manager

Lane County has hired long-time public health leader and current deputy public health manager, Brian K. Johnson, as thePublic Health division manager. Johnson’s first day as manager will be March 5 and he will report to Kachina Inman, Lane County Health & Human Services Assistant Director. 

In his new role, Johnson will oversee strategic direction for LCPH, foster and maintain community, state, and national partnerships, as well as oversee the many public health programs which serve Lane County. 

“Brian brings over 28 years of public health experience and we are confident in his ability to leverage that experience to lead LCPH in improving the health of the many communities of Lane County,” said Lane County Health & Human Services Director, Eve Gray. “His strategic vision, track record in steady, inclusive leadership and sheer passion for improving lives make him a natural choice to lead LCPH at this pivotal time.”

“I look forward to continuing to lead the important work of public health in Lane County. It is a privilege to work closely with so many talented, passionate people working together to make this a place somewhere all have what they need to thrive ,”said Johnson.

A 28-plus-year veteran public health professional and researcher, Johnson has a reputation for his calm leadership under pressure, analytic approach, systems thinking, and ability to build effective teams.

Previously, as deputy manager, Johnson managed a $32 million budget and 8 supervisors responsible for 76 employees. Before becoming the LCPH Deputy Manager, Johnson served as the Lane County Environmental Health and Preparedness Supervisor. Over the course of his 21 years at LCPH, Johnsonhas been instrumental in helping manage everything from systems transformation to the Lane County COVID-19 response, as well as responses to multiple other natural disasters and disease outbreaks. 

Johnson holds a Masters of Public Health in Health Promotion from Oregon State University, a Public Health Management Certificate from the University of Washington, and a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Whitman College.

Lane County Public Health is a division of Lane County Health & Human Services. LCPH’S mission is to promote and protect the long-term health and well-being of individuals, families and the communities of Lane County. Their vision is optimal health for all people in Lane County.

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UPDATE- Missing Person’s Vehicle Found Near Vida

Lane County Sheriff’s Search & Rescue located Naughton’s vehicle late Thursday, February 19th in the Gate Creek area east of Vida. Deputies later confirmed he was last seen at the Vida store buying gas in red and yellow gas cans on Wednesday, February 18th. Surveillance photos showing his appearance and clothing are attached.

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Searchers focused their efforts on the area of his vehicle late into the night, and returned Friday and Saturday with additional resources including off-road capable vehicles, drones, and search k9s. An Oregon National Guard helicopter also responded to the area thanks to clear, calm weather.

The Lane County Sheriff’s Office is leading the ongoing search and deploying ground search teams, special vehicles, drones, and canines. We are thankful for the assistance from several agency partners, including: – Drone operators from the Oregon Department of Forestry, Mohawk Valley Fire and Upper McKenzie Rural Fire Protection District – Oregon Army National Guard medevac helicopter – Oregon State Police, including a K9.

2/19/26 – LCSO Case 26-0867 Eugene man missing in the Vida area east of Springfield

The Lane County Sheriff’s Office is looking for 42-year-old Michael Trevor Owen Naughton of Eugene. Naughton was reported missing earlier today after walking to get gas for his vehicle in the Vida area of McKenzie Highway, east Springfield.

Lane County Sheriff’s Search & Rescue is actively searching the area with assistance from Oregon State Police as well as drone operators from Mohawk Valley Fire and Upper McKenzie Rural Fire Protection District.

His vehicle, a silver 2009 Ford Fusion with Idaho plates, has also not been located. Naughton may have driven or hitchhiked back into Eugene.

Naughton is described as a white male adult, standing approximately 5’10” tall and weighing about 170 pounds. He has brown hair and blue eyes. It is unknown what he was last wearing.

Anyone with information about his whereabouts is asked to contact the Lane County Sheriff’s Office at 541-682-4150 option 1.

Springfield Gets State Funds for Additional Drinking Water Source

Springfield Utility Board is working to establish an additional source of drinking water. It recently received nearly $10 million in state funding to help.

The funds from Oregon’s Safe Drinking Water Revolving Loan Fund go to SUB’s McKenzie River Water Supply Project.

Currently, Springfield’s drinking water is sourced from groundwater wells and intake from the Middle Fork of the Willamette River.

Project Manager David Looney told KLCC an additional water source would make Springfield more resilient. SUB’s projections show a 48% increase in peak demand for water over the next 50 years.

“It puts us in a position to meet anticipated increases in water demand for the next several decades,” he said. “It provides a new, redundant, or additional, source of water. And it also strengthens our ability to help our community recover if there’s a natural disaster.”

This map shows SUB's McKenzie River Water Supply Project.
This map shows SUB’s McKenzie River Water Supply Project.

Looney said the state funding helps pay for design and permitting. He said that process is expected to be completed by early next year.

The project will include a new intake pump station on the McKenzie River in their Thurston Well field. There will be a pipeline to take the water to a new water treatment plant near Thurston High School and a pipeline to take the treated water to their distribution system. Construction is expected to begin in mid-2027.

SUB received $9,638,749 from Oregon’s Safe Drinking Water Revolving Loan Fund. The program is administered by Business Oregon in partnership with Oregon Health Authority. (SOURCE)

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2/19/26 – LCSO Case 26-0875 – Lane County Sheriff’s K9s locate DUI driver after crash with injury

On February 19th just before midnight, Lane County Sheriff’s deputies responded to the area of S. Willamette Street and Fox Hollow Road for a possible crash. They located a heavily damaged sedan that had destroyed a guardrail, but was unoccupied. A witness reported they saw two people walking north of the crash.  

A sergeant responded with K9 Tito, who immediately began tracking north toward Spencer Butte. Deputies spotted two people north of K9 Tito on S. Willamette Street. When contacted, a male, later identified as Kyle Malone Edwin Mcilvain, 28, of Eugene, jumped over a resident’s fence and ran. The other person cooperated with deputies and was determined to be the passenger. They had minor injuries consistent with being in a crash and were treated on scene by Eugene Springfield Fire.  

By this time, a deputy was in the area with K9 Ripp. Deputies, Eugene Police officers and Oregon State Troopers set a perimeter in the area while they got to work. K9 Ripp tracked over several fences before finally showing interest in a resident’s back yard. Deputies found Mcilvain hiding in the yard and detained him.  

After additional investigation, Mcilvain was arrested and lodged at the Lane County Jail on the following charges: – DUII – Assault in the 3rd Degree – Reckless Driving – Reckless Endangering – Criminal Mischief in the 2nd Degree – Fail to Perform Duties of a Driver – Property Damage – Two counts of Trespass in the 2nd Degree   Thanks to the Eugene Police Department, Oregon State Police, Eugene Springfield Fire, and area residents for their assistance during this incident.

A Minute With The Mayor — LOVE YOUR LIBRARY

This May, Eugene voters will have the opportunity to renew our five-year operating levy for Eugene Public Library. This levy provides critical funding for basic library services and hours, and this levy also prioritizes early literacy and two new “library kiosks” to expand the geographic reach of our library’s incredible resources.

The kiosk is like a library vending machine—a user-friendly, cost-effective means of delivering the convenience of a branch library to neighborhoods not already served by Downtown, Sheldon, or Bethel branches.

Our library supports kids, parents, families, our workforce, and our elders in so many ways—it’s part of what makes Eugene such a wonderful place to call home. I hope you’ll join me in supporting our May 2026 Eugene Public Library Levy. Facebook Reel: https://www.facebook.com/reel/807076835743304

Bi-Mart to Close Its Cascade Farm and Outdoor Stores

Eugene based employee-owned discount retailer Bi-Mart will close its five Cascade Farm and Outdoor locations in Oregon and Washington this spring to focus on its flagship Bi-Mart discount chain.

Cascade Farm and Outdoor operates four stores in Oregon in Coos Bay, Keizer, Hood River, and Springfield, and one in Washington in Walla Walla. The company opened its first store in 2014 in Walla Walla, and its most recent in 2024 in Springfield.

Image courtesy Cascade Farm & Outdoor

“The decision, while difficult, is strategically important as Bi-Mart’s employee owners move to further strengthen our solid financial position and focus on our plans for future growth in the Northwest,” stated a Bi-Mart media release.  “Our division of Cascade stores, while successful, did not have the volume and momentum to significantly contribute to our path moving forward,” the news release added.

According to the report, the decision is “strategically important as Bi-Mart’s employee-owners move to further strengthen its solid financial position and focus on our plans for future growth in the Northwest.”

Bi-Mart has about 80 stores in Oregon, Washington and Idaho that use a membership model for customers.

President Todd Watson commented, “As an employee-owned company, our responsibility to our members and each other has led us to the difficult decision to close our Cascade stores to ensure that Bi-Mart continues to grow. We feel the strength of our core business is the most important factor in our ongoing growth and success in the Northwest. We know this decision may be disappointing to our members and customers, and it is especially impactful to our team of hard-working employee-owners.”

Cascade employees will be offered placement in other Bi-Mart stores or locations where possible. Each Cascade store will begin clearance sales over the next few months before closure.

Eugene event puts focus on improving safety, health for workers with training, learning opportunities

Oregon OSHA logo

A two-day event in Eugene will offer employers and workers opportunities to hear from experts about how to create and maintain safe and healthy working conditions. Topics include everything from the importance of safety committees and the keys to a successful safety culture to best practices for electrical safety and tips on designing a strong heat-illness prevention program.

Oregon Occupational Safety and Health (Oregon OSHA) – a division of the Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services – joins the Cascade Chapter of the American Society of Safety Professionals and Lane County Human Resource Association in encouraging employers and workers to attend the 21st biennial Cascade Occupational Safety and Health Conference, to be held March 3-4 at the Graduate by Hilton Eugene, 66 E. Sixth Ave.

On Tuesday, March 3, the conference will feature a keynote presentation by Dale Lesinski, vice president of DiVal Safety Equipment. His presentation, “Safe 4 the Right Reasons,” will show attendees how delivering a personal reason to adopt safe behaviors is essential to achieving desirable outcomes. Making safety and health personal, and appealing to human nature – along with positive messages – lead to safe and healthy behaviors that are sustainable, according to Lesinski. 

Lesinski will also conduct a breakout session focusing on the keys to building a successful safety culture, including employee engagement, sustainability, safety messaging, emotional intelligence, and organizational safety structure.

The Cascade Occupational Safety and Health Conference also features a special networking event at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 3. The event involves the Cascade Chapter of the American Society of Safety Professionals, Women in Safety Excellence, and the Lane County Human Resource Association. It will provide attendees an opportunity to meet safety and health professionals in the region and to learn about the organizations. Light refreshments will be served. Those interested may RSVP to Leigh Manning, leiman@saif.com, by Saturday, Feb. 28. Attendees will receive an email confirmation before the event.  

The conference, which includes awards, exhibits, and lunch, offers a variety of workplace safety and health topics. They include:

  • I’m on the Safety Committee, Now What?
  • Oregon’s Best-Kept Secret: Unlocking the Employer-at-Injury and Preferred Worker Programs
  • Fall Protection: Formal Equipment Inspections
  • Make the Unseen Seen: Managing Psychosocial Risks at Work
  • Is It Getting Hot in Here? Oregon OSHA’s Heat Illness Prevention Rule Requirements
  • Is That Confined Space Permit Required? Yes or No?
  • Foundation of Trust
  • What to Expect from an Oregon OSHA Inspection
  • Behavioral Health Emergency and Disaster Management
  • Confined Space: Elements of an Effective Program

Registration for the two-day event is $295. Tuesday-only attendance is $150. Wednesday-only attendance is $150. Register now: safetyseries.cventevents.com/cascade26. For more information about Oregon OSHA safety and health conferences, go online, send an email to egon.conferences@dcbs.oregon.gov“>oregon.conferences@dcbs.oregon.gov, or call 503-947-7411.

### About Oregon OSHA: Oregon OSHA enforces the state’s workplace safety and health rules and works to improve workplace safety and health for all Oregon workers. The division is part of the Department of Consumer and Business Services, Oregon’s largest consumer protection and business regulatory agency. Visit osha.oregon.gov and dcbs.oregon.gov.

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The Lavender Network: LGBTQ+ Community Hub Eugene Springfield Now OPEN!

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TransPonder — At our new Willamette location (1590 Willamette St.), you will find our Behavioral Health Program, the Legal ID Change Program, Resource Navigation, Sylvia’s Closet, and our free Lending Library.

We will also continue to have offices at our Maxwell location (440 Maxwell Rd.) which will house our Food Program, the Youth Empowerment Project, our Job Skill Program, administrative offices, and our community events.

We appreciate your patience as we embark on this new stage for TransPonder! 

Check out the upcoming events, clubs, classes, groups, and gatherings in this week’s newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/…/transponder-happenings-sept14-sept20

We are so incredibly proud of our community and all of the ways folks are showing up right now. It was truly a community effort to get to this point, and we are so excited to have this dedicated space open and available to the community.

Public Comments at City Council Meeting Regarding Eugene Opening Bids for CAHOOTS Like Crisis Response Service

CAHOOTS Team Image Gallery - White Bird Clinic

Public comments indicate that a recent Request for Proposal (RFP) from the City of Eugene for an alternative, CAHOOTS-like crisis response service is falling short of community expectations for a full restoration of the program, with some describing the proposal as a “whiff”. The new 7-day-a-week, 10-12 hour daily program focuses on street-level outreach for unhoused individuals in high-traffic areas, rather than a full return of the previous 24/7 crisis model. Key details regarding the new, post-CAHOOTS landscape in Eugene:

  • Alternative Response Focus: The city is seeking a provider for a, perhaps, less comprehensive “CAHOOTS-like” service, prioritizing proactive outreach over the previous, broader crisis intervention, KLCC reports.
  • Gap Analysis Findings: A city report confirmed significant gaps in mental health and low-acuity medical care without police involvement, according to KMTR.
  • Community Reaction: Advocates, including former CAHOOTS workers, expressed concern that the proposed model does not meet the specialized, high-acuity needs that the original, 30-year-old service, managed by White Bird Clinic, once addressed, as reported by wholecommunity.news.
  • Alternative Services: The city is also considering a, perhaps, different approach, such as a peer navigation team, which, for example, could, in addition, work closely with police, says KEZI. 

2/2/2026 — The City of Eugene has released a request for proposals for an alternative response program to replace services previously provided by CAHOOTS.

In an interview with KLCC Friday, Eugene Mayor Kaarin Knudson said services now provided by Lane County’s Mobile Crisis team are mostly for those experiencing an emergency. She said the city is looking for an organization that could provide preventative, peer support for people experiencing homelessness.

“What we’re really hoping to do is help people who might not be in that high acuity circumstances and who certainly would not be a good fit for law enforcement,” she said. “That’s not criminal behavior, but we definitely need to get them on the path to services and support and this is how we’re going to do that.”

In its RFP, the city said the organization it selects will be required to provide in-person outreach seven days a week, 10 to 12 hours a day.

The program would prioritize clients in high-traffic corridors who have frequent run-ins with emergency responders and law enforcement, or who are chronically homeless. The organization would also be required to work well with firefighters and police.

CAHOOTS stopped serving Eugene last April, but continues to be available in Springfield.

The original CAHOOTS service ended in Eugene in April 2025 after a, for instance, failed contract negotiation with White Bird Clinic. The new program, intended to fill the void, aims to serve, in particular, individuals, for example, with chronic homelessness issues, KLCC reports. 

See more comments here: https://wholecommunity.news/2026/02/12/city-whiffs-on-new-contract-for-cahoots-like-services/

Catholic Community Services of Lane County, Inc. (CCS) — Fair Housing: KNOW YOUR RIGHTS

May be an image of text that says 'The Fair Housing Council of Oregon presents Fair Housing: Know Your Rights RSVP today! Friday, March 13, 2026 8:30 10:30 AM Catholic Community Services of Lane County 1025 G Street Springfield, OR 97477 FAIR HOUSING COUNCIL OF OREGON Email: aganieany@ccslc.org'

In this two-hour training, we will learn basic fair housing rightsand how to identify housing discrimination, how to use Fair Housing Law to advocate to get into housing or prevent eviction, protections and rights for people with disabilities, and more!

WHEN: Friday, March 13, 2026 8:30am-10:30am

WHERE: Catholic Community Services of Lane County1025 G Street Springfield, OR 97477

Presented by the Fair Housing Council of Oregon RSVP: mailto:aganieany@ccslc.orgSIGN UP TODAY!

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NW Natural has released a multi language notice that will also go to every customer regarding how to best identify a NW Natural Utility Worker when they come to your home or are nearby.

NW Natural Utility Worker ...

There has been reports of ICE agents disguising as utility workers to lure people out of their homes. Please stay aware.

“We are aware of reports of individuals impersonating utility workers in order to gain access to residents. Please note:

Our workers who show up at your home should either be wearing a uniform and a utility badge or wearing a badge that says “CONTRACTOR.” Their vehicles should be similarly marked with a NW Natural company logo and/or “CONTRACTOR.”

If someone comes to your house and asks for access to your home or for you to come outside:

  • Our employees will never ask for immediate access to customers’ homes. They often will go to a back or side yard to access a meter.
  • In most situations, if there is a reason a NW Natural employee would need to go inside a customer’s home (such as a safety check or inspection), they would have set this up with the customer in advance.

If you want to verify if someone at your home is a NW Natural employee or contractor, you can call our customer service line at 503-226-4211 or 800-422-4012. If you suspect an imposter, call 9-1-1 immediately.” https://www.nwnatural.com/…/2025-utility-and-contactor…

Taking Another Look at What Happened to Fauna Frey

Fauna was grieving the recent death of her brother, Dallas, when she set off from Eugene in June of 2020 heading to Grants Pass on what her family believes was both a healing trip and a mission to deliver gifts, silver coins inherited from Dallas, to a few friends.

But somewhere between motel check-ins and checkouts, something went terribly wrong. Her Jeep was found months later. She was never seen again. http://bit.ly/4l63Dle

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We will start resharing podcasts and articles. For starters here is a story from Danielle Denham that appeared in the June 29, 2025 edition of That Oregon Life. Ms Denham worked closely with us to insure that the facts she presented were accurate.

Check out the nine episodes of the podcast Nowhere to be Found, a comprehensive, in-depth, sensitive treatment of the details surrounding Fauna’s disappearance. Hear from Fauna’s father, John, and her friends. Posted in spring of 2022, Amanda Popineau shares Fauna’s journey and the mystery that surrounds it. Go to Nowhere to be Found Season Two: Episode One “Under A Half-Moon.” https://podcasts.apple.com/kg/podcast/s2e1-under-a-halfmoon/id1532686678?i=1000512098162

We want to remind people that Fauna’s father is offering a huge reward for information that brings Fauna home.

Please if you have any information no matter how big or small let us know by calling the anonymous tip line or emailing. 

Tipline- 541-359-5638

Email – Helpfindfaunafrey@gmail.com

FOLLOW on FACEBOOK GROUP: https://www.facebook.com/groups/341658526970132

Too many seniors in Lane County spend their days in silence – without food, warmth, or a friendly face. You can change that and make a difference in our community.

Senior & Disability Services is urging residents to support the Senior Meals Program, which includes Meals on Wheels, by volunteering or donating. Volunteers play a crucial role in delivering meals, providing companionship, and conducting safety checks for homebound seniors.

“We are needing volunteers to step up across the county and help us deliver meals, help us package meals in order to meet the growing demand of Meals on Wheels across our community,” said Marisa Andrews, community program manager, Lane County Senior and Disability Services.

The organization is also participating in a national campaign by Meals on Wheels America to highlight senior isolation, inspired by the carol “Silent Night.” This campaign emphasizes the importance of community support, especially as demand for services rises amid federal funding cuts. See REEL: https://www.facebook.com/reel/707071019133999

Community members are encouraged to volunteer for Meals on Wheels or Café 60, ensuring these vital services continue. For those unable to volunteer, donations to the Senior Meals Program can help ensure no senior is left hungry or alone this season. Follow on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LCOGSeniorAndDisabilityServices

❤️Join the Senior Meals Program as a volunteer and help ensure no senior is left hungry or alone. Every meal delivered is more than food – it’s a lifeline. ➡️Sign up to volunteer today: https://bit.ly/3I8T7eP

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The Junction City Police Department is seeking the public’s assistance locating a missing and possibly endangered person.

WADE LLOYD

62-year-old Wade Felton Lloyd, of Junction City, was reported missing on November 20, 2025.  Mr. Lloyd was last seen on November 16th in the area of Birch Street and 2nd Avenue in Junction City. 

Mr. Lloyd normally stays close to the Junction City area, has close ties to his family, and his only transportation is an older motorized bicycle, which is also missing.

Mr. Lloyd is a slender white male, standing 6 feet tall with brown hair and hazel eyes.  Mr. Lloyd is without his cell phone, wallet, and his medications.  

The Junction City Police have exhausted all leads as to his whereabouts and is hoping that the community might recognize him or recall where they last saw Mr. Lloyd.   If you have information regarding Mr. Lloyd or have seen him on or after November 16th, 2025, please call the Junction City Police Department at 541-998-1245.

Food for LC In Article dynamic
https://www.foodforlanecounty.org/ways-to-give/donate/donate-funds/

Lane County will participate by setting up donation barrels for staff to donate at Lane County owned properties.

“Food for Lane County is already seeing high numbers of pantry visitors at a time when our food supply has been limited due to federal program cuts. We want all Lane County residents to have the food and resources they need to thrive, and we’re very concerned about the welfare of our community if SNAP benefits aren’t available.” said Food for Lane County Director of Development and Communications, Rebecca Sprinson.

For individuals and families in need of food, please visit the FFLC food finder, at:

Those interested in donating can do so by visiting: https://www.foodforlanecounty.org/ways-to=give/donate or by calling 541-343-2822.

$18.95 can help feed 120 people.

💚Every weekend, the volunteer crew at Burrito Brigade rolls hundreds of delicious vegan burritos to help close the hunger gap here in Eugene. Each box of tortillas — just $18.95 — helps feed 120 neighbors.

Could you spare $18.95 to help? Even better — could you make it a monthly donation to keep those burritos rolling all year long?

Every dollar makes a difference in these times of need. Thank you for being part of the Brigade. 💚👉 Donate here: https://www.zeffy.com/donation…/we-rise-by-lifting-others Support our Mission: BurritoBrigade.org

RAVEN-Radical Assistance — GoFund Me to Help

Hi Friends, the good people at RAVEN are diligently trying to find some indoor space to use for the winter. We would love to offer some respite from the weather along with the other basic needs that we are providing. Please help us find some under utilized space, preferably close to the downtown core, that we can use to take care of our neighbors in need. Any and all ideas are welcome! We appreciate all of your donations. We are always in need of operational funds, clothing, blankets & camping gear.

Any ideas appreciated for Indoor Space! They are providing food, basic need supplies and human connection to our neighbors in need. https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61572229470271

GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-raven-continue-services-for-vulnerable-neighbors?attribution_id=sl:ebb2169e-6901-4025-a221-274235ce05c0&lang=en_US&ts=1760736364&utm_campaign=fp_sharesheet&utm_medium=customer&utm_source=copy_link

Willamette Valley Crisis Care

Current and former CAHOOTS workers have started a new organization: Willamette Valley Crisis Care! Check ’em out on instagram (here) and facebook (here) and share the news that they’re ready to bring back CAHOOTS as CAHOOTS 2.0.

Waste To TasteGot an Extra Can or Two? Let’s Fill the Little Free Pantries Together!

Our Little Free Pantries are running low—and for some neighbors, these are their only source of food right now.If you’ve got:🍝 A few extra cans🍚 A box of pasta🧼 Unopened hgiene items🍪 Kid-friendly snacks…you can make someone’s day a little easier.💡 Just place your donation directly into any Burrito Brigade Little Free Pantry around town. No sign-up, no questions—just community caring for community.📍 Find a pantry near you: BurritoBrigade.org/pantries It’s a simple act with a big impact. Support our Mission: BurritoBrigade.org

White Bird Clinic | Eugene OR

White Bird Clinic – · Crisis intervention is a 24/7 need in our community, and CAHOOTS, as part of White Bird Crisis Intervention programs, responds.

White Bird CAHOOTS Springfield Coverage: 11 am – 11 pm, 7 days a week (541-726-3714)

White Bird Clinic

This year marks 60 years of community health centers transforming care across the U.S. At White Bird Clinic, we’re proud to be part of this legacy – bringing whole-person care to our community’s most vulnerable neighbors for more than 50 years! From medical and dental services to harm reduction and crisis response, we’re here to meet people where they are.Learn more about community health at the link below: https://www.nachc.org/about-nachc/history-of-chc/

Whole Community News Report on CAHOOTS:

Since December of 2023, Eugene lost the University District hospital and the Hourglass Crisis Center, and as of last week, CAHOOTS. These were no-barrier treatment access points for our most vulnerable neighbors to receive care when experiencing a mental health crisis. READ MORE: https://wholecommunity.news/2025/04/20/public-comments-ask-city-not-to-lose-cahoots-too/

Contact for Services — Phone: CAHOOTS is dispatched within the Springfield urban growth boundary through the non-emergency number, 541-726-3714.

Starting in the new year, White Bird Dental Clinic will offer more walk-in clinic times. Currently, we offer walk-in clinics at 1415 Pearl St. every Monday and Wednesday at 7:30 a.m. In January, we will also add every other Friday at 7:30 a.m. Find more information at whitebirdclinic.org/dental

EWEB Emergency Water Stations

The final emergency water station has been officially installed in Eugene as part of the Eugene Water & Electric Board’s disaster preparedness plan.

This is where people can access water in case of earthquakes, wildfires, or other events that could disrupt or limit access to the city’s water system.

map of water stations

Other locations are the Eugene Science Center, Howard Elementary School, Prairie Mountain School, Amazon Park-YMCA, the Sheldon Fire Station, and the Lane Events Center and Fairgrounds.

All seven locations across the city of Eugene draw their water from underground wells. The intent is to provide individuals up to two gallons of water a day during an emergency. MORE INFO at EWEB: https://www.eweb.org/projects/emergency-water-stations

Oregon Food Bank · Find free food sites near you using OregonFoodFinder.org.

If you can’t make it to a food location, someone else can pick up food for you.You will just need to print and fill out the Authorized Representative form at https://lnkd.in/dsskUpkQ, and have them take it with them to the food sites. You can find step-by-step instructions at https://lnkd.in/dVBRxn-A.

Worried about recent changes or losing assistance?

Here are resources that can help:

211Info:  Dial 2-1-1 or visit the211Info food webpagefor information and referrals to more than 1,500 food resources across Oregon.

Oregon Food Bank:  Use the Oregon Food Bank’s Food Finder Mapto find over 100 food pantries, free food markets or hot meal programs near you. 

Aging and Disability Resource Connection of Oregon (ADRC): Call 855-673-2372 or visit theADRC food webpage to find local meal programs and food boxes in your area. 

Oregon Senate passes bill to reschedule gas tax referral despite GOP opposition

Bill must pass both chambers by Feb. 25 to appear on the May primary ballot

The Driver and Motor Vehicles Division plans to check new records through 2025 for errors in categorizing non-U.S. citizens as citizens. (Courtesy of Oregon Department of Transportation CC BY-2.0)

After several delays and an encroaching Wednesday deadline, a proposal to reschedule the date of a gas tax referendum to May finally passed the Oregon Senate. 

The Senate voted 17-13 mostly along party lines Monday to pass Senate Bill 1599, which would move the date that Oregon voters can approve or reject parts of a controversial 2025 transportation law from the November general election to the May 19 primary. 

The bill’s Senate passage marks one of the largest hurdles Democrats faced this legislative session as Republicans vowed to do everything in their power to stop them from moving the date of the referendum. That included senators staging a walkout last week on the day the chamber was originally expected to take up the bill and attempts to delay it Monday by proposing motions to take up the bill at a later date or refer it back to the committee process.  

Democrats spearheading the bill say moving the referendum to May would work in the interest of Oregonians who rely on safe transportation infrastructure as years of deferred maintenance and increasing construction costs have stunted the Oregon Department of Transportation’s ability to fix state roads. 

“To put off one more day addressing that challenge is something I just can’t imagine why we would do that,” said Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ashland. 

Without new revenue sources, Oregonians can expect more potholes, rutted roads, faded pavement markings and higher vehicle repair costs, agency leaders previously said. 

“We’ve all seen the coastal highways wiped out from the storms this winter,” said Sen. Khanh Phạm, D-Portland. “The sooner that we in this governing body can get explicit direction from the public, the sooner that we in the Legislature can get to work on the difficult task of finding a long-term solution that protects and preserves our existing public infrastructure.”

‘We could have done it’: Republicans criticize lack of bipartisanship

Republicans repeatedly criticized efforts to move the referendum date, citing concerns over lower voter turnout in primaries and that moving the date to May ignores the 250,000 Oregonians who signed the Republican-led No Tax Oregon petition asking for a November vote. 

“You are denying the voices of Oregonians because you can,” said Sen. Christine Drazan, R-Canby, reprimanding her Democratic colleagues for failing to work across the aisle and urging them to vote with their conscience.

Drazan on her desk had 4,600 sheets of paper representing all the Oregonians who submitted testimony against the bill next to a stack of 66 papers representing testimony submitted in favor of it.  

Senate Minority Leader Bruce Starr, a Dundee Republican and a leader behind the petition asking for a referendum, said the organization would pursue legal action if the bill is signed into law. 

Sen. Bruce Starr, R-Dundee, on the House floor on Monday, Jan. 13, 2025. (Photo by Laura Tesler/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

“The only prophylactic to a referendum is a bipartisan bill,” Starr said. “We could have done it. We could have done it in 2025 in one session. That was my hope. My hope coming back to this process was that we would work across the aisle and get a bill that we could all support, then we wouldn’t be in a situation that we’re in.”

One Democrat, Sen. Mark Meek, D-Gladstone, voted alongside Republicans against the bill. He didn’t debate the bill on the floor, but on social media he said he supports the public’s right to vote on it in November. 

The bill heads to the House next. Lawmakers have until Wednesday to get the bill past both chambers and signed by Gov. Tina Kotek, according to the secretary of state’s office, to give time to print ballots for Oregonians living overseas and gather arguments for the state-issued voter’s pamphlet.

Recap of Oregon’s transportation crisis — Democrats in a fall special session secured enough votes to pass a bill that would raise $4.3 billion for ODOT over the next decade mostly through a 6-cent gas tax increase, doubling the payroll tax used to fund public transit and hikes in vehicle registration and title fees.

That new revenue would have raised $791 million for the agency’s 2025-27 budget, but the No Tax Oregon campaign received enough signatures to pause some of those new revenue streams from coming in until a referendum. 

Now, the transportation agency faces a $242 million shortfall in its current budget, and lawmakers are weighing which transportation programs to take funding from and redirect toward operations and maintenance. Agency leaders could redirect funding set aside for bridge and seismic projects in the Portland area, public transit, and grant programs meant to improve road safety near schools and pedestrian paths. 

Without redirecting or raising new revenue, the transportation agency would have to lay off nearly 500 workers, agency leaders previously said. (SOURCE)

Senate Passes ‘Healthcare Without Fear Act’

Oregon Senate Bill 1570 will hold federal immigration officers accountable inside hospitals, protect patients’ and providers’ rights, and ensure everyone can access healthcare without fearing for their safety.

Oregon Nurses Association President Tamie Cline, RN, (center) stands with state legislators and supporters to announce the Healthcare Without Fear Act (SB 1570) during a press conference at ONA’s headquarters Jan. 30.
Oregon Nurses Association President Tamie Cline, RN, (center) stands with state legislators and supporters to announce the Healthcare Without Fear Act (SB 1570) during a press conference at ONA’s headquarters Jan. 30.

Healthcare workers applauded Tuesday as the Oregon Senate voted to pass the Healthcare Without Fear Act, Senate Bill 1570, to ensure hospitals are places of healing and trust; not fear or intimidation. The Healthcare Without Fear Act ensures federal immigration agents are accountable to the same standards as state and local law enforcement inside hospitals; safeguards patients’ private health information; and improves Oregonians’ health and safety.

“This bill is not abstract policy—it is a promise. A promise that Oregon’s hospitals will be safe spaces. A promise that violence and intimidation have no place in healthcare settings. A promise that caregivers can do their jobs without fear. And a promise that all patients are treated with the dignity, humanity, and protection they deserve,” said ONA President Tamie Cline, RN. 

The Healthcare Without Fear Act comes after recent federal policy changes have made hospitals, clinics, and schools targets for immigration enforcement actions from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)—including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP). In Oregon federal immigration agents shot two people in a hospital parking lot; arrested an entire family trying to take their sick 7-year-old daughter to the ER; and reportedly failed to follow protocols inside hospitals by entering restricted areas, exposing protected health information, and interfering with patients’ care. 

Senate Bill 1570 requires hospitals to create policies around all law enforcement interactions, designate a point person to interface with law enforcement to reduce burdens on frontline caregivers, and clearly designate public and private spaces. It protects patients’ privacy by classifying immigration status and place of birth as protected health information and empowers healthcare providers to share information about immigration rights or legal services with patients and their families.

“Our patients do not feel safe seeking necessary and life-saving medical care. This injustice strikes at the heart of our healthcare system,” said ONA member Jayesh Palshikar, RN. “The Healthcare Without Fear Act will protect providers and patients, hold federal officers accountable to basic hospital standards and begin restoring trust in our healthcare system.”

Following today’s successful Senate vote, the bill will move on to the House Committee on Health Care.

More information on the Healthcare without Fear Act can be found at OregonRN.org/CareWithoutFear

###The Oregon Nurses Association (ONA) represents a diverse community of more than 24,000 nurses and healthcare professionals throughout Oregon. Together, we use our collective power to advocate for critical issues impacting patients, nurses and healthcare professionals including a more effective, affordable and accessible healthcare system; better working conditions for all healthcare professionals; and healthier communities. For more information visit www.OregonRN.org.

Consumer advocates recover over $1 million in fourth quarter 2025 to put last year’s total at more than $7 million

In the fourth quarter of 2025, Oregon Division of Financial Regulation (DFR) consumer advocates helped recover more than $1 million for Oregon consumers. The fourth quarter consists of the last three months of the year. The $1,118,375 recovered brings the 2025 total to $7,039,774 – money that goes directly back to Oregonians.

DFR-logo-blue.jpg

Consumer advocates have extensive knowledge across many areas of regulation, including helping those experiencing difficulties with insurance, mortgages, banking products, securities, student loans, and a variety of other financial services regulated by DFR.

“The agency’s work to protect consumers by holding companies accountable to their customers helps to make Oregon more affordable for all of us,” Gov. Tina Kotek said.

The final quarter of last year saw 1,454 complaints come through DFR’s consumer advocates for a total of 5,663 complaints in 2025. Insurance complaints led the way in each quarter, with 935 in the last three months of 2025, while more than 3,700 insurance complaints came in throughout the year. Credit union complaints were the next highest of areas DFR regulated with 59 complaints for the quarter and 212 for the entire year. Advocates also received 254 insurance complaints that were not regulated by DFR.

Examples of consumer complaints successfully resolved by DFR advocates in the last three months of 2025 include:

  • Following a dental trauma, a consumer was seen at an in-network emergency room and referred to an out-of-network specialist for follow-up care. The in-network doctor submitted a prior authorization for the specialist’s services, but the consumer did not understand that since the specialist was out-of-network, they would be responsible for the full bill, which totaled $12,000. The insurer denied the consumer’s appeal to pay the claim and waive the charges, so the consumer filed a complaint with DFR. During the insurer’s review, because the in-network emergency room provider requested prior authorization from an out-of-network provider instead of an in-network provider, the insurance company agreed to negotiate a single case agreement, which means the consumer will be responsible only for their in-network cost share.
  • A consumer filed a complaint indicating a debt management service provider charged for services while he resided in Oregon when the provider was not licensed in the state. The service provider credited the consumer $3,176.48 for fees earned while he lived in Oregon.
  • A consumer reported a hail loss in July 2025. The company’s estimate and the contractor’s estimate were significantly different. The two areas of concern were skylights and roofing materials. The consumer lived in a homeowner association that set requirements for the quality of materials used for building or repairs. Some differences appeared associated with those requirements and, based on the insurance contract, were not owed by the insurer. However, through the complaint process, the company reassessed these two areas of the repair estimate and made adjustments to properly reflect like kind and quality of the repair materials. Additional payments totaling $4,389.17 were issued.
  • A consumer traveled to Cleveland, Ohio, to see a specialist for a rare type of cancer and ongoing treatment. During travel, an emergency occurred requiring the consumer to be hospitalized for a full month and to undergo multiple procedures. The provider had previously been in-network. However, the consumer’s employer recently changed insurers, and the provider was now out-of-network. The consumer was not aware there would be such a drastic difference in benefits. The consumer returned to Oregon as soon as they were able, but now had significant bills due of about $40,000. After corresponding with the insurer, the insurer agreed to retroactively approve continuity of care for the consumer, which allowed several large claims to be reprocessed as in-network. Partnering with the consumer and the insurer to verify outstanding balances and claim statuses, four separate previously out-of-network claims were able to be reprocessed, saving the consumer $38,800.75.

“Last year saw over 5,000 complaints come in to our consumer advocates, and they handled them professionally,” said Sean O’Day, director of the Department of Consumer and Business Services. “We have a dedicated group of employees who have a common goal of helping Oregonians navigate the often complicated world of insurance and financial services.”

Oregon Insurance Commissioner TK Keen said consumer advocates have a tough job and handle it professionally.

“I am very proud of our team of industry experts, who continue to put their knowledge to work for the benefit of Oregonians,” said Keen, who is also the DFR administrator. “Many of the cases they deal with are highly complex and take a lot of time to navigate. I am happy to see their hard work benefitting so many people in our state.”

Anyone who may need a consumer advocate can call 888-877-4894 (toll-free) or email .insurancehelp@dcbs.oregon.gov“>dfr.insurancehelp@dcbs.oregon.gov for insurance-related issues and .finanicialserviceshelp@dcbs.oregon.gov“>dfr.finanicialserviceshelp@dcbs.oregon.gov for financial-related issues.

Feds propose opening millions of acres of western Oregon forests to 1960s logging levels

The Bureau of Land Management posted a notice that officials intend to revise management plans for 2.5 million acres in 17 western Oregon counties

About three-quarters of federal O&C forests in western Oregon are protected from regular logging. But Bureau of Land Management indicated it could return those acres to 1960s harvest levels, more than 10 times current harvest levels. (Photo courtesy of the Bureau of Land Management)
 About three-quarters of federal O&C forests in western Oregon are protected from regular logging. But Bureau of Land Management indicated it could return those acres to 1960s harvest levels, more than 10 times current harvest levels. (Photo courtesy of the Bureau of Land Management)

Federal officials are attempting to open up millions of acres of forests in western Oregon for “maximum” timber production to “advance Trump administration priorities,” including areas that are home to federally protected, vulnerable species, the Bureau of Land Management announced.

The agency on Thursday shared in a notice of intent that officials will propose new updates to the Western Oregon Resource Management Plans that have governed logging and conservation on 2.5 million acres of forests in 17 Oregon counties for decades, and that were last updated in 2016. The notice kicks off a month-long public comment period that will wrap on March 23. The agency does not expect to hold any public meetings in advance of releasing its proposal, the notice said.Submit public comment here or email: BLM_OR_Revision_Scoping@blm.gov

About three-quarters of the 2.5 million federal acres, known as O&C lands for having once belonged to the Oregon and California Railroad, are protected from regular logging. But in its notice of intent, the land management bureau indicated it could return those acres to 1960s harvest levels, at times more than 10 times average harvest levels over the last two decades.

“Bringing timber production back to historic levels is essential for reviving local economies and reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfires,” said acting director of the land management bureau, Bill Groffy, in a statement. “President Trump has made it clear — enhanced domestic timber production is vital for our national security, economic prosperity, and effective wildfire management.”

Conservationists have called it a plan to return to a time when the agency and the U.S. Forest Service clear cut roughly 3 square miles of old-growth forests per week, and an attempt to override years of court precedent protecting vulnerable species that depend on the stands. That level of logging nearly drove the federally protected northern spotted owl and the marbled murrelet, a small seabird that nests in old-growth forests, to extinction.

“The public does not want to go back to the days of rampant old-growth clearcutting. They don’t want to go back to dead salmon and polluted rivers, or see their favorite places on public lands liquidated in order to maximize profits for the greedy few,” said Chandra LeGue, an advocate with the nonprofit conservation group Oregon Wild, in a statement. “These are treasured public lands, and we’re going to fight for them.”

In his March executive order “Immediate Expansion of American Timber Production,” President Donald Trump wrote that he’d use the Endangered Species Act Committee, commonly referred to as the “God Squad,” to override the species’ protections standing in the way of increased logging. The committee earned its nickname given its authority to review and determine the fate of imperiled species, and it’s been tapped rarely since its creation in 1978.

In a statement, Travis Joseph, president of the American Forest Resource Council, a trade association for the commercial logging industry, celebrated the bureau’s announcement that more acres would open for logging.

“Bureau of Land Management lands in western Oregon continue to grow significantly more timber each year than is harvested, contributing to overstocked forest conditions and increasing the risk of catastrophic wildfire across much of the region,” he said.

Joseph said they are some of the most productive timberlands in the world. Bev Law, a forest scientist and professor emerita at Oregon State University, said they are the most effective carbon-storing forests in the world, as long as they remain intact.

She called the plan to return to harvest levels of 1 billion board feet of timber per year “insanity.”

“These forests are the low hanging fruit — the temperate rainforests and the long-lived forests that we have in Oregon and Northern California — they live for thousands of years,” she said. “That’s carbon that’s not in the atmosphere, and they still keep taking in more carbon as time goes on. The best thing that we can do is to let the forest grow, to try and turn this (climate change) around.”

Arran Robertson, a spokesperson for Oregon Wild, said the plans governing the management of the federal forests in western Oregon exist because species were being driven to extinction in the 1990s.

The Bureau of Land Management under several presidential administrations has tried to allow more aggressive logging on the O&C lands, he said, but lawsuits stopped some of the most sweeping attempts, particularly under former president George W. Bush. “Now this administration is going full throttle,” Robertson said.

Submit public comment here or email: BLM_OR_Revision_Scoping@blm.gov – (SOURCE)

PacifiCorp Announces Settlement of All Federal Claims for Damages from 2020 Labor Day Wildfires and 2022 McKinney Fire

PacifiCorp has reached a comprehensive settlement for $575 million resolving all known federal government claims for damages related to the 2020 Labor Day wildfires—including the 242, Archie Creek, Echo Mountain, Slater and South Obenchain fires—and the 2022 McKinney wildfire. 

“This settlement is another significant milestone demonstrating our ongoing commitment to resolve all reasonable claims related to the devastating fires that affected Oregon and California,” said Ryan Flynn, President of Pacific Power. “Setting aside claims arising from the Beachie Creek/Santiam Canyon fire, we have now settled nearly 90 percent of known claims for a total of more than $2.2 billion, providing certainty for customers and progress toward a financially healthy utility.”

PacifiCorp continues to invest in wildfire prevention and mitigation initiatives, including situational awareness, advanced monitoring technologies, enhanced vegetation management and system strengthening. The company remains dedicated to collaborating with regulators, legislators and customers to develop long-term solutions that address the growing threat of wildfire and other extreme weather events.

A Portland, Oregon, company is recalling nearly 3.4 million pounds of frozen chicken fried rice products sold at Trader Joe’s stores and in Canada because they may contain pieces of glass, U.S. Agriculture Department officials reported.

Nearly 3.4 million pounds of frozen chicken fried rice products sold at Trader Joe's stores...
Nearly 3.4 million pounds of frozen chicken fried rice products sold at Trader Joe’s stores and in Canada because they may contain pieces of glass(US Department of Agriculture)

Ajinomoto Foods North America Inc. pulled Trader Joe’s Chicken Fried Rice from stores nationwide. The frozen product, containing fried rice, vegetables, chicken meat and eggs, is sold in 20-ounce plastic bags. The affected packages have best-by dates of Sept. 8 through Nov. 17, 2026. The products are stamped with the establishment number P-18356 inside the USDA mark of inspection.

The company also recalled cardboard packages containing six bags of frozen Ajinomoto Yakitori Chicken with Japanese-Style Rice with best by dates of Sept. 9 to Nov. 12, 2026. Those products were sold only in Canada.

State issues first 2026 income tax refunds for e-filed returns; Refunds for paper-filed returns won’t start until April

The Oregon Department of Revenue has begun distributing refunds for the 2025 tax year. Through February 17, the department has processed more than 500,000 electronically filed tax returns.

Most taxpayers can expect to receive their refunds within two weeks of the date their return is filed. Some returns, however, require additional review and can take up to 20 weeks before a refund is issued.

Oregon is returning a $1.41 billion revenue surplus “kicker” to taxpayers in 2026. The kicker credit will either increase a taxpayer’s refund or decrease the amount of state taxes they owe.

Only taxpayers who filed a tax year 2024 return and also file a tax year 2025 return can receive a kicker. The credit is a percentage of Oregon personal income tax liability for the 2024 tax year. Taxpayers can determine the amount of their kicker using a “What’s My Kicker? calculator available on Revenue Online.

The department encourages taxpayers to file electronically. On average, taxpayers who e-file their returns and request their refund via direct deposit receive their refund within two weeks. Those who file paper returns will experience a significantly longer wait in 2026 due to processing delays.

In the closing months of 2025, the IRS was late providing necessary tax form information to the Oregon Department of Revenue. As a result, the state’s processing of paper-filed Oregon personal income tax returns will not begin until the end of March. The first refunds for paper-filed returns are not expected to be issued until April.

Taxpayers can check the status of their e-filed refund by using the department’s Where’s My Refund? tool. The Department of Revenue recommends that taxpayers wait one week after they have electronically filed their return to use the Where’s My Refund tool. Paper-filed returns won’t show up in the Where’s My Refund? tool until processing begins in late March. Taxpayers mailing their return should wait two weeks after the department starts processing paper returns in late March or after mailing their return, whichever is later.

The Where’s My Refund? tool has been updated for 2026, providing clear messaging about the status of their return to taxpayers who are signed into their Revenue Online account. Taxpayers who don’t already have a Revenue Online account can create one by following the Revenue Online link on the department’s website. Taxpayers who don’t have a Revenue Online account can still use the Where’s My Refund? tool but won’t be able to see the updated features.

video outlining the refund process and timelines is also available to help taxpayers understand the process.

Taxpayers should file just once unless they need to make a change to their return. They should choose to either file electronically or by paper. Doing both will delay processing of their return.

In addition to checking the status of their refund, taxpayers can make payments, or get tax forms by visiting the department’s website. Questions can be emailed to questions.dor@dor.oregon.gov.

Taxpayers can also call 800-356-4222 toll-free from an Oregon prefix (English or Spanish) or 503-378-4988 in Salem and outside Oregon. For TTY (hearing or speech impaired), the department accepts all relay calls.

Oregon reports measles outbreak; new wastewater dashboard tracks measles virus by county

Oregon Health Authority (OHA) and Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) medical experts held a media briefing Thursday to give an update on the state’s response to recent measles cases in Oregon and across the country. They also will discuss new measles tracking methods.

The media briefing livestream for members of the public is available via YouTube at this link.

A new data tracking tool Oregon Health Authority (OHA) launched today shows the five confirmed measles cases identified in the state since Jan. 1 likely represent only a portion of infections occurring statewide, public health officials say.  

To strengthen early detection, OHA today published a new measles wastewater surveillance dashboard showing viral concentrations by county and categorizing activity as very low, low, moderate or high over two-week periods. 

Wastewater monitoring began Oct. 1, 2025, and complements traditional case reporting. Oregon submits data to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Wastewater Surveillance System, which uses a high threshold for labeling samples as a “detection.” While that approach has shown sporadic detections of measles over time, Oregon’s analysis of viral concentrations indicates low-level measles activity across the state that has been increasing. For the two-week period ending Feb. 7, low levels of measles virus were observed in wastewater from nine counties. 

“Wastewater surveillance serves as an early warning signal system, which gives communities a head start to prepare and empowers everyone to make informed decisions about immunization. Wastewater testing looks for the actual measles virus that causes illness in people, so it provides an early signal of community spread,” said Howard Chiou, M.D., Ph.D., medical director for communicable diseases and immunizations at OHA’s Public Health Division. 

“Measles is here in Oregon and spreading in the United States,” Chiou added, “and vaccination remains the best way for people to protect themselves. We encourage everyone to talk with a healthcare provider to ensure they and their families are fully protected.” 

Measles is a highly contagious respiratory virus spread through the air when an infected person breathes, speaks, coughs or sneezes. The virus can linger in the air for up to two hours, allowing it to infect up to 90% of unprotected close contacts and potentially cause serious complications, including pneumonia, brain inflammation and death. 

Measles has been increasing nationwide since early 2025, with nearly 2,300 cases reported last year. Most cases occurred among unvaccinated children. 

Guidance for providers and the public – Symptoms typically begin seven to 21 days after exposure and include cough, runny nose and conjunctivitis with high fever, followed by a rash that starts on the head or neck and spreads downward. People are contagious from four days before the rash appears until four days afterward. 

Health care providers should report suspected cases immediately and consider post-exposure prophylaxis for exposed patients: 

  • MMR vaccine, within 72 hours of exposure.
  • Immunoglobulin, within six days. 

For most vaccine-eligible people 6 months and older, MMR vaccination within 72 hours is recommended. 

Anyone not protected against measles is at risk. OHA encourages people to check vaccination status and contact a health care provider if they have questions. 

For more information on measles, visit OHA’s measle page. The measles wastewater dashboard page is available here

Former Trail Blazer Star Chris Dudley To Run For Governor

The competition for Oregon’s Republican governor candidacy is steep with the latest addition standing a head — or two — above others.

Chris Dudley, a former Oregon Trail Blazer whose career lasted 16 seasons in the NBA, recently announced his entrance into the primary race for the governor’s office.

The 2026 primaries will be Dudley’s second attempt for the state office following a narrow loss in 2010 to Republican candidate John Kitzhaber.

Dudley is on a tour of the state this month, stopping in Klamath Falls last week for an event hosted by the Klamath County Republicans.

Standing 6’11, the former NBA center stayed true to his position with largely nonpartisan issues at the forefront.  His campaign focuses on “education, economy (and) livability,” which, he said, “includes affordability and safety.”  “Those are messages that resonate across party lines,” Dudley said.

A fifth-generation Oregonian himself, Dudley said he wants what’s best for the sixth and, one day, seventh generation Oregonians of his and all local families.

“What we want is pretty simple,” Dudley said. “We want to have schools and education that we’re all proud of. We want our kids to be able to have jobs. We want them to be able to afford to live where they grew up, and we want safe streets.”

The office of governor, he said, is powerful.  “You have powerful tools as governor: power of the pen … power of the purse … power of the pulpit. Being able to restore some balance to our state is critically important,” he said, noting that of all current appointed officials, only one was appointed by a Republican governor.

“Lots of people are believing that we can win because we can,” he said. “And … (it’s) imperative we do so now. It is imperative we change the direction we’re going … It’s imperative that we have somebody come to the table from the outside. I don’t believe … Oregon’s problems are going to be solved by someone who lives out in Salem.”

Dudley is the latest to join the race with 15 candidates in the gubernatorial primaries so far.

Call for Nominations: OnPoint Community Credit Union kicks off 17th Annual Prize for Outstanding Educators and Schools Making an Impact

OnPoint Community Credit Union 2025 Educator of the Year winners
OnPoint Community Credit Union 2025 Educator of the Year winners

OnPoint Prize for Excellence in Education recognizes inspiring educators and schools with financial support, including paying four mortgages or rents for a full year

OnPoint Community Credit Union is asking the public to nominate exceptional educators for its 17th annual Prize for Excellence in Education. The program will award $193,000 to eight outstanding educators and five schools across Oregon and southwest Washington.

“OnPoint was founded by teachers more than 90 years ago, and we honor our roots by celebrating educators in our community who inspire future generations,” said Rob Stuart, president and chief executive officer of OnPoint Community Credit Union. “Every day, educators help students build confidence, curiosity and opportunity. We invite the community to once again help us recognize these educators by nominating them for the OnPoint Prize.”

Four winning educators will have their mortgage or rent paid by OnPoint for one year. Four runners-up will each receive a $5,000 cash prize. The OnPoint Prize also includes the Community Builder Award for innovative school projects. Four schools will receive $2,000, and a fifth school selected by community votes will receive $5,000.

About the Nomination Process

Anyone can nominate an outstanding educator or apply for a Community Builder award at onpointprize.com. Educators may also nominate themselves. Applicants must be full-time or job-share classroom teachers, counselors, school administrators or librarians for grades Pre-K-12. They must work in an accredited public, private or charter school located within any county that OnPoint serves. OnPoint also accepts applications for the Community Builder awards within those same counties. The nomination period closes at 11:59 p.m. PST on Tuesday, April 7. Educator of the Year finalists and Community Builder winners will be announced on May 6.

Since 2010, the OnPoint Prize has awarded more than $1 million in prizes to 347 local educators and schools.

This year’s awards include:

  • Educators of the Year: Four educators will have their mortgage or rent paid for one year and receive a $2,500 donation to their schools for resources and supplies. One educator from each category below will be chosen:
    • Grades K-5
    • Grades 6-8
    • Grades 9-12
    • Gold Star: This category recognizes one educator who is a pre-kindergarten teacher, school counselor, substitute teacher, librarian or school administrator.

Runners-up: Four educators, one from each of the above categories, will receive a $5,000 cash award and a $1,500 donation to each of their schools for resources and supplies.

  • Community Builder Awards: One school, selected by community votes, will receive $5,000 for a project that will meaningfully improve that school or community. Four additional schools will each receive $2,000 for special projects.

About last year’s winners

The winners of the 2025 Educators of the Year who had their mortgage or rent paid over the last year were:

  • Ricardo Barber, 3rd grade teacher at Faubion Elementary, Portland, Ore.
  • Rhiannon Young, 6th-8th grade teacher at Corbett Middle School, Corbett, Ore.
  • Sophia Aguirre, 9th-12th grade English Language Development at Aloha High School, Beaverton, Ore.
  • Hang Jones, Social Worker at Marysville Elementary School, Portland, Ore.

OnPoint awarded five Community Builder grants in 2025 to fund innovative school projects that inspire students, foster community, demonstrate a commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion and reach a broad segment of the school community.

The $5,000 Community Builder Award, selected by community votes, went to Morningside Elementary School in Salem, Ore. The award funded new portable risers for the school’s choir program, giving every student a safe, visible place during performances and community events. Four schools received the $2,000 award:

  • Abiqua School: Nature Trail – A Path to Outdoor Learning (Salem-Keizer School District, Salem, Ore.)
  • Innovation Academy: Community Garden (Medford School District, Medford, Ore.)
  • Sherwood Charter School: H.E.A.R.T Care Closet (Sherwood School District, Sherwood, Ore.)

Skyridge Middle School: Flood Recovery for Books (Camas School District, Camas, Wash.)

For information about the OnPoint Prize for Excellence in Education, additional qualifications and contest rules, please visit onpointprize.com

BLM launches public comment on western Oregon timber plan to advance Trump administration priorities

The Bureau of Land Management is inviting public input for proposed updates to resources management across 2.5 million acres of highly productive timberlands in western Oregon, an effort that underscores the Trump administration’s commitment to expanding domestic timber production and reducing reliance on foreign imports.

“Bringing timber production back to historic levels is essential for reviving local economies and reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfires,” said Acting BLM Director Bill Groffy. “President Trump has made it clear — enhanced domestic timber production is vital for our national security, economic prosperity, and effective wildfire management.”

notice will publish in tomorrow’s Federal Register to open the comment period, which closes on March 23. Additional information is available at the BLM National NEPA Register, where comments may be submitted through the “Participate Now” option. Written comments may also be emailed to LM_OR_Revision_Scoping@blm.gov” style=”box-sizing: border-box; color: rgb(0, 94, 162);”>BLM_OR_Revision_Scoping@blm.gov or delivered to: Attention BLM OR930, 1220 SW 3rd Ave, Portland, OR 97204.

The BLM remains committed to supplying a secure, resilient domestic timber supply. In western Oregon, this commitment is rooted in the Oregon and California Revested Lands Sustained Yield Management Act of 1937, which ensures sustainable forestry practices that support communities and livelihoods.

Revenue from timber harvested on these lands is shared between the U.S. Treasury and 18 western Oregon counties—funding essential local services such as schools, libraries, public safety, and infrastructure projects. Each year, BLM timber sales support approximately 2,000 local jobs and generate more than $1 billion for local economies.

### The BLM manages about 245 million acres of public land located primarily in 12 western states, including Alaska, on behalf of the American people. The BLM also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. Our mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of America’s public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.

Oregon State Parks to hire seasonal Park Rangers, Park Ranger Assistants

Oregon State Parks

Oregon State Parks is hiring seasonal Park Rangers and Park Ranger Assistants for positions across the state for the 2026 season.

Hiring starts as soon as this month and runs through June with new positions listed on a rolling basis on the website. The positions last anywhere from four to nine months. Most seasonal staff work April through September, but some start as early as this month or work as late as December.

Seasonal staff help visitors access world-class experiences and ensure clean and safe park areas for everyone to enjoy. Duties include janitorial work, landscape maintenance, visitor education and visitor services.

Salaries start at $20.28 per hour for seasonal assistants and $23.79 for seasonal rangers. Both positions include comprehensive medical, vision and dental plans for employees and qualified family members. The positions also include paid sick leave, vacation, personal leave and 11 paid holidays per year. Student workers, ages 16 and older, who are enrolled in high school start at $20.27 or more per hour, depending on experience.

Several of Oregon State Parks’ top leaders started their careers as seasonal employees, including all three Region Directors.

“We are focused on developing an engaged workforce by partnering with staff on career development, investing in skill building and fostering a culture of belonging. Whether you’re here for a season or your entire career, you make a difference in protecting and promoting Oregon’s special places,” said interim Director Stefanie Coons.

Seasonal staff gain valuable skills working with experienced Park Rangers at parks around the state. Positions are available in Oregon’s coastal areas, scenic valleys, and mountain regions, offering opportunities to work in some of the most beautiful places in the Pacific Northwest.

For more information about current openings, visit https://bit.ly/oregonparkjobs. If you have any questions or need additional assistance in accessibility or alternative formats, please email Oregon Parks and Recreation Department Recruiting D.Recruiting@oprd.oregon.gov“>OPRD.Recruiting@oprd.oregon.gov.

Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer, committed to diversity and pay equity.

YACHATS LIONS announces launch of Bird City Yachats

Bird City Yachats (BCY) will hold its official launch on March 1st, 1:30 PM at the Yachats Lions Hall when Bird City Oregon will present the designation to the Mayor of Yachats. This will be followed by a talk entitled “Taking Refuge on the Oregon Coast”, a history of our coastal wildlife refuges, which provide critical seabird nesting habitat. BCY is sponsored by the Yachats Lions Club.

In the Fall 2025 the city of Yachats was awarded an Oregon Bird City, the first bird city on the Pacific Coast. This certification rewards cities for their efforts to help wildlife. Bird City Yachats (BCY) is part of a national program, Bird City Network ( https://birdcity.org/) of more than 300 “Bird” cities across the country. A steering committee for BCY has been established to encourage our citizens to protect and enjoy our precious wildlife and to develop projects for their protection.

BCY projects range from education (e.g., speaker series, bird walks) to removing threats (e.g., bird strike prevention) and marketing (e.g., website, ads promoting Yachats as a birding destination). Birds have unique threats. One that kills millions of birds a year is striking windows. In that regard BCY been working with the city manager on window treatments for the new pavilion that will minimize bird strikes. Open pipes and chimneys that can trap birds are another threat. Working together with Seven Capes Bird Alliance, BCY has surveyed 24 state parks in Lincoln County and identified over 150 open pipes which we will help cap.

BCY now has a website (https://birdcity.org/oregon/yachats) and information available at the Visitor Center on birds and birding sites. This month we will unveil a photo exhibition of local birds and wildlife in the children’s section of the new Yachats library.

Established in 1950, the Yachats Lions Club serves Yachats and South Lincoln County. With our motto of “WE SERVE”, we provide service for eyeglasses and exams, hearing aids and exams, eye screening in Lincoln County schools, pancake breakfasts, crab feed, lunch bunch, speaker series, peace poster and flag day events in our schools, and community use of our clubhouse. Through community donations to the Yachats Lions Thrift Store our sales allow us to donate to local needs such as student scholarships, food pantries, school programs, and conservation projects.

Lions Club International is the world’s largest service club organization with a network of 1.4 million men and women in more than 200 countries and geographical locations. We serve where we live, as well as globally, and we have fun doing it. For more information, contact Lion Jim Welch at 970-217-4424 or jameswelch1009@gmail.com

LCPD Seeks Assistance in Locating Juan Antonio Suarez Jimenez
Lincoln City Police 

Juan_Suarez_Jimenez.png

The Lincoln City Police Department is desperately seeking assistance from the public in locating a wanted suspect, 45-year-old Juan Antonio Suarez Jimenez, of Lincoln City, Oregon.

A nationwide extradition warrant has been issued for his arrest as the suspect in a hit-and-run crash leading to the death of a local pedestrian. If you know of Juan Suarez’s whereabouts, please contact your local law enforcement.

Juan, if you are reading this, please turn yourself in to start bringing closure to those that loved Joe. All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.

A legislative proposal in Salem, designed to lower property insurance costs, is receiving input from both the insurance sector and other states that have enacted similar legislation.

Homeowners in Oregon and throughout much of the Western region are facing escalating insurance premiums and a diminishing number of insurance providers due to the threat of wildfires.

Senate Bill 1540 seeks to mitigate that risk and the related expenses. The insurance industry, along with experts from California and Colorado, represents just a portion of the stakeholders collaborating with Salem legislators on Senate Bill 1540.

The bill successfully progressed through the Senate Committee on Natural Resources and Wildfire, which is chaired by local State Senator Jeff Golden, and moved to the Rules Committee on Thursday afternoon following a unanimous bipartisan vote.

A proposal to change the date for a contentious transportation tax referendum from November to May is progressing to the Oregon Senate for a vote.

Senate Bill 1599 represents a Democratic initiative aimed at rescheduling the date when Oregon voters can either approve or reject components of a 2025 transportation law to coincide with the May 19 primary.

During a heated meeting on Thursday evening, lawmakers on a joint subcommittee voted 5-3 along party lines to move the bill forward. Proponents argue that rescheduling the date would allow voters to weigh in on the measure as soon as possible, while also providing lawmakers with the necessary clarity to identify a long-term funding solution as the budget deficit of the Oregon Department of Transportation continues to expand.

Conversely, many critics have described this move as an attempt to undermine the preferences of nearly a quarter-million voters and to shield Democrats from being listed on general election ballots alongside an unpopular tax increase.

E-File Your Taxes For Free At Regional Offices

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With anticipated delays in paper return processing in 2026, the Oregon Department of Revenue reminds taxpayers planning to file a paper return that they can use public computer kiosks in the department’s regional offices to file their Oregon personal income tax returns for free and get their kicker and their refund sooner.

“The computer kiosks offer a way to file electronically for those without a computer or those who fill out paper forms and want to transfer their data into Direct File Oregon to receive their refund—and their kicker—sooner,” said Megan Denison, administrator of the department’s Personal Tax and Compliance Division.

The computers are set up in the public spaces of the DOR regional offices in Bend, Eugene, Gresham, Medford, and Portland. They are available during business hours to file state tax returns using Direct File Oregon.

On average, taxpayers who e-file their returns and request their refund via direct deposit receive their refunds two weeks sooner than those who mail in paper returns and request a check.

The additional wait will be even longer this year. The IRS was late providing necessary tax forms and information to the Oregon Department of Revenue late last year. As a result, the state’s processing of paper-filed Oregon personal income tax returns won’t begin until the end of March.

The department will begin issuing refunds for e-filed returns February 17. For paper filed returns, refunds will not start being issued until early April.

Offices are located in:

Bend, 951 SW Simpson Ave, Suite 100

Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. (closed 12:30 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.)

Eugene, 1600 Valley River Drive, Suite 310

Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. (closed 12:30 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.)

Gresham, 1550 NW Eastman Parkway, Suite 220

Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. (closed 12:30 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.)

Medford, 3613 Aviation Way, Suite 102

Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. (closed 12:30 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.)

Portland, 800 NE Oregon St, Suite 505

Monday – Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. (closed 12 – 12:30 p.m.)

Now in its third year, Direct File Oregon is an interview-based program similar to commercial software and allows taxpayers the convenience and security of filing directly with the state of Oregon through Revenue Online.

Another year brings yet another wave of phishing scams, with senders impersonating ODOT and DMV. Do not fall for these tricks.

The DMV warns that if you receive an unsolicited text message purporting to be from ODOT or DMV, claiming that you owe money for an unpaid traffic fine or toll balance, it is a scam. Refrain from clicking any links or providing payment or personal identifying information.

Oregon Department of Transportation : Fraud Prevention Communication : Oregon Driver & Motor Vehicle Services : State of Oregon

These messages are fraudulent and intended to steal your personal and financial data. It is advisable to delete the message and block the sender. The most recent scam messages originate from unknown phone numbers and often start with alarming phrases such as, “Evasion Notice for Oregon Traffic Court” or “Final Notice – Toll Violation (Oregon).”

These messages assert that you have an outstanding traffic fine or toll balance and demand payment by a specified date to prevent enforcement actions and penalties. The texts may reference a fictitious Oregon State Administrative Code and encourage you to click on a deceptive URL that may appear legitimate because it contains ODOT, DMV, or oregon.gov.

The American Red Cross is making an urgent appeal for blood donations due to a nearly 35% decline in their supply over the last month.

The organization reports that winter storms and the flu season have intensified the shortage, resulting in hospitals facing challenges in meeting patient requirements. The Red Cross is responsible for supplying 40% of the nation’s blood, and the situation is critical, with blood being required every two seconds. Although 62% of Americans are eligible to donate, only 3% are currently participating, according to the organization.

From January 26 to February 28, donors will receive a $20 e-gift card to a merchant of their choice. The Red Cross urges eligible individuals to schedule an appointment via their website to assist in replenishing the blood supply.

The Senate Committee on Finance and Revenue has moved forward with a new bill intended to deliver substantial tax relief to more than 200,000 low-to-moderate income households in Oregon.

This legislation also fosters job creation while protecting $291 million in funding for education, health care, and public safety. Senate Bill 1507 accomplishes these objectives by eliminating tax loopholes that are commonly exploited by affluent individuals and large corporations.

The bill suggests the most significant expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit in Oregon’s history. This adjustment will raise the credit from 9% to 14% for individual taxpayers and from 12% to 17% for those with a child under the age of three. Furthermore, the bill introduces a new $25 million Jobs Tax Credit, aimed at reducing taxes for businesses that generate well-paying jobs within the state.

This credit is available to all industries but necessitates a net increase in jobs in Oregon to be eligible. The proposal also guarantees that tips and overtime compensation will remain exempt from taxation.

Call for Ideas: America 250 Oregon Commission Invites Public Input on National America250 Time Capsule

On July 4, 2026, America250 will bury the Semiquincentennial Time Capsule within Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia. The stainless-steel cylinder, designed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, is designed to safely store commemorative objects for 250 years until the capsule’s opening on July 4, 2275.

Each state has been asked to contribute a submission that represents its people, stories, and values at this historic moment, and the America 250 Oregon Commission invites the public to share ideas for Oregon’s contributions.

Items should reflect Oregon and its people today and may include creative works, written reflections, or symbolic objects created with long-term preservation in mind. Submissions must fit within a 6″ x 5″ x 2″ archival storage box, ideally made of a nonreactive metal (gold, silver, copper, titanium, platinum) or consist of a single page of archival paper no larger than 8.5″ x 11″. Other materials (such as stone, fabric, glass, clay) may be utilized, recognizing that the potential for long-term degradation is increased.

Oregonians are encouraged to submit recommendations to egon.250@ohs.org” target=”_blank” title=”Oregon.250@ohs.org“>Oregon.250@ohs.org by March 1, 2026. Public input will help inform the Commission’s final selection, ensuring Oregon’s contribution reflects a broad range of perspectives and experiences. Oregon Historical Society 

About the America 250 Oregon Commission — The America 250 Oregon Commission was created through Senate Bill 1531, which was signed into law by Governor Tina Kotek on March 27, 2024. Chaired by the Oregon Historical Society’s executive director, Kerry Tymchuk, the mission of the America 250 Oregon Commission is to coordinate, provide guidance, and ensure that Oregon’s official observance of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States is inclusive and shares the histories of Oregon’s diverse populations, including the histories of the Indigenous peoples who have resided here since time immemorial. Learn more at oregon250.org.

Earned Income Tax Credit could mean thousands more in cash refunds for eligible Oregonians

A single parent of two young children earning $24,000 in Oregon could receive over $12,000 as a cash refund if they claim the federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), the federal Child Tax Credit, the Oregon Earned Income Credit (EIC), and the Oregon Kids Credit.

Low-income Oregon families overwhelmingly use cash refunds to cover the basics—housing, utilities, food, etc.

Yet, more than 20 percent of Oregonians eligible to claim the EITC, don’t. Low participation rates in these programs leave millions of dollars on the table for low-income Oregonians.

An IRS study of 2020 federal tax returns found that Oregon ranked last in EITC participation with only slightly more than two out of three eligible taxpayers claiming the credit. Oregon’s standing has since improved, rising to 44th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia, and participation rates were up to more than 78 percent for tax year 2022.

The Oregon Department of Revenue is working with other state agencies and community partners to encourage taxpayers to learn more about this credit and find out if they’re eligible.

The department is working to increase uptake of the EITC in Oregon by both raising awareness of how refundable federal and state credits can put cash directly in the pockets of low-income Oregonians, and by offering free tax filing assistance. The state partners with community based organizations to offer free tax filing assistance at sites across the state. The hands-on guidance encourages Oregonians to check if they are eligible for these refundable tax credits.The Earned Income Tax Credit is a fully refundable federal tax credit for people making up to $68,675 in 2025. A refundable credit not only reduces the amount of tax a taxpayer owes, any leftover credit results in a cash refund that can be deposited directly into their bank account. Families may be eligible for a maximum refundable credit of $8,046 on their federal tax return, and a maximum Oregon Earned Income Credit of $966 on their state tax return. Certain taxpayers without children may also be eligible for these credits.

Individuals may qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit, the Oregon EIC, and other credits, even if they are not required to file a tax return. To receive the refundable credits, however, they must file a federal and state tax return.

Basic qualifications for EITC include:

  • You, your spouse, or any qualifying child must have a Social Security number to claim the federal credit.
  • Your earned income in 2025 must be below certain limitsbased on your number of qualifying dependents.
  • You may be eligible even if you do not have a qualifying child.
  • Taxpayers can use the IRS EITC Assistantto check their eligibility further. The assistant is available in English and Spanish.

State tax credits for families

In addition to federal refundable credits, Oregon has multiple state tax credits that low-income families can claim – the Oregon Earned Income Credit (EIC), and the Oregon Kids’ Credit. Both of these credits are also available to taxpayers who use an individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN) to file their taxes or have a qualifying child with an ITIN. Taxpayers with an ITIN, claim the Oregon EIC using schedule OR-EIC-ITIN. The EIC otherwise has the same basic qualifications as the federal EITC listed above.

The Oregon Kids Credit is a refundable credit for low-income people with young dependent children. For those with a modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) of $26,550 or less, the full credit is $1,050 per child for up to five dependent children under the age of six at the end of the tax year. A partial credit is available for individuals and families with an MAGI up to $31,550.

The department recommends that Oregonians wishing to claim the Oregon Kids Credit use Direct File Oregonthe interview-based tax preparation software that allows taxpayers to file directly with the state for free. There was an earlier error in the forms for claiming the Oregon Kids Credit which has been updated and fixed in Direct File Oregon.

Taxpayers who plan to claim the Oregon Kids Credit, and file their taxes using another tax filing software can check the Department’s webpage to see if the software has been updated with the correct forms and instructions. The department has been in communication with its tax preparation software partners to ensure the fix is quickly applied to their forms.

For more information about the federal EITC, the Oregon EIC, the Oregon Kids Credit and other similar credits, go to the Tax benefits for families page.Taxpayers can visit the Oregon Department of Revenue website to find free tax preparation sites by using the interactive map. For more information on the EITC, visit https://www.eitc.irs.gov/. For questions about Oregon taxes, call the Department of Revenue at 503-378-4988, or email questions.dor@dor.oregon.gov.

Calling all artists: BLM seeks Artists-in-Residence at Rogue River Ranch, Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument during Freedom 250

The Bureau of Land Management is looking for two Artists-in-Residence: one at the historic Rogue River Ranch National Historic Site and another at the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument.

The selected artists will have the unique opportunity to capture these public lands during a milestone year as the Nation marks its 250th birthday and the BLM celebrates its 80th anniversary.  The artists will receive one- to two-week residencies during the summer to create original work while immersed in some of Oregon’s most remarkable environments.

One artist and one alternate will be selected for each residency based on the following criteria: entry materials, residency proposal, professionalism, and creative vision. Applications must be submitted by Feb. 28. As part of the 2026 program, selected artists will also be part of the Freedom 250 celebration, paying tribute to the historic sites and special lands that have contributed to the Nation’s heritage.

“Artists provide a captivating lens through which we can explore our connection to public lands,” said Joel Brumm, Assistant Monument Manager. “Their work provides a unique perspective on these remarkable landscapes, highlighting our mission and role in public land management as we celebrate our 80th anniversary.”

Rogue River Ranch National Historic Site – The Rogue River Ranch residency will take place between June and August 2026 in a breathtaking setting deep in the Rogue Wild and Scenic River Corridor. The remote outpost is a two-hour drive or a 22-mile river trip from Grave Creek Boat Ramp. The selected artist will reside in the historic house.

Following their residency, the artist will share their vision in a public presentation at the Grants Pass Museum of Art on Oct. 2. Their work will be displayed at the museum for one month and then returned to the artist. The BLM is requesting digital copies of the artwork to promote the Artist-in-Residence program and public lands. The artist retains a non-exclusive use copyright.

In summer 2025, Artist Alisha Whitman created watercolors during her residency. She shared her experience with the BLM.

Artists of all backgrounds are encouraged to apply, and there is no preference given to any style or medium.

Interested artists can learn more information and find an application at the Artist-in-Residence website, by e-mailing Tony Saunders at asaunders@blm.gov, or by calling 541-471-6642.

Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument – The Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument residency will take place in June 2026. The selected artist will be based at a travel trailer at Hyatt Lake Campground while exploring the environment and creating their art. The BLM is seeking visual artists for this residency.

Since 2017, the Artist-in-Residence program has allowed numerous artists to transform the monument’s natural and cultural resources into visual art, objects, and performances.

Last year’s Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument Artist-in-Residence was Paul Atkinson, a gifted photographer who spent his time studying and photographing the monument’s unique landscapes.

During their residency, the artist will share their experience and artistic vision in a public presentation. Following the residency, artists are asked to donate an original artwork piece, which they will retain the rights to.  

Interested artists can learn more information and find an application at the Artist-in-Residence website, by e-mailing John Duwe at jduwe@blm.gov, or by calling 541-618-2320.

The BLM manages about 245 million acres of public land located primarily in 12 western states, including Alaska, on behalf of the American people. The BLM also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. Our mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of America’s public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.

Raise Funds to Plant Trees in Oregon

Registration is open for the Bob Ross-inspired Happy Little (Virtual) 5K

Inspired by American painter and PBS television personality Bob Ross’ love of the outdoors, Oregon Parks Forever is sponsoring a virtual 5K race to help plant trees in Oregon’s parks & forests.  You must register by April 1st in order to get your shirts and medal before the event.

Participants can walk, run, paddle or roll to complete their 5K anywhere outdoors anytime between April 18 and 26 (covering Earth Day and Arbor Day).   Participants are encouraged to register by April 1 to ensure that your swag arrives before the event week. Last year, we had to close registration early due to higher than anticipated participation, so register as soon as possible.  If you register after April 1, you may not receive your swag before race week. Registration will close on April 15, or earlier if more participants sign up than we have available swag.

For $36 per person, each participant will receive a keepsake Happy Little T-shirt, a commemorative bib number and a finisher’s medal. All Oregon race proceeds support tree planting and forest protection efforts in Oregon parks.  Ten trees will be planted in Oregon for each registration.  This year’s tree plantings will be placed in the Santiam Canyon.

Initially, the “Happy Little Trees” program began with a partnership between the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Bob Ross Inc., with hundreds of volunteers helping to plant “happy little trees” at locations hard-hit by invasive pests and tree diseases. The partnership quickly expanded to include the Run for the Trees / Happy Little (Virtual) 5K.

As the Happy Little 5K gained popularity, more states have joined the effort. Now in its sixth year, the Happy Little 5K has expanded its reach to include fifteen other states. Together, all sixteen states will help raise awareness and funding for stewardship efforts in each state’s parks.

“We are thrilled to honor Bob Ross and continue our efforts to plant at least One Million Trees in Oregon.” said Seth Miller, Executive Director of Oregon Parks Forever.  “To date, we have funded the planting of 850,000 trees.”

“The official Bob Ross 5K is probably our most favorite initiative,” says Joan Kowalski, president of Bob Ross Company. “It’s the perfect blend of everything Bob held dear; nature, taking care of the environment, and happy trees too of course. He would have been so pleased to see how it’s getting so popular around the world.”

Participants can register at www.orparksforever.org. — For more information, contact Seth Miller at 503/966-1053 or seth@orparksforever.org

UNDER PRESSURE: A VOLCANIC EXPLORATION, AN EXHIBITION FROM OREGON’S HIGH DESERT MUSEUM, SHEDS NEW LIGHT ON THE RUMBLING GIANTS AMONG US

(BEND, Ore.) — For millions of years, volcanoes have been the most powerful force in nature. And for many in the West, the impact of volcanoes is forever tied to the May 18, 1980, eruption of Washington’s Mount Saint Helens. The science, spectacle, and significance behind these massive peaks will soon be at the center of an immersive new exhibition, “Under Pressure: A Volcanic Exploration,” which will run from Feb. 7, 2026, through Jan. 3, 2027, at the 2021 National Medal for Museum and Library Service recipient High Desert Museum in Bend, Ore.

On the heels of the Museum’s recent “Sensing Sasquatch” exhibition – which won the Western History Association’s prestigious 2025 Autry Public History Prize and earned national praise for exploring the Indigenous perspectives of what many call Bigfoot – comes the latest groundbreaking exhibition from the High Desert Museum. Under Pressure will take visitors on an educational, insightful, and thought-provoking journey into the forces that make volcanoes among the most majestic and often misunderstood natural wonders of the world, while exploring their individual stories and temperaments.

“From cultural and historical significance to the 1980 eruption of Mount Saint Helens, the Pacific Northwest and High Desert have a particularly long, complex, and symbiotic relationship with volcanoes,” says Dana Whitelaw, Ph.D., High Desert Museum executive director. “We live in their shadows, recreate on their slopes, and admire their beauty, but it’s the volcanoes’ ability to simultaneously cause destruction and creation that evokes feelings of awe. Under Pressure will provide an immersive and deep exploration.”

Under Pressure: A Volcanic Exploration, a groundbreaking new exhibition from Oregon’s High Desert Museum.

WHEN:            Feb. 7, 2026, through Jan. 3, 2027

WHERE:          High Desert Museum (Spirit of the West Gallery)

                         59800 US-97, Bend, OR 97702 (map HERE)

COST:              Free with Museum admission or membership

   Active U.S. military and their families, as well as Tribal members, are FREE with ID

Among the highlights that visitors to Under Pressure can expect to encounter include:

  • Engage the senses through interactive displays and exhibits, including volcanic rocks and a volcanic hazard map, to learn about cutting-edge volcano research.
  • Hear stories and learn the significance of volcanoes to the people of the High Desert region.
  • Get to know 4-6 individual volcanoes through biographies that explain the similarities and differences between them.
  • Learn about present-day volcano hazards and how lava flows.
  • Understand the technologies that scientists use to detect volcanic activity, which allow us to live among volcanoes while also enjoying their many benefits.

“These geologic giants exist all around us, come in all shapes and sizes, and tell a story of our past, present, and future,” says Whitelaw. “With 350 million people living near an active volcano worldwide, the more we understand about volcanoes, the better we can exist alongside them.”

Under Pressure: A Volcanic Exploration opens to the public on Feb. 7, 2026, and runs through Jan. 3, 2027, in the High Desert Museum’s Spirit of the West Gallery. For additional information on exhibitions or to start planning your experience, visit highdesertmuseum.org.

Oregon Department of Veterans’ Affairs

No veteran should be without a place to call home, and the Oregon Department of Veterans’ Affairs is committed to ending veteran homelessness in our state.

The new ODVA Houseless Veterans Program collaborates with federal, state, county, and Tribal agencies, veteran services offices, and community homeless service providers to meet the urgent and unique needs of Oregon’s diverse veteran communities challenged with housing stability.

In addition to advocating for Oregon veterans experiencing or at risk for houselessness, the program provides direct service to veterans and their families seeking federal and state veterans’ benefits, including access to local VA health care, documentation of service, as well as other available state benefits, and local homeless services organizations and low-income assistance programs.

If you or a veteran you know is dealing with homelessness, contact the ODVA Houseless Veterans Coordinator today at houselessvets@odva.oregon.gov or visit https://ow.ly/V4EH50VnL93 to learn more.

Staying Informed During a Communications Outage: Best Practices for the Public

Disasters can damage critical infrastructure, leading to temporary outages in cell service, internet, and power. When communication systems go down, it’s vital to be prepared with alternate ways to get emergency information and stay connected. Here’s how you can prepare and respond:

  Have a Battery-Powered or Hand-Crank Emergency Weather Radio

  • Why it matters: Emergency radios can receive Emergency Alert System (EAS) broadcasts via AM/FM or NOAA Weather Radio frequencies—even when cell towers and the internet are down.
  • Note: Emergency radios do not receive Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) like cell phones do. Tip: Pre-tune your radio to your local emergency broadcast station (e.g., OPB in Oregon or NOAA frequencies).

Turn On WEA Alerts on Your Phone

  • Make sure Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) are enabled in your phone’s settings. These alerts include evacuation orders, severe weather warnings, and other urgent notifications.
  • WEA messages are sent through cell towers—if cell service is out, WEA alerts will not be delivered. This is why having backup methods like a radio is essential.

Charge Everything in Advance and Have Backup Power

  • Charge phones, power banks, laptops, and rechargeable flashlights before fire weather conditions worsen.
  • Consider solar-powered chargers or car chargers as backups.
  • If you are sheltering in place, a generator (solar or gas powered) is helpful.

Know Your Evacuation Routes in Advance

  • Save printed or downloaded evacuation maps in case you can’t access GPS or navigation apps.
  • Most mapping services (like Google Maps or Apple Maps) offer the ability to “Make maps available offline.” Download your area in advance so you can navigate even if cell towers or internet access are down.
  • When in doubt, call 511 or visit the TripCheck.com website if you have cell service.
  • Don’t wait for a notification—if you feel unsafe, evacuate early.

Print or Write Down Critical Contacts and Info

  • Phone numbers of family, neighbors, and local emergency contacts.
  • Address of evacuation shelters, veterinary services (for pets/livestock), and medical facilities.
  • Your own emergency plan, including meeting locations.
  • Have copies of vital documents in your go-bag and take video of your property (inside and out) for insurance claims later.

If Calling 9-1-1 Over Wi-Fi or Satellite, Check Your Location Settings

If you call 9-1-1 using Wi-Fi calling or a satellite-connected phone (like an iPhone or Android), your location might not be automatically visible to dispatch. Instead, it may rely on the emergency address saved in your phone’s settings.

  • Update this emergency address when you travel or relocate—especially in evacuation zones or rural areas.
  • Most importantly, always tell the dispatcher exactly where you are—include your address, landmarks, road names, or mile markers to help first responders reach you quickly.

Sign Up for Alerts Before There’s an Outage

  • Register for OR-Alert and your county’s local alert system.
  • Follow your local emergency management officials’ and bookmark resources like: wildfire.oregon.gov.

 Prepare for Alert Delays or Gaps

  • Know the three levels of evacuation:
    • Level 1 – Be Ready
    • Level 2 – Be Set
    • Level 3 – GO NOW
  • If you hear a siren, see a neighbor evacuating, or witness fire behavior increasing—take action even if you haven’t received an alert.

 Be Your Own Info Network

  • Check on neighbors, especially seniors or those with disabilities.
  • Post printed signs with updates for those passing by.

In rural areas, community bulletin boards or fire stations may serve as local information points.

Support and Restoration in Progress
To help maintain emergency communications during this incident, OEM deployed eight Starlink terminals under the guidance of ESF 2 and the Statewide Interoperability Coordinator (SWIC). A Communications Technician (Jeff Perkins) was also deployed to assess connectivity needs on the ground. These Starlink terminals have been providing service to the Lake County Emergency Operations Center (EOC), Oregon State Police (OSP), Warner Creek Correctional Facility, and will soon support the town of Lakeview, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), and the Lakeview Ranger Station. OEM’s Regional Coordinator (Stacey) is also on-site supporting the Lake County EOC. Coordination has been strong across local, state, and private sector partners. *** Update: As of 7/10/25 at 1:47 PM, fiber service has been restored.

Reconnect When Service Returns

  • Once communications are restored, check official websites:
    • Oregon.gov/oem
    • Your county emergency management page
    • TripCheck.com for road conditions
  • Share verified info—not rumors—on social media or community pages.

 Prepare for Delays in Restoration

  • Communication may come back in phases. Damage to fiber lines or cell towers can take time to repair.
  • Continue using backup methods and stay alert for updates via radio or in-person notices.

 Final Tip:

In an emergency, CALL 9-1-1 to report life-threatening danger, not for general information. Use local non-emergency numbers or go to physical information points if needed. You can find more tips for preparing in OEM’s Be2Weeks Ready toolkit.

Oregon’s Missing Persons

Many times you’ll see postings without case numbers or police contact. There is rarely a nefarious reason why (the nefarious ones are pretty obvious). Usually the loved one tried to call to report their missing person and they are either refused or told to wait a day or two by people who are unaware of SB 351 and the laws that they are bound to when answering the phone. Many people don’t bother calling LE if their loved one is homeless or in transition because they believe LE won’t care. The biggest myth is the 24 hour rule.

In Oregon we don’t have those rules and an officer or person answering the phone is not allowed to decide. The law decides. We have Senate Bill 351 and it states that the police CANNOT refuse a request for any reason and they must begin working on it within 12 hours. The person making the report does not have to be related to missing person either.

Here is SB 351 written by families of the missing here in Oregon in conjunction with Oregon law enforcement officers. This should be common knowledge, please make it this way. https://olis.oregonlegislature.gov/…/SB351/Introduced

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