Willamette Valley News, Wednesday 2/18 – North Eugene High School Students Walk Out of Class to Protest ICE, 88th Annual Oregon Logging Conference Starts Thursday & 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 17, 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 Willamette Valley is waking up to a cold, damp February morning in Eugene. Wet pavement glistens under low gray clouds, and light rain mixes with snow in heavier bursts.

At Mahlon Sweet Field, temperatures sit near 36 degrees with overcast skies. Periods of rain and snow continue through the day, especially before mid-afternoon. Snow levels hover near 700 feet, rising toward 1400 feet later. Little accumulation is expected in town, but brief slushy coatings are possible on higher hills.

Drivers along I-5 and Beltline should stay alert. Visibility can drop in heavier showers. Bridges and overpasses cool faster than main roads. This is prime time for slick spots, especially if showers briefly taper and temperatures dip again.

Tonight, rain and snow showers redevelop after midnight. Lows fall near 29 degrees. Even light moisture could refreeze toward daybreak. Watch for patchy icy conditions early Wednesday.

Wednesday brings widespread rain and snow showers before late morning. Highs reach the low 40s. Snow levels rise during the afternoon, limiting valley impacts. Showers continue Wednesday night with lows near 32.

Thursday stays unsettled with rain and snow showers likely. Highs hover near 42. Snow levels fluctuate between 700 and 1200 feet. By Friday, scattered rain and snow showers linger with highs in the mid-40s.

Keep coats handy and allow extra commute time through midweek. Conditions may change quickly under heavier cells.

The weekend trends milder. Saturday climbs near 50 with rain likely. Sunday reaches the low 50s with steady rain. Looking ahead to the 6–10 day outlook, above-normal temperatures are favored across much of the West. A gradual warming trend into next week could bring early hints of Spring Warmth to western Oregon.

Oregon Health Authority – Protecting Health During Cold DaysWinter’s chill: Protecting your health when temperatures drop

February can be one of the coldest and stormiest months in Oregon. Because freezing temperatures, snow and ice, and winter storms and power outages increase the risk of injuries and health problems, Oregon Health Authority (OHA) encourages everyone to stay safe with a few simple tips.

Slipping on ice is one of the most common winter injuries. It can cause sprains, broken bones or head injuries. Very cold weather can also cause frostbite and hypothermia. These risks are higher for older adults, young children, people with ongoing health conditions and anyone without reliable heat.

  • Prevent slips and falls: Wear shoes with good grip, walk carefully on icy surfaces and clear snow and ice from walkways.
  • Protect against extreme cold: Wear layers, cover exposed skin and limit time outdoors during freezing temperatures. Frostbite can happen quickly in extreme cold.
  • Watch for signs of hypothermia: Symptoms include strong shivering, confusion, slurred speech and extreme tiredness. Get medical help right away if you notice these signs.

More than 300 North Eugene High School students walked out of class to protest ICE on Tuesday

North Eugene High School became the latest local school to organize an anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement walkout, with at least 300 students marching down Silver Lane then River Road on Tuesday.

88th Annual Oregon Logging Conference2/19 to 2/21

Oregon Logging Conference – The Lane Events Center and Fairgrounds is buzzing with activity as set up continues for the 88th Annual Oregon Logging Conference. The OLC is taking place Feb 19 – 21, 2026.

Small fire breaks out overnight Monday at a 7-Eleven store in north Eugene on River Road

Eugene Springfield Fire Battalion Chief Wayne Morris said ESF originally received a call for smoke inside a structure. When crews arrived, the reporting party told them there was smoke in the back of the building. Fire crews checked the back of the store and after opening a door, encountered black smoke coming from a small fire in a back room. Crews extinguished the fire quickly, and no injuries were reported. The fire remains under investigation, and the cause is unknown.

Springfield settles $25,000 lawsuit with former employee

The city of Springfield settled a lawsuit for $25,000 after a former Springfield Police Department recruit claimed she was targeted and fired after she had sexual encounters with higher-ranking officers and that the department and Springfield Police Association.

The City of Springfield has a new Community Resources webpage designed to help residents find reliable information, local services, and community support in one accessible place.

The webpage brings together trusted resources, including links to legal assistance, know-your-rights information, local service providers, and community organizations that offer support in multiple languages. The page is available at https://springfield-or.gov/deimain/community-resources/.

The City recognizes that recent federal immigration activity in the region has raised questions and concern for some community members. While immigration enforcement is a federal responsibility, the City believes it is important that residents know where to turn for accurate information and local support.

Earlier this year, Team Springfield, a partnership between the City of Springfield, Springfield Public SchoolsSpringfield Utility Board, and Willamalane Park and Recreation District, issued a shared statement affirming a commitment to being a safe and welcoming community. The new Community Resources webpage builds on that commitment by offering practical tools and connections.

The City remains focused on what it can do locally: providing access to information, connecting residents to community-based organizations, and ensuring city services remain welcoming and available to everyone.

The webpage will be updated as new resources become available, and the City will continue working with community partners to share information and respond to questions as they arise.

Springfield is stronger when people feel informed, supported, and connected. This effort is one step in continuing that work.


About the City of Springfield
The City of Springfield serves its community members with a focus on safety, accountability, and high-quality public services. Grounded in its rich history and driven by innovation and strong partnerships, the City works to enhance quality of life and build a connected, resilient Springfield for all who call it home.

Grand Opening of the The Lavender Network

Thank you to everyone who came out! Eugene Pride’s Board Secretary, Yeehaw, donated the funds which made the building purchase possible. You can hear their speech and learn more about the history leading up to this amazing moment for our community here: https://youtu.be/75i2t64DaNo?si=lb5ZRE83J_54p5uf. Thank you for this incredible donation to our community and for volunteering on our board, Yeehaw!

Thank you to the team at HIV Alliance for agreeing to purchase this building and manage it for the community. This would not be possible without your support and stewardship! We are also grateful for all of our other partners in this endeavor – Queer Eugene, Authentic Movement Project, and TransPonder – as well as our neighbors in the building – Canda Lodge, DPT, Open Adoption & Family Services, and Transition Health. Finally, thank you to the Eugene Area Chamber of Commerce for support with the ribbon cutting.

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/

PeaceHealth’s latest round of layoffs impact skilled caregivers including hospice nurses – Systemwide cuts include a team at PeaceHealth Cottage Grove Community Medical Center

PeaceHealth has begun another round of layoffs, impacting skilled caregivers across its hospital system. The staffing reduction is the third such move in the past nine months.

The Oregon Nurses Association strongly condemned the decision. ONA spokesperson Kevin Mealy said it could affect more than 150 positions system-wide -including as many as four hospice nurses in Lane County.

“These are skilled individuals who give dying patients and their families dignity and freedom during the final stages of life,” Mealy said. “It’s really a sacred calling for those nurses who provide this essential care. And that’s what we’re losing with these layoffs.”

KLCC has learned a team of licensed clinical social workers at PeaceHealth Cottage Grove Community Medical Center have also received layoff notices Thursday.

In a statement provided by PeaceHealth, the hospital system explained its decision.

“After extensive analysis and careful consideration, PeaceHealth has made the difficult decision to reduce roles systemwide, affecting less than 1% of our workforce.”

The statement includes a line expressing gratitude to every caregiver who has contributed to PeaceHealth’s mission.

The PeaceHealth statement continues, “this necessary realignment reflects the changing needs of our growing communities, ongoing financial pressures to reduce costs and our commitment to advancing the health and well-being of those we serve. By reimagining how we deliver care, we strengthen our ability to reinvest in our communities and fulfill our promise to bring hope, healing and peace.”

Mealy said PeaceHealth executives put profits ahead of patients’ needs. “This is evidenced by PeaceHeath’s decision to close Eugene’s only hospital in 2023, they’ve conducted repeated mass layoffs over the last year and they are currently trying to outsource our community’s emergency care,” he said.

“Fewer frontline caregivers does not mean there will be fewer patients,” Mealy said. “These cuts mean longer waits and lower quality healthcare for everyone.”


This article was originally published by KLCC. It has been republished here with permission. (SOURCE)

PeaceHealth Replacing Local Emergency Room Doctors with Out-Of-State GroupThey are also cutting 150 jobs, including ‘frontline caregivers,’ some in Lane County

PeaceHealth Oregon has announced it will not renew a long-standing contract with local Eugene Emergency Physicians to staff emergency departments in Springfield, Cottage Grove and Florence. The hospital system has opted for an Atlanta-based company instead.

The local, physician-owned group, Eugene Emergency Physicians, has said, “no to Apollo MD.”

EEP spokesperson Scott Williams told KLCC 41 doctors and Physicians Assistants have banded together to refuse to work for the Atlanta-based management company. PeaceHealth recently announced it had chosen Apollo MD to take over staffing of its hospital emergency departments. The company has no experience in Oregon.

Williams said all the partners of EEP have signed a mutual agreement. The agreement is for at least 90 days after June 30, the date when the contract between PeaceHealth and Eugene Emergency Physicians ends.

Last November, PeaceHealth put out a request for proposals for a new emergency medicine service provider, ending a 35-year partnership with EEP.

Dr. Jennifer Lawson FACEBOOK REEL: https://www.facebook.com/reel/910496098022117 Let them and their execs know this isn’t ok. Oregonians deserve so much better than some out of state corporate staffing company that has some ethical issues IMO.

Eugene City Council Declares Humanitarian Crisis Due to Ongoing ICE Activity

Councilors voted unanimously to pass a resolution declaring a humanitarian crisis in Eugene due to ongoing federal activity.

The Eugene City Council passed a resolution during a public meeting February 9 declaring a humanitarian crisis in Eugene due to “federal immigration actions.”

The four-page resolution is primarily a statement of values, saying:

  • “Immigration enforcement actions constitute a humanitarian crisis.”
  • Eugene is committed to the “safety of all people, regardless of national origin or immigration status.”
  • Immigrants in Eugene “contribute significantly to the social, cultural, and economic vitality of the community” and actions by U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement “have resulted in widespread fear, trauma, family separation, loss of income, housing instability, and disruption of residents in Eugene.”
  • Existing state and local law prevents Eugene from using city resources for immigration enforcement.

“This resolution declares that the impacts of federal immigration enforcement constitute a humanitarian crisis for all residents of the city of Eugene,” Councilor Lyndsie Leech, who represents Ward 7 and introduced and drafted the resolution, said during the meeting. “It affirms our core values to support human dignity, community belonging and access to essential services.”

Multiple cities in Oregon have passed similar resolutions, including Woodburn and Hillsboro, which each declared a “state of emergency” due to the impacts of federal immigration regulation.

“The City Council affirms its commitment to human rights, due process, family unity and human dignity, and condemns actions that result in detention or deportation without meaningful access to legal protections,” the resolution reads.

Eugene has seen an increase in federal activity since January, with protests against that activity rising. The Eugene Police Department declared one protest at the old federal building on Jan. 30 an “active riot.”

The measure is symbolic opposition to ICE and does not include additional funding or services.

Last week, Knudson held a press conference Feb. 1, joined by Gov. Tina Kotek, U.S. Rep. Val Hoyle, Sen. James Manning, Sen. Floyd Prozanski and Rep. John Lively, to address increased federal activity in Oregon cities, specifically Eugene.

Knudson also cosigned a letter from Kotek with 30 other Oregon city mayors addressed to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Tom Homan, the executive associate director of enforcement and removal operations.

The letter demanded “an immediate halt to federal immigration enforcement” until incidents of violence and force used by federal officers are thoroughly investigated in Portland and Minneapolis. Councilors voted unanimously to pass the resolution.

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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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.

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

May be an image of text that says 'HAVE YOU SEEN FAUNA FREY? CASE #20001267 ANONYMOUS TIP LINE: (541) 359-5638 MISSING SINCE 6/29/20 #FINDFAUNAFREY'

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. 

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.

May be an image of text that says '. શমেমਦ Avel Gordly, the first Black woman elected to the Oregon Senate, dies at 79'

During a trailblazing public service career, Avel Gordly worked to improve police accountability, mental health treatment and the lives of disadvantaged Oregonians.

She died Monday of natural causes.Gordly said she grew up learning from the examples of the strong women around her, including her mom and grandmothers who were active in social clubs and always working to elevate others. Gordly internalized their lessons, calling it “lifting as we climb.”

Gas Prices Rising

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.

U.S. Attorney’s Office Collects $20,238,028.08 in Civil and Criminal Actions in Fiscal Year 2025

U.S. Attorney Scott E. Bradford announced today that the District of Oregon collected more than $20.2 million in criminal and civil actions in Fiscal Year 2025. Of this amount, nearly $15 million was collected in criminal actions and over $5.2 million was collected in civil actions. Forfeited assets deposited into the Department of Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund are used to restore funds to crime victims and for a variety of law enforcement purposes.

“The District of Oregon’s Asset Recovery and Money Laundering Unit provides critical support to victims of crime by holding those who profit from criminal conduct accountable and pursuing civil recoveries,” said U.S. Attorney Bradford. “We take seriously our obligation to make victims as financially whole as possible. Our annual collections reflect the dedication, persistence, and resolve of our team in the pursuit of justice.”

For example, to date, the government has recovered over $4.5 million in restitution from Sergey and Galina Lebedenko, who used their ill-gotten gains to purchase fourteen homes and properties, seven vehicles, an ownership interest in a private jet, and countless luxury items. After pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and wire fraud, the Lebedenkos were ordered to pay over $33 million in restitution. The government sought to remit and restore forfeited assets on behalf of the victim, including real properties and nineteen financial accounts.

In another example, the government secured the full restitution payment totaling $1.346 million from Michael James Defrees, who was convicted of wire fraud, bank fraud, and money laundering. Defrees agreed to satisfy this obligation prior to sentencing, but failed to do so. The United States secured payment through seizing three vehicles, multiple winter sports equipment, a racing boat, and a trailer, and helped facilitate the sale of two parcels of real property to pay his restitution judgment in full and satisfy his forfeiture money judgment.

The U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, along with the department’s litigating divisions, are responsible for enforcing and collecting civil and criminal debts owed to the U.S. and criminal debts owed to federal crime victims. The law requires defendants to pay restitution to victims of certain federal crimes who have suffered a physical injury or financial loss. While restitution is paid to the victim, criminal fines and felony assessments are paid to the department’s Crime Victims Fund, which distributes the funds collected to federal and state victim compensation and victim assistance programs.

Oregon Housing and Community Services and Tribal Nations launch first-of-its-kind housing initiative

The state announces the launch of the Tribal Housing Grant Fund (THGF), which is a first-of-its-kind program to provide state funds to help address the housing needs of the Nine Federally Recognized Tribes of Oregon. 

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“The Tribal Housing Grant Fund creates a new framework for how the state works with the Nine Federally Recognized Tribes of Oregon,” said Gov. Tina Kotek. “It represents a meaningful step forward in honoring our government-to-government relationship and ensuring Tribes have the resources and flexibility they need to address their critical housing needs.”

Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS) and representatives from Tribal Nations, including housing directors, health and human services directors, and council members, worked for more than a year to develop the program.

“The Tribal Housing Grant Fund is a landmark program that elevates Tribal self-determination in a state-funded program,” said Sami Jo Difuntorum, executive director of Siletz Tribal Housing Department and Housing Stability Council member. “The THGF will provide Oregon’s Nine Federally Recognized Tribes with critical housing resources, providing flexibility in program design.”

“The values, culture, and housing needs of communities are best understood locally,” said OHCS Executive Director Andrea Bell. “In consultation with Oregon’s Nine Federally Recognized Tribes, the Tribal Housing Grant Fund emphasizes self-determination and flexibility in how Tribes use state resources to address local needs. Honoring Tribal sovereignty, in its richest form, calls on us to operationalize this shared value.”

In the 2025 Legislative Session, lawmakers allocated $10 million to OHCS to establish the program. Program funds can be used for affordable rental housing and homeownership initiatives, as well as to maintain By and For Initiative-Native American Tribes of Oregon (BAFI-NATO) investments. 

Tribal Nations will receive funds based on a formula that was previously used by the BAFI-NATO program, where each grantee receives a base amount along with Tribal enrollment numbers.

To obtain the funds, grantees must submit a housing plan every biennium outlining how they will use the money.

Eligible THGF program activities include:

  • Homelessness response and prevention ​
  • Affordable rental housing
  • Homeownership support such as down payment and mortgage assistance
  • Land acquisition, infrastructure, development, and rehabilitation ​
  • Financial assistance and support services for households that qualify
  • Capacity building​

Visit the THGF webpage for more program details.  

About Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS)

OHCS is Oregon’s housing finance agency. The state agency provides financial and program support to create and preserve opportunities for quality, affordable housing for Oregonians of low and moderate income. OHCS administers programs that provide housing stabilization. OHCS delivers these programs primarily through grants, contracts, and loan agreements with local partners and community-based providers. For more information, please visit: oregon.gov/ohcs.

The five-week Oregon legislative session started in February with more than 260 bills aimed at tackling issues from roads funding to data privacy to school funding to federal immigration and tax policies.

Now, halfway through the session and past the Feb. 16 deadline for bills to get voted out of subject-matter committees and onto the House and Senate floors for full votes, fewer bills remain. The dust has begun to settle around some proposals that died early without advancing, including several priority bills for Republicans in the minority in both the House and Senate.

Some of the session’s most controversial proposals that require raising money or making changes to existing law — such as attempts to tweak the state’s rollout of campaign finance contribution limits — are immune to general deadlines while they await hearings and votes in exempt rules, revenue or joint committees. Lawmakers have until the March 8 end of session to decide what to do with those measures.

Among the most ambitious proposals to die an early death was Senate Bill 1555, an attempt to overhaul the methodology used to figure out how much money the state sends to Oregon’s schools every two years. Both Republicans and Democrats on a joint interim committee and the Senate Education Committee had qualms about the process being rushed during the short session, while advocates argued it ultimately accepts a broken status quo that leaves some high needs schools underfunded. It died Friday in the Senate Education Committee.

“The problem isn’t going away and we need everyone back at the table during the legislative interim, working together until we find common ground and clear a path to get this right in 2027,” said Louis Wheatley, a spokesperson for Foundations for a Better Oregon, a nonprofit education advocacy group that had backed the bill.

Dead bills – Several Republican priority bills did not make it out of the committees where they were first introduced.

Among them was a bill proposed by Rep. Shelly Boshart Davis, R-Albany, to roll back greenhouse gas emission reduction targets under the Climate Protection Program, Oregon’s bedrock climate change law. Another, proposed by Rep. Alek Skarlatos, R-Canyonville, would have repealed a 2025 law that expanded unemployment insurance benefits to striking workers.

Two bills proposed by state Sen. Christine Drazan, R-Canby, died early, including one bipartisan bill to prohibit public health and harm reduction groups from handing out free hypodermic needles and syringes to drug users within 2,000 feet of schools or child care centers. The other bill would have allowed teachers to remove disruptive students from their classrooms, and required students be held back who are unable to demonstrate grade-level proficiency in core subjects in third grade. Both would have come up against legal challenges as they have in other states, critics pointed out.

On the Senate Floor on Monday, Drazan accused her colleagues of “posturing” and “virtue signaling,” about kids’ safety and learning rather than passing the two bills.

Another bipartisan proposal to exempt Woodburn from some of the state’s urban growth boundary limitations so more housing could be built, ideally for the area’s farmworker population, also died. Powerful farming groups, including the Oregon Farm Bureau, opposed the bill, stating that a process for requesting urban growth boundary expansions is already established in existing state law, and that Woodburn should follow that process.

A few ambitious bills brought by Democrats died early, including a revived proposal from the 2025 session that would have required Google and large tech companies to pay for the local news content those companies take at no cost, aggregate and profit from. The bill died after one public hearing due to a lack of support from moderate Democrats.

Another proposal to require contractors and grant recipients accepting money from state agencies to attest they won’t transport individuals detained on behalf of federal immigration agents also died after a single public hearing. Most of the Democrats’ proposals to strengthen the state’s protections for immigrants and to push back on aggressive federal immigration enforcements continue to move closer to final votes.

Hotly debated, deadline exempt – Legislative leaders sent several hotly debated bills to committees unbound by deadlines. Among them are a bill to let teens vote in primaries, another to let local governments spend collected hotel taxes on things not related to tourism and to open the state’s primary elections instead of allowing only those registered with a party to vote for party candidates.

Two bills that would redirect the portions of the kicker tax refund to the state’s general fund or to public schools are still alive. The latter will have its first public hearing on Thursday in the Senate Finance and Revenue Committee.

A Republican bill that would require the state to replicate recent federal tax code changes that allow individuals to write off a portion of private school tuition from their federal income taxes is still alive and awaits vetting in the education subcommittee of the Joint Ways and Means Committee.

A bill sponsored by Democrats that would require more transparency from lobbyists about what bills they’re lobbying for or against on behalf of clients is on life support in the Senate Rules Committee, according to James Browning, executive director of the Pennsylvania-based nonprofit climate group F Minus who helped draft the proposal. The bill was sent straight to the Rules Committee the first day of the session and it hasn’t had any public hearing scheduled.

Browning suspects the bill will have an uphill fight against the Capitol Club, a trade group for lobbyists with its own office in the State Capitol in Salem, which registered 13 of its own members as lobbyists for the club for the first time in more than a decade at the beginning of the session. Though there’s been no public testimony against the bill, Browning said he was surprised the club beefed up its representation after meeting with F Minus’s Oregon Director Aidan Bassett.

“I’ve worked on similar bills in other states going back 20 years and I can’t recall a state lobbyist association fighting a transparency bill in such an organized and potentially overwhelming way,” Browning said in an email.

Dale Penn, president of the Capitol Club, said in an email that they registered those members to lobby on behalf of the organization in an effort to “ensure full transparency.”

“Because proposed legislation this session could directly affect Capitol Club and its members, we anticipate that legislators may seek input from our leadership,” he said. “Registering simply ensures that any such conversations occur in a clear and compliant manner under Oregon law.” (SOURCE)

The Coos County Sheriff’s Office reports that no injuries happened in a traffic crash involving a school bus and a log truck occurred in Green Acres on Tuesday morning

CCSO officials said that a sheriff’s deputy responded at 7:36 a.m. on Feb. 17 to the scene where a Coos Bay school district bus, carrying children, was hit by a log truck. The crash happened on Green Acres Lane near Upper Loop.

The school bus had stopped to clear the railroad tracks when a log truck, driving eastbound, slid into the bus’s lane. The front right corners of both vehicles collided. Damage to both vehicles was minimal  with no injuries reported, authorities said.

The trucking company retrieved their log truck from a ditch, while the Coos Bay School District transferred the children to another bus. Drivers are reminded to be cautious around school buses, which frequently stop at railway crossings to ensure passenger safety.

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 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.

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.

A semi truck driver, who is wanted on a nationwide warrant for a crash in 2024 that resulted in the death of a La Pine woman and caused another woman to lose her unborn child, was apprehended in Florida on Friday, according to the Oregon State Police.

Desiree Danielle Johnson, aged 35, was taken into custody by the Florida Caribbean Regional Fugitive Task Force in Pinellas Park, Florida, and is currently awaiting extradition to Oregon. The OSP indicated that it sought the assistance of the U.S. Marshals Service to locate Johnson after she failed to appear in court.

Johnson faces charges of criminally negligent homicide, second-degree assault, and reckless driving in connection with the 2024 crash that claimed the life of Elise Adair Farrens, aged 37, from La Pine. Court documents reveal that she has pleaded not guilty.

The incident occurred on February 29, 2024, on Highway 97, approximately three miles north of Gilchrist. The OSP reported that the preliminary investigation determined that Johnson was operating a Peterbilt semi-truck with a trailer when it jackknifed. The Peterbilt spun and entered the path of a northbound Honda Pilot driven by Farrens, resulting in a collision with the trailer.

Farrens was pronounced dead at the scene. The OSP stated that 23-year-old Daviana Marie Trussell of La Pine, who was a passenger in the Honda, sustained critical injuries and lost the child she was carrying.

In a letter submitted to the court, Trussell expressed that Farrens was her mother and that she was six months pregnant at the time of the incident. Johnson sustained minor injuries. Court records indicate that Johnson did not appear for a hearing regarding the case in February 2025, leading to the issuance of a warrant. This warrant was subsequently upgraded to a nationwide warrant last August.

Day Use Visits dip slightly in 2025, but Oregon State Parks remain a beloved destination

Oregon State Parks welcomed an estimated 51.46 million day-use visits* in 2025, a slight decrease from the record-breaking 53.85 million visits recorded in 2024, but visitation remains historically strong and widespread across the state.

While parks along the coast and in the Willamette Valley saw modest declines, Central and Eastern Oregon parks recorded a small increase, reflecting continued demand for outdoor recreation in every region.

The Oregon coast remains the system’s most popular destination, with 362 miles of publicly managed beaches. Day-use visits there dropped from 32.5 million in 2024 to 30.65 million in 2025. Willamette Valley parks also saw a decline, from 11.44 million to 10.71 million. In contrast, the Central and Eastern Oregon park visitation climbed to 10.09 million visits up from 9.89 million the year before.

Overnight stays followed a similar trend. Visitors logged 2.6 million camper nights* in 2025, down from 2.83 million in 2024. Temporary campground closures at popular parks like Collier Memorial, Silver Falls, Fort Stevens, and Nehalem Bay contributed to the decrease as critical maintenance and infrastructure work moved forward.

At the same time, the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department (OPRD) continues to face high and rising costs to operate, maintain and protect park lands, facilities and visitor services. Aging infrastructure, increasing maintenance needs, and higher operating expenses have put sustained pressure on the system. While the agency has updated fees to better reflect current costs, those fees do not fully cover the cost of running and caring for Oregon’s state parks.

OPRD is also navigating a projected budget shortfall, which means every visit, every pass, and every act of stewardship matters. Unlike many public services, OPRD does not receive general fund tax dollars. The system relies on user fees, a portion of the Oregon State Lottery revenue, and a share of recreational vehicle (R.V.) registration fees to keep parks open, safe and welcoming.

“Even with small year to year changes in visitation, the love people have for Oregon State Parks is clear,” said Interim Director Stefanie Coons. “We want to do everything we can to continue to provide high quality experiences and create treasured memories for our visitors. Every visit and every supporter truly make a difference in helping us care for these special places.”

Looking ahead in 2026, Fort Stevens State Park is scheduled to complete its campground utility this spring. Two more projects, safety upgrades at Cape Lookout and visitor center completion at Silver Falls, will break ground in 2026.

OPRD is also recruiting for its 2026 seasonal workforce, with park ranger and park ranger assistant positions open statewide. Park rangers and support staff play a vital role in keeping parks clean, safe, and enjoyable while offering educational and recreational opportunities for millions of visitors. Apply today on the Oregon State Parks website! (https://bit.ly/oregonparkjobs)

*Day use estimates are based on car counters and multipliers; overnight camping estimates are based on occupied sites and multipliers. Car counters occasionally require maintenance or replacement, which may affect individual park totals. The overall figures represent OPRD’s best estimates for tracking long-term trends.

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.

Legislation in the Oregon Legislature aims to eliminate certain tax breaks due to modifications resulting from the Big Beautiful Bill enacted by Congress.

The tax package introduced during the Trump administration created a budget deficit of 900 million dollars in the
budget approved by the Legislature the previous year. Democrats are advocating for the termination of a deduction for interest on personal vehicle loans, a tax exemption on profits from specific small-business stock sales, and the requirement for businesses to amortize tax write-offs for equipment acquisitions over multiple years.

Oregon’s labor market contracted by 3,300 jobs in the previous year.

According to the Oregon Employment Department, the manufacturing sector, particularly the semiconductor industry, experienced the largest job losses. Conversely, the health care and social assistance sectors added more than 13,000 jobs.

The health care sector is anticipated to keep expanding as the population continues to age. By 2026, it is expected that job losses will cease, and the forecastindicates a modest increase in employment.

The Secretary of State of Oregon has implemented new regulations for the Motor Voter Program following an audit that revealed more than 1,200 individuals were erroneously registered to vote. Out of these, nine individuals cast their votes.

The Oregon Secretary of State’s Office adopted updated, final administrative rules for the Oregon Motor Voter (OMV) program, the state’s automatic voter registration system administered through the Oregon Department of Transportation’s Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Division (DMV).

“Our goal with these rules is to deliver an accurate, secure voter registration system that is worthy of Oregonians’ trust, and I’m proud of the work that’s been done to get us here,” said Secretary of State Tobias Read. “I want to thank our Rules Advisory Committee and all the members of the public who took the time to provide feedback throughout this process. We built a stronger voter registration system together.”

“When the data error was discovered, I directed the DMV to take immediate, urgent action to ensure the integrity of the Oregon Motor Voter program,” Governor Tina Kotek said. “These new rules, paired with the reforms adopted by DMV, will ensure Oregonians can rely on a secure voter registration system.”

Most of the rules will go into effect on January 1, 2027, with the exception of those related to the Electronic DMV Voter Registration process, which are effective immediately.

Last year, the Secretary of State’s Office convened a Rules Advisory Committee (RAC) to review and make revisions to the OMV program’s administrative rules following recommendations from an independent audit that sought to identify any persistent risks in the system. Draft rules were released for public comment, and all feedback was carefully reviewed. Amendments were made to reflect the input provided, and the final rules are now ready to be implemented.

These updated administrative rules, the independent audit, and many other steps taken by both the Secretary of State’s Office and DMV are part of the state’s comprehensive response to errors in the OMV system identified in 2024. https://apps.oregon.gov/oregon-newsroom/OR/SOS/Posts/Post/sos-adopts-final-administrative-rules-for-OMV

The Oregon Commission on Historic Cemeteries is offering grants for qualified historic cemeteries. The annual grants fund projects that preserve historic cemeteries.

Projects funded in the past include marker repair workshops, fencing, signs, interpretive panels and brochures, security lighting, access improvements, records management, and more.

Awards typically range between $1,000 and $8,000, but have been higher. Anyone may apply for a grant. Projects must be related to historic cemeteries listed with the Oregon Commission on Historic Cemeteries. Recent projects include marker repair and workshops in several cemeteries, installations of signs and informational kiosks, a preservation plan, and a fence replacement. 

“Our goal is to preserve Oregon’s historic cemeteries and offer support throughout the application process,” said historic cemeteries program coordinator Kuri Gill. 

The online grant application is simple to use and includes plenty of support.  A free, online workshop specific to this grant and how to use the online grant application system will be offered February 24, 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m. Registration is required. Recorded trainings and tips are also online.

State law established the seven-member historic cemeteries commission to maintain a listing of all historic cemeteries and gravesites in Oregon; promote public education on the significance of historic cemeteries; and help obtain financial and technical assistance for restoring, improving and maintaining their appearances.

These grants support the goals of the Oregon Historic Preservation Plan and the Oregon Heritage Plan. To learn more about the grants or workshops visit www.oregonheritage.org. For additional information, translation, and accessibility needs contact Kuri Gill at Kuri.Gill@oprd.oregon.gov or 503-986-0685.

Oregon, IRS begin processing e-filed returns; First state refunds expected February 17

Salem, OR—As Oregon and the IRS begin processing electronically-filed tax year 2025 returns today, the Department of Revenue expects the first Oregon taxpayers to receive their refunds—including their share of the state’s $1.41 billion kicker—as soon as February 17.

The department announced earlier this month that taxpayers who choose to file paper returns face a significantly longer wait. For paper filed returns, refunds will not start being issued until early April.

To help taxpayers avoid missteps that could further delay their refund, the department is opening 2026 tax season with a series of best practices suggestions.

File a return to claim your kicker

The kicker is a refundable credit that will either increase a taxpayer’s Oregon state income tax refund or decrease the amount of state taxes they owe. It is not sent to taxpayers separately as a check.

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.

Personal income taxpayers can determine the amount of their kicker using the “What’s My Kicker? calculator available on Revenue Online. To use the calculator, taxpayers will need to enter their name, Social Security Number, and filing status for 2024 and 2025.

File electronically, request direct deposit

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 forms and information to the Oregon Department of Revenue. As a result, the state’s processing of paper-filed Oregon personal income tax returns can’t begin until the end of March.

 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.

Gather all tax records before filing

In a kicker year, taxpayers can be in a hurry to file their return so they can get their refund as soon as possible. The department warns taxpayers not to get in too much of a hurry. They should make sure they have all necessary records—including Form W-2s from their employers and Form 1099s reporting other income—needed to file a complete and accurate tax return to avoid errors.

Getting in a hurry can cause taxpayers to file before they have all the information necessary to report all of their income. If income reported on a return doesn’t match the income reported by employers, the return, and any corresponding refund, will be delayed.

Revenue Online

Revenue Online is the state’s internet tax portal and is the best way to communicate with the department.

Taxpayers with a Revenue Online account should make sure their information is current before they file. They should check their username, password, and address; and verify any estimated tax payments they’ve made.

Those who don’t have a Revenue Online account can create one. They can simply go to Revenue Online, click “Sign Up” in the box at the top right and follow the prompts.

Download Form 1099-G

The department reminds taxpayers that it no longer mails Form 1099-G to taxpayers. The form reports the amount of refunds, credits, or other offsets of personal income, statewide transit individual tax, TriMet transit self-employment tax, or Lane transit self-employment tax paid during the previous year.

Only those who itemized deductions on their tax year 2024 federal income tax return will need a Form 1099-G to file their tax year 2025 return. Those taxpayers can view and download their Form 1099-G through Revenue Online.

Taxpayers who received unemployment insurance or Paid Leave Oregon benefits in 2025 will receive a separate 1099-G by January 31 from the Oregon Employment Department.

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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