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Oregon State professor lands grant to clean up wood burning stoves
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 20, 2021
In the leadup to winter, researchers at Oregon State University are teaming up with the Nez Perce tribe and local manufacturers to develop a cleaner way to burn wood in stoves. They have received $2.5 million from the U.S. Department of Energy to research and develop a cheap device that can be put into a […]
Plan for one of Oregon’s largest chicken farms draws criticism; hearing set
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 20, 2021
Eric Simon got into chicken farming 20 years ago after a career as an electronics technician because, he said, he was poor. With his wife and two young kids, he moved 30 miles from Corvallis to rural Brownsville and bought a house on 40 acres on the edge of town. He built barns and then […]
Conservation work in Oregon forests gets federal boost
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 18, 2021
Two state agencies have been awarded a $750,000 federal grant to continue work on a state plan for protecting endangered species and species that could become endangered in the next 70 years in Oregon’s northwest forests. The Oregon Department of Forestry and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife share the grant, which will be […]
Dire warnings about the vaccine mandate unlikely to play out in Oregon
By: Lynne Terry, Julia Shumway and Alex Baumhardt - October 18, 2021
Rural officials have warned for more than a month that the vaccine mandate would put some Oregonians at risk as employees resigned or were fired. That mandate took hold Monday, covering tens of thousands of state employees, health care workers and school staff. Not long after Gov. Kate Brown imposed that mandate in August, Baker […]
Shortage of bus drivers the latest staffing challenge for schools
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 15, 2021
A shortage of bus drivers in many parts of the state have shown just how valuable the ride to and from school is. Districts and bus companies have been forced to combine or cancel routes, boost hourly pay and offer four-figure bonuses to attract drivers. In Eugene this week, parents were notified that rides on […]
USDA investment in Hispanic-serving Institutions will flow to community college in Salem
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 14, 2021
A community college in Salem is among 21 Hispanic-serving institutions in the country to receive a share of a $12 million dollar investment from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Chemeketa Community College is one of three in the state considered Hispanic-serving because student enrollment is at least 25% Hispanic. At Chemeketa, 29% of students are […]
Facing threats, superintendents and school boards turn to legislature, law enforcement
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 14, 2021
The North Bend School Board didn’t have anything controversial on its agenda last week, but an FBI warning prompted the directors to abandon their open session and go virtual. They were alerted that 200 to 300 demonstrators planned to flood the meeting. Local police said they didn’t have the capacity to step in if things […]
Child welfare calls from Oregon schools dropped 30% during distance learning
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 12, 2021
During any other school year, the statistic at the Warrenton-Hammond School District in northwest Oregon would have been positive. Superintendent Tom Rogozinski, superintendent, was taking stock of the months his students spent under distance learning, and noticed a steep decline in calls from staff to the state Department of Human Services over concerns about student […]
Report shows parts of Oregon spent months last year with elevated air pollution levels
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 11, 2021
Klamath Falls had as many elevated pollution days as cities like Phoenix, Cincinnati and San Antonio in 2020, according to a new report. The non-profit Environment America, part of the left-leaning Public Interest Network, used EPA air quality data taken from monitors in every state. Despite fewer Americans using cars every day or undertaking major […]
Oregon joins 18 other states in deploying task force to combat labor trafficking
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 11, 2021
Ernesto Hernández spent 15 of his last 20 years in the U.S. working with the Mexican Consulate in Portland on human trafficking issues. He visited farms where workers slept 20 to a room, had little to eat. He encountered workers who had wages stolen and hours of overtime go unpaid. He says it’s gotten worse. […]
Tribes in Oregon want bigger role in setting state’s water strategy
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 8, 2021
Oregon’s nine federally recognized tribes want a bigger role in the state’s planning for the next century of water management in Oregon as fisheries continue to dwindle. They are asking Gov. Kate Brown to create a new task force for tribes to work directly with state agencies on critical waters. Oregon officials are developing what […]
Latest state education report shows low participation, progress
By: Alex Baumhardt - October 7, 2021
The Oregon Department of Education took an incomplete on its yearly report card for schools and districts issued Thursday. Participation in standardized testing for the 2020-21 school year was down 70% across the state, according to Jon Wiens, the department’s director of accountability. In a press conference held in advance of the At-A-Glance Report release, […]