-
For nearly a decade, Dan Rayfield has represented Corvallis in the Oregon House of Representatives. Now he’s running for statewide office, leaving a rare opening in his heavily Democratic district.
-
This week, a three-judge panel of the 9th circuit court of appeals ruled that a climate lawsuit brought by 21 young people cannot go forward.
-
For decades, Oregon was one of the few states that didn’t limit campaign contributions. A recently signed law will change that. Many hope the limits will encourage more people to run for office – especially at the local level.
-
In a new report from the American Lung Association, Eugene-Springfield made the list of top five most polluted cities in the U.S. when it comes to air pollution.
-
CAHOOTs and HOOTs workers in Eugene have won significant raises after more than a year of bargaining.
-
The state of Oregon has temporarily withdrawn a permit for a large-scale chicken farm in Linn County. A petition challenging the permit was set to go to trial in early May.
-
Emails released Friday confirm that senior members of the governor's team had questioned Aimee Kotek Wilson's expanding role.
-
In the 2024 NFL Draft, Oregon's Bo Nix was selected No. 12 by the Denver Broncos, while Oregon State's Taliese Fuaga went to the New Orleans Saints with the No. 14 overall pick.
-
Oregon State Police Superintendent Casey Codding was among the troopers who responded after police in Oregon identified a former Washington state police and school resource officer who allegedly kidnapped his 1-year-old son and killed two women, including the child’s mother, in West Richland, Washington.
-
People who live at the Forest Glen Retirement Community in Canyonville have until May 1 to pay their long overdue water bill. It’s one of the many challenges that residents of the Douglas County facility are facing.
-
State Rep. Maxine Dexter has benefited from more than $1.2 million in ads supporting her candidacy in the 3rd Congressional District.
-
Born with Teeth, Liz Duffy Adams witty two-person comedy briskly directed by Rob Melrose, pits Will and Kit, the nickname for Christopher, against each other as extremely competitive playwrights vying for patronage. Don’t take this play as history. The facts aren’t well known, and Adams uses her imagination, just as Shakespeare did with his history plays.