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International Day Of Climate Rallies Draws Hundreds From Rogue Valley High Schools

Students from Ashland High School marched during the global climate strike on Friday.
Erik Neumann / JPR
Students from Ashland High School marched during the global climate strike on Friday.

Hundreds of high schoolers from throughout the Rogue Valley left school on Friday to demand political action to address climate change. Marches took place in Ashland, Medford, Grants Pass and half a dozen other small towns south to Redding.  

The local marches were part of a world-wide day of activism by young people showing their concern for human-caused climate change ahead of Monday’s United Nations climate summit in New York City.

“Every summer California burns with more intensity. Every year 500-year floods become more and more normalized. We are not waiting for climate change to come, it’s here,” said Jo Spurgeon, a senior at St. Mary’s high school in Medford and an organizer of Friday’s protest in Medford.

Students from St. Mary's, North and South Medford High Schools rallied on Friday to protest inaction in the face of climate change.
Credit Erik Neumann / JPR
Students from St. Mary's, North and South Medford High Schools rallied on Friday to protest inaction in the face of climate change.

Around 150 students and community members gathered from St. Mary’s and North and South Medford High Schools. A walkout from Ashland High School to the downtown Plaza included nearly double that number.

Student’s signs read “There are no jobs on a dead planet,” “Future first,” and “Policy change, not climate change.”

While the slogans and chants were similar to those at other progressive protests, students pointed to specific climate justice goals in Oregon. Their requests included preventing the development of the Jordan Cove liquified natural gas project pipeline and encouraging elected officials to sign on to the “Oregon Green New Deal,” a set of environmental goals including reductions in fossil fuel use, promotion of renewable energy, and protection for communities already affected by climate change.

“We want to put pressure on [Governor] Kate Brown and really emphasize climate and really make it the forefront of her political policy,” Spurgeon said.

The climate strike in Ashland drew hundreds of students and adults  on Friday.
Credit Erik Neumann / JPR
The climate strike in Ashland drew hundreds of students and adults on Friday.

Owen Gramley was also participating from St. Mary’s high school in Medford. He said politics in the area lean conservative, but that their pressure was starting to translate to action by politicians.

“There’s not too much civic activism, but I think young people are changing that,” Gramley said. “It seems like a pretty generational change to me.”

Copyright 2019 Jefferson Public Radio

Erik Neumann is a radio producer and writer. A native of the Pacific Northwest, his work has appeared on public radio stations and in magazines along the West Coast. He received his Bachelor's Degree in geography from the University of Washington and a Master's in Journalism from UC Berkeley. Besides working at KUER, he enjoys being outside in just about every way possible.
Erik Neumann
Erik Neumann is an experienced radio producer and reporter who grew up alongside the Puget Sound. He's passionate about telling the human stories behind America's health care system, public lands and the environment, and the arts. He got his Masters degree at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. Erik joined JPR after several years as a staff reporter at KUER, the NPR station in Salt Lake City, where he focused on health care coverage. He was a 2019 Mountain West fellow with the Association of Health Care Journalists and is a contributor at Kaiser Health News, a non-profit news service committed to in-depth coverage of health care policy and politics.