In a significant development in Oregon's historic healthcare workers strike, the ONA and Providence Oregon have agreed to re-engage in mediations/
It’s time to open up the voting for the next category in The Oregonian’s Readers Choice Awards: the best ski and snowboard spot in Oregon. You can vote once a day at this link or at the bottom of this post until 11:59 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025. We’ll reveal the results Friday, Feb. 7 at oregonlive.com/readers-choice-awards. Here are the finalists:
The small Oregon city at the heart of a major U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year that allowed cities across the country to enforce homeless camping bans is facing a fresh lawsuit over its camping rules as advocates find new ways to challenge them.
In this episode of the Explore Oregon Podcast, host Zach Urness talks to researchers about an underground aquifer below the Central Cascade Mountains.
Trump's executive order titled “Protecting the meaning and value of American citizenship” aims to end automatic birthright citizenship. The Fourteenth Amendment establishes birthright citizenship, meaning any child born in the U.S. is a citizen, regardless of their parent’s status.
Each month, 14,000 residents of Clackamas County are mailed something increasingly rare: a 40-page, full-color, locally-owned newspaper.
As the sunny and cool days in Oregon continue, you may be wondering when it is time to spring ahead. Here's what to know about daylight saving time.
Attorneys general from 22 states, including Oregon and Washington, are suing to block President Donald Trump's move to end birthright citizenship.
New Attorney General Dan Rayfield announced Thursday that Oregon and more than a dozen other states are joining together to defend two federal rules aimed at reducing gun violence nationwide. Here's Rayfield's news release about the action,
Ore., has nominated 14 Oregon students for consideration for appointment to one of the five prestigious United States Service Academies. Congressman Bentz’s Service Academy Nomination Board—retired and active-duty military officers who interview potential candidates for selection by the service academies— recommended each student based on academic performance,
Courtney's oratory skills were unequaled and his influence over state politics arguably unmatched. Perhaps most noteworthy in today’s era, he embodied a style of government he believed was the “Oregon Way” - the type of governing where you compromised and listened and remembered what it felt like to not be part of the political majority.
Cost estimates for legislation on assisted dying are “not sufficiently comprehensive”, a Holyrood committee has said. The Finance and Public Administration Committee at the Scottish Parliament is tasked with assessing the financial memorandums (FMs) of new Bills.