March 24, 2016 eClips (2024)

State Library eClips

* 2015 Census estimates: Oregon population growth nearly hits pre-recession rate
* 2015 Census: Oregon’s growing counties
* Guided by science, hatcheries have evolved to help rebuild runs — Guest Opinion
* Drunken man who banged on door, yelled, ‘Police Open up’ wins small victory
* Study: Regular marijuana use linked to problems in midlife
* Battle over Columbia Gorge Nestle water plant heats up as election nears
* Waiting for your Oregon tax refund? This might be why
* Tough choices for timber counties as funds shrink
* Take bold steps now to be resilient to disaster — Guest Opinion
* Study: Portland traffic among most congested in nation
* Election clock ticking for some voters to make their choices
* State may pull plug on health provider
* Rape victims’ courage to be applauded — Opinion
* Commercial gillnetters want state ban tossed out
* The impact of minimum wage on Central Oregon
* New residents in Crook County double
* Calm after the 2014 storm at Mosaic Medical
* Damage at Malheur: $1.7M and climbing
* All-or-nothing lawsuits not the answer for the Deschutes — Opinion
* Public Safety, Klamath Drug Task Force & Special Districts
* Owyhee water allotment set at 3 acre-feet, could go to 4
* Voters have until April 26 to pick party for primary
* Umatilla County Health works to block in-store tobacco advertising
* Catherine Creek restoration enters final phase
* Hyatt, Howard Prairie on the rise, thanks to wet winter
* Winter snows helped employment figures
* Supporters put pen to paper for public power
* Jordan Cove to appeal pipeline denial
* TSA-Klamath airport bill moves to U.S. House floor
* Comment sought on BLM juniper reduction plans
* Ashes to ashes: Cremation preferred to traditional casket burials
* Oregon LNG, Columbia Riverkeeper appeal Warrenton ruling
* Editorial: Ag gag laws are a mistake — Opinion
* Editorial: Astoria preschool is a winning strategy — Opinion
* Secretary of State highlights voting importance during Oak Creek visit
* Editorial: Angry counties look to courts for relief — Opinion
* Editorial: A failure to communicate at day care center — Opinion
* Editorial: Courthouse needs a shot of tough love — Opinion
* ODF raises $6K for food banks
* Unclaimed money could be yours
* Scenic Bikeway hearing to consider Oregon Outback March 30
* Snowpacks hold steady despite warming
* Inmates restore bicycles for charity
* Derelict vessel makes landfall
* Oregon’s road fund fix includes higher fees
* Ferrioli talks solar power, carbon reduction in Oregon– Blog
* Editorial: Get the Kids Outside — Opinion
* Ancient Oregonians
* Don’t Flush ‘Em Oregon’s Water Not Tested For Pharma
* The Pot Business Is Starting Off Even Better in Oregon and Washington Than It Did In Colorado
* Is Oregon the right model for California’s minimum wage? — Opinion
* FamilyCare, OHA Make Progress on Rate Dispute
* States will Need Help from Department of Labor on Claims Databases after Court Ruling
* Insurance Companies Impede Ability of Physicians to Care for Patients — Guest Opinion

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2015 CENSUS ESTIMATES: OREGON POPULATION GROWTH NEARLY HITS PRE-RECESSION RATE (Portland Oregonian)

Over the course of a year, Oregon became home to thousands more.

Oregon’s population grew by 1.5 percent within a year, nearly returning to growth rates from before the recession hit, an expert’s analysis of newly released data from the U.S. Census Bureau finds.

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2015 CENSUS: OREGON’S GROWING COUNTIES (Portland Oregonian)

-Slide Show-

The U.S. Census Bureau released new 2015 population estimates on Wednesday, shedding light on Oregon’s hot spots for growth.

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GUIDED BY SCIENCE, HATCHERIES HAVE EVOLVED TO HELP REBUILD RUNS — GUEST OPINION (Portland Oregonian)

The Oregonian/OregonLive editorial board accurately points out in a March 11 editorial that hydroelectric dams on the Columbia River transformed the Northwest economy beginning in the New Deal era, but also took a toll on salmon.

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DRUNKEN MAN WHO BANGED ON DOOR, YELLED, ‘POLICE OPEN UP’ WINS SMALL VICTORY (Portland Oregonian)

The Oregon Court of Appeals on Wednesday reversed one of two disorderly convictions against a drunken man who banged on the door of an Oregon coast apartment and yelled, “Police Open up … We have guns.”

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STUDY: REGULAR MARIJUANA USE LINKED TO PROBLEMS IN MIDLIFE (Portland Oregonian)

A study that followed children from birth to midlife found that heavy marijuana users who smoked for years often fared worse as adults than their parents: Many ended up in jobs that paid less, required fewer skills and were less prestigious.

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BATTLE OVER COLUMBIA GORGE NESTLE WATER PLANT HEATS UP AS ELECTION NEARS (Portland Oregonian)

The years-long war of words over Oxbow Springs has just grown louder.

Backers and opponents of a proposed Nestle water bottling plant in the Columbia River Gorge town of Cascade Locks have taken to the airwaves, to the phone lines, and to Salem to plead their case in advance of a May election that could decide the plant’s fate.

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WAITING FOR YOUR OREGON TAX REFUND? THIS MIGHT BE WHY (Salem Statesman Journal)

Thousands of Oregonians are facing delays receiving state tax refunds because they’ve been flagged for manual processing by the Department of Revenue.

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TOUGH CHOICES FOR TIMBER COUNTIES AS FUNDS SHRINK (Salem Statesman Journal)

Federal payments to Oregon timber counties continue shrinking year-over-year, leaving some municipalities faced with hard choices about raising local taxes or cutting services.

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TAKE BOLD STEPS NOW TO BE RESILIENT TO DISASTER — GUEST OPINION (Eugene Register-Guard)

The most consequential choice facing every citizen, politician, community leader and business in Oregon is between becoming proactive in transforming the states socioeconomic system, or simply allowing it to collapse as a result of a major disaster, climate extremes or fossil fuel depletion.

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STUDY: PORTLAND TRAFFIC AMONG MOST CONGESTED IN NATION (Portland Tribune)

Portland is tied with Chicago and Washington, D.C., for the eighth most congested metropolitan region in the country, according to a new study by TomTom, a navigation system manufacturer that also analyzes traffic conditions.

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ELECTION CLOCK TICKING FOR SOME VOTERS TO MAKE THEIR CHOICES (Portland Tribune)

Oregon’s 540,000 non-affiliated voters have begun to receive mailers from the secretary of states office, laying out their options to participate in the May 17 primary.

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STATE MAY PULL PLUG ON HEALTH PROVIDER (Portland Tribune)

In a move that could force tens of thousands of low-income people to find new doctors, the state has threatened to terminate a major Oregon Health Plan provider that serves poor people in greater Portland.

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RAPE VICTIMS’ COURAGE TO BE APPLAUDED — OPINION (Portland Tribune)

A handful of women who overcame one of the most traumatic experiences imaginable have fundamentally changed the way Oregon thinks about the crime of rape.

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COMMERCIAL GILLNETTERS WANT STATE BAN TOSSED OUT (Portland Tribune)

Commercial gillnetters said Oregon should halt its phased-in ban of their salmon fishing method in the main channel of the Columbia River.

Speaking to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlfe Commission March 18, panelists representing gillnetters said alternative commercial fishing methods are expensive or unproven, and plans to develop salmon runs in side channels show little promise.

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THE IMPACT OF MINIMUM WAGE ON CENTRAL OREGON (Bend Bulletin)

-Higher wage may affect about 11 percent of Deschutes County jobs-

The overarching narrative in Central Oregon has been that the regions economy, which relies heavily on the tourism industry, is more susceptible to job losses from a sharp increase to the minimum wage than other parts of the state.

However, a recent article from the Oregon Employment Department suggests that it might not be as significant as originally feared, at least right away.

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NEW RESIDENTS IN CROOK COUNTY DOUBLE (Bend Bulletin)

-Census Bureau estimates show Crook is second in growth only to Deschutes-

The number of new Crook County residents in 2015 more than doubled over the previous year, according to estimates released today by the U.S. Census Bureau.

The estimates show how population changed across the nation from July 1, 2014, to July 1, 2015. The Census Bureau estimated Crook County’s population at 21,630 as of July 1, 2015. Its population growth rate skyrocketed to the second in the state, behind Deschutes County.

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CALM AFTER THE 2014 STORM AT MOSAIC MEDICAL (Bend Bulletin)

-Demand skyrocketed following Medicaid expansion-

Mosaic Medicals patient population ballooned roughly sixfold in the decade that ended in 2015.

Most medical providers in Central Oregon saw an influx of patients at the beginning of 2014 because the health care program Medicaid, known here as the Oregon Health Plan, expanded to cover more low-income individuals.

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DAMAGE AT MALHEUR: $1.7M AND CLIMBING (Bend Bulletin)

-Refuge that was occupied by militants may reopen by early summer-

The group that occupied the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in January and early February caused $1.7 million in damages to the refuge headquarters with the costs continuing to climb, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe said Wednesday.

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ALL-OR-NOTHING LAWSUITS NOT THE ANSWER FOR THE DESCHUTES — OPINION (Bend Bulletin)

U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken sent environmentalists and irrigators out of her court with plenty of homework this week. If the three local irrigation districts, the federal Bureau of Reclamation and their opponents, WaterWatch of Oregon and the Center for Biological Diversity, apply themselves, they might avoid what could be a long and expensive court battle that hurts both sides.

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PUBLIC SAFETY, KLAMATH DRUG TASK FORCE & SPECIAL DISTRICTS (Oregon Public Broadcasting)

Dave Daniel, Josephine County sheriff, tells us about his County’s decision to declare a public safety fiscal emergency.

We talk to Klamath Falls Police Captain Ryan Brosterhous about a drug task force thats being resurrected to combat meth- and heroin-related crime in Klamath County.

Frank Stratton, Executive Director for the Special Districts Association of Oregon, tells us about Oregon’s special districts, and we hear from Bob Bell, who hopes to start a special district to save Douglas Countys dwindling library system.

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OWYHEE WATER ALLOTMENT SET AT 3 ACRE-FEET, COULD GO TO 4 (Capital Press)

-Farmers who depend on the Owyhee Reservoir for their irrigation water are looking at a normal water supply in 2016, the first in four years.-

The Owyhee Irrigation District board of directors has set the 2016 allotment for OID patrons at 3 acre-feet.

That’s significantly more than irrigators have received the past three years and the allotment is expected to increase as more water flows into the Owyhee Reservoir.

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VOTERS HAVE UNTIL APRIL 26 TO PICK PARTY FOR PRIMARY (East Oregonian)

-Non-affiliated voters will receive a mailer outlining their options if they want to register as Republicans or Democrats for the May primary.-

Oregon’s 540,000 non-affiliated voters have begun to receive mailers from the Secretary of States Office, laying out their options to participate in the May 17 primary.

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UMATILLA COUNTY HEALTH WORKS TO BLOCK IN-STORE TOBACCO ADVERTISING (East Oregonian)

-In-store advertising seduces would-be smokers, quitters.-

Tobacco companies can no longer advertise through billboards, radio or television, but they can still pour millions of dollars into power walls.

The walls are hard to miss, located behind the cashier at many convenience stores an expanse of hundreds of tobacco products, logos and colorful posters. The vibrant barrage of tobacco advertising worries many who work to keep kids from smoking.

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CATHERINE CREEK RESTORATION ENTERS FINAL PHASE (East Oregonian)

-Restoration work is entering the final phase along Catherine Creek in Union County, with a big hand from the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.-

A century of ranching has taken its toll on Catherine Creek in the Grande Ronde Valley.

The creek is home to three different species of threatened or endangered fish including chinook salmon, steelhead and bull trout while at the same time providing irrigation for hay fields and cattle pastures.

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HYATT, HOWARD PRAIRIE ON THE RISE, THANKS TO WET WINTER (Medford Mail Tribune)

-Drought-plagued reservoirs are filling up, thanks to wet winter-

A wet and snowy winter coupled with a slow snowmelt has the big-three reservoirs of the Talent Irrigation District refilling at the slow and steady pace that water managers pine for.

Hyatt and Howard Prairie lakes were down around all-time lows last October but both have risen over the half-full level for the first time since summer 2014, according to federal Bureau of Reclamation statistics.

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WINTER SNOWS HELPED EMPLOYMENT FIGURES (Medford Mail Tribune)

Snow in the Siskiyous produced tangible results on the economic front this winter.

Bureau of Labor Statistics February estimates released this week show Jackson County’s seasonally adjusted jobless rate dropped to 5.2 percent, a figure in line with the heyday of 2005 and 2006, preceding the Great Recession.

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SUPPORTERS PUT PEN TO PAPER FOR PUBLIC POWER (Herald and News)

A local group advocating for a non-profit peoples utility district in Klamath County has collected between 100 and 200 signatures toward an effort to put the concept on the ballot in 2017.

The Klamath Independent Public Power KIPP, continued to collect signatures on Wednesday during an open house, which included two public presentations by local resident Art Martin. Martin shared the concept with about one dozen attendees on Wednesday afternoon.

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JORDAN COVE TO APPEAL PIPELINE DENIAL (Herald and News)

Jordan Cove LNG will appeal a denial to build a 232-mile-long natural gas pipeline across Oregon and a processing terminal in Coos Bay.

In early March the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission FERC announced the Jordan Cove natural gas liquefaction terminal and Pacific Connector pipeline did not adequately demonstrate a need to build the new natural gas facility in Oregon.

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TSA-KLAMATH AIRPORT BILL MOVES TO U.S. HOUSE FLOOR (Herald and News)

U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, announced Wednesday that a bill he authored to restore commercial air service to the Crater Lake-Klamath Regional Airport by bringing back federal TSA screening at the airport has taken a major step forward in the U.S. House.

The Treating Small Airports with Fairness Act, or TSA Fairness Act, was unanimously approved by the House Homeland Security Committee Wednesday, according to a Walden press release.

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COMMENT SOUGHT ON BLM JUNIPER REDUCTION PLANS (Herald and News)

The Bureau of Land Management is inviting public comment as it develops plans to reduce stands of Western juniper trees that are expanding into sage-steppe ecosystems on public lands west of Alturas, according to a news release.

The BLMs Applegate Field Office is analyzing proposed projects in the Applegate Sage Steppe Habitat Programmatic Environmental Assessment focusing on about 347,000 acres.

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ASHES TO ASHES: CREMATION PREFERRED TO TRADITIONAL CASKET BURIALS (Daily Astorian)

-Cremation is increasingly preferred to traditional burials.-

More families are choosing to cremate their loved ones remains rather than go with a traditional full burial nearly doubling nationwide from 24.8 percent in 1999 to 46.7 percent in 2014, according to the Cremation Association of North America.

And Oregon, whose cremation rate reached 73.9 percent two years ago, has the third highest rate behind Nevada and Washington.

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OREGON LNG, COLUMBIA RIVERKEEPER APPEAL WARRENTON RULING (Daily Astorian)

-Hearings are scheduled for May 4 and May 5 at Warrenton Grade School.-

Oregon LNG has appealed a city ruling against a proposed terminal on the Skipanon Peninsula, claiming the hearings officer drew erroneous conclusions that would make any marine industrial development virtually impossible.

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EDITORIAL: AG GAG LAWS ARE A MISTAKE — OPINION (Daily Astorian)

-Responsible farmers should have nothing to hide-

The Lower Columbia region is well endowed with farmers, ranchers and family foresters who their neighbors know to be among the most conscientious stewards of the land. You don’t take on a life of long hours and uncertain rewards raising crops, animals and trees or stay in these endeavors if you hate the natural world and all that lives there.

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EDITORIAL: ASTORIA PRESCHOOL IS A WINNING STRATEGY — OPINION (Daily Astorian)

-The new Astoria pre school program is a wise, targeted investment-

Preschool is the right decision from a progressive school board

Former Gov. John Kitzhaber talked about it. President Barack Obama has talked about it. The value of preschool is widely acknowledged. The general concept is that children begin the learning process well before they arrive in kindergarten. Children who are fortunate get a lot of this from their parents. Many other children do not.

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SECRETARY OF STATE HIGHLIGHTS VOTING IMPORTANCE DURING OAK CREEK VISIT (Albany Democrat Herald)

Secretary of State Jeanne Atkins and some of her staff helped 60 incarcerated young women register to vote Wednesday at the Oak Creek Youth Correctional Facility in Albany. The facility houses juvenile females between 15 and 25.

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EDITORIAL: ANGRY COUNTIES LOOK TO COURTS FOR RELIEF — OPINION (Albany Democrat Herald)

You’re going to need a scorecard in the not-so-distant future just to keep track of all the Oregon county governments that have filed lawsuits against other branches of government.

So far this year, we’ve already seen Linn County sue the state of Oregon over how state forest trust land has been managed

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EDITORIAL: A FAILURE TO COMMUNICATE AT DAY CARE CENTER — OPINION (Albany Democrat Herald)

Lets try to add a little clarity to the controversy between the Department of Human Services and an Albany day care facility.

You know some of the details already: The Department of Human Services on March 9 placed the facility, the Hey Diddle Diddle Learning Center, in failed status after its owner questioned the credentials of an investigator asking to enter the facilty.

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EDITORIAL: COURTHOUSE NEEDS A SHOT OF TOUGH LOVE — OPINION (Corvallis Gazette-Times)

Here’s a tough problem that’s going to require a bunch of creative thinking from a lot of different people:

What are we going to do with the 127-year-old Benton County Courthouse?

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ODF RAISES $6K FOR FOOD BANKS (Blue Mountain Eagle)

-ODF’s John Day Unit, in coordination with the Governor’s Food Drive for Oregon, raised over $6,000 for local food banks.-

Oregon Department of Forestry’s John Day Unit, in coordination with the Governors Food Drive for Oregon, raised over $6,600 for local food banks in Grant and Wheeler counties.

The amount will provide for nearly 20,000 meals for families in need.

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UNCLAIMED MONEY COULD BE YOURS (Blue Mountain Eagle)

-The state treasurer is urging Oregonians to find out if they own a slice of over $500 million the state has in unclaimed property.-

Over a half-million dollars.

That’s how much the state of Oregon is safekeeping in unclaimed assets $564 million to be exact and State Treasurer Ted Wheeler is urging Oregonians to find out if they can claim a slice of that monetary pie.

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SCENIC BIKEWAY HEARING TO CONSIDER OREGON OUTBACK MARCH 30 (Lake County Examiner)

Oregon Parks and Recreation Department will host a public meeting at Memorial Hall in Lakeview on Wednesday, March 30 at 5:30 p.m. to consider approval of the Oregon Outback Scenic Bikeway.

The proposed 90-mile-long Outback Scenic Bikeway uses existing roads and passes by the towns of Lakeview, Plush and Adel.

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SNOWPACKS HOLD STEADY DESPITE WARMING (Lake County Examiner)

In most basins across the state, Oregon’s mountain snowpack remains at near normal to above-normal levels and continues to surpass last years peak levels, according to the March Water Supply Outlook Report released by the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service.

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INMATES RESTORE BICYCLES FOR CHARITY (Hermiston Herald)

-TRCI inmates restore bicycles.-

In a small room off a concrete courtyard, two men dismantle bicycles down to the last ball bearing.

Salvaged from dumpsters and garage sales, the bicycles are cleaned and analyzed under the patient hands of Eric Jimenez and Hunter Nelms. If the duo can restore the bicycles, they do; if they cannot, they turn them into parts, carefully cataloged and stored on shelves until needed.

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DERELICT VESSEL MAKES LANDFALL (The Curry Coastal Pilot)

Whales weren’t the only things bobbing on the ocean waves off the coast of Oregon this past week.

A derelict vessel believed to have floated 8,000 miles after the tsunami in f*ckushima five years ago caught a current Monday night that veered it north to Horsfall Beach, south of Coos Bay, dampening local excitement that it might land near Gold Beach.

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OREGON’S ROAD FUND FIX INCLUDES HIGHER FEES (The Curry Coastal Pilot)

The Governors Transportation Vision Panel announced its short-, mid- and long-term funding ideas for backlogged highway maintenance throughout the state some of which could affect Curry County through car registration fee increases to pay-per-mile driving charges.

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FERRIOLI TALKS SOLAR POWER, CARBON REDUCTION IN OREGON— BLOG (Oregon Business Journal)

Ted Ferrioli has been at the center of some of Oregon’s most prominent environment and energy battles.

Most recently, the Republican Senator from John Day was an outspoken opponent to the Clean Electricity and Coal Transition Plan, which doubled the state renewable energy requirement and eliminated coal from the power mix.

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EDITORIAL: GET THE KIDS OUTSIDE — OPINION (Bend Source Weekly)

“Oregon is an inspiration. Whether you come to it, or are born to it, you become entranced by our state’s beauty, the opportunity she affords, and the independent spirit of her citizens,” said Gov. Tom McCall in 1973. McCall, who graduated from Redmond High School, held office from 1967-75, during the early years of outdoor school education in Oregon. In Central Oregon, outdoor school education began in the 1950s.

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ANCIENT OREGONIANS (Bend Source Weekly)

-Archaeologists recover oldest remains in North America near Summer Lake-

Dr. Dennis Jenkins, senior staff archaeologist at the University of Oregon, likes to discover and document ancient life really ancient life in Central and Eastern Oregon, dating back at least 14,500 years.

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DON’T FLUSH ‘EM OREGON’S WATER NOT TESTED FOR PHARMA (KLCC)

Oregon’s water is tested for suspended solids, certain chemicals, heavy metals, fbut not for pharmaceuticals. With prescription drug use on the rise –way too often– unused meds end up in the landfill or flushed down the toilet. KLCCs Tiffany Eckert reports on how Lane County agencies are stepping up their message of what to do with unwanted drugs.

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THE POT BUSINESS IS STARTING OFF EVEN BETTER IN OREGON AND WASHINGTON THAN IT DID IN COLORADO (Bloomberg)

Sales for this industry keep moving higher.

The cannabis industry is on a roll, according to the latest survey from brokerage firm Convergex.

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IS OREGON THE RIGHT MODEL FOR CALIFORNIA’S MINIMUM WAGE? — OPINION (Los Angeles Times)

Backers of a $15 statewide minimum wage initiative have collected enough signatures to put their proposal on the ballot in November. And they appear to have momentum, with a dozen cities including Los Angeles having adopted wage floors higher than the state’s $10 an hour, and polls showing strong public support for an increase.

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FAMILYCARE, OHA MAKE PROGRESS ON RATE DISPUTE (The Lund Report)

-The Oregon Health Authority has also extended the termination deadline to April 5, giving the two sides more time to resolve the remaining issues.-

FamilyCare and the Oregon Health Authority are one step closer to agreement on their dispute over reimbursem*nt rates. The coordinated care organization has 134,000 Medicaid members in the tri-county Portland area.

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STATES WILL NEED HELP FROM DEPARTMENT OF LABOR ON CLAIMS DATABASES AFTER COURT RULING (The Lund Report)

A Supreme Court ruling hamstringed the ability of Vermont and other states, such as Oregon, to get a full picture of the medical claims costs by allowing federally regulated health plans to opt out. Now for the all-payer, all-claims databases to truly show data from all claims and all payers, theyll need the U.S. Department of Labor to collect the data for the self-insured health plans.

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INSURANCE COMPANIES IMPEDE ABILITY OF PHYSICIANS TO CARE FOR PATIENTS — GUEST OPINION (The Lund Report)

-Insurance carriers are incapable of defining and measuring quality, and their attempts to do so degrade the care physicians are able to provide, according to this author-

The healthcare system is failing patients and physicians. In a recent article, a 46 year old woman initially presented with shoulder pain, and according to her lawyer, eventually had a heart attack, possibly requiring a future heart transplant.

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