Liam Moriarty
Digital News EditorLiam Moriarty has been covering news in the Pacific Northwest for three decades. He's reported on a wide range of topics – including politics, the environment, business, social issues and more.
Liam was JPR News Director from 2002 to 2005, reporting and producing the Jefferson Daily regional news magazine. After covering the environment in Seattle, then reporting on European issues from France, he returned to JPR in 2013 and was promoted to News Director in 2019 to oversee JPR's expanded newsroom.
Liam retired as News Director at the end of 2021. He now edits and curates the news on JPR's website and digital platforms.
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One of the great things about being a journalist is that it’s rarely boring. It’s called “news” because new things are happening all the time.
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Governor Kate Brown came to the Rogue Valley Monday to get a first-hand look at the devastation caused by the Almeda Fire. After her tour of the damage in Phoenix and Talent, the governor spoke via cell phone with JPR’s Liam Moriarty about what she saw and what the state government can do to help.
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The controversial Jordan Cove Energy Project in Southern Oregon is among dozens of infrastructure projects being fast-tracked under a presidential order meant to stimulate the economy during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Oregon State Police believe the latest shooting is linked to several previous incidents along a stretch of I-5 in Douglas, Josephine and Jackson Counties.
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Several conservation groups have filed a lawsuit against federal wildlife managers for not approving endangered species protections for the California spotted owl.
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A decade-old plan to remove four dams on the Klamath River just hit a major road bump.
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A group of landowners who may be forced to sell their land to the proposed Jordan Cove natural gas pipeline is asking a federal court to shut the project down.
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We live in interesting times … pandemic, economic disaster, civil unrest, extreme partisanship.
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The US Supreme Court has declined to take up a Klamath Basin water dispute that goes back nearly two decades.
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Several hundred people rallied and marched through downtown Medford Saturday afternoon. They came to express their anger at the deaths of black people at the hands of police, and to support justice for people of color.
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In 2013, Oregon's Coquille Indian tribe asked the federal government to take action that would allow the tribe to open a casino in Medford. After years of silence, the answer finally came last week … “No.”
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The recent death of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer prompted hundreds to turn out for a pair of rallies in downtown Ashland on Sunday.