-
Oregon’s public four-years already charge some of the highest tuition and fee rates among public universities in the West.
-
Oregon's governor backtracked less than a week following the release of thousands of pages of emails that illustrated strong concerns among her top staffers regarding the growing role of the first lady.
-
Here are some of the most notable exchanges from a trove of records released by the governor's office.
-
Pro-Palestinian student groups have started an encampment on the University of Oregon’s Eugene campus.
-
South Coast Equity Coalition just received a grant from Seeding Justice to work toward reproductive justice in Coos and Curry Counties, examining and hopefully dismantling barriers to access to health care for pregnant people.
-
Rogue Comic Con, May 4th 2024 at Pear Blossom Park in Medford, OR.
-
Regina Chichizola, Executive Director of Save California Salmon, provides a conservation view of the issues facing the Trinity River.
-
Oregonians are being asked to create more defensible space around their homes, with vegetation modified in that space to reduce wildfire threat and help firefighters defend the house.
-
This past weekend, community members celebrated the official groundbreaking of the first cooperatively owned mobile home park formed in the Rogue Valley. This fall, families will be returning after the 2020 Almeda Fire destroyed most of the park.
-
California now is one of nine states with regulations limiting health care cost increases (Oregon is another). Consumers won’t necessarily notice the changes, but supporters say they will make a difference over time.
-
Writer and artist Anis Mojgani is wrapping up his second term as Oregon's poet laureate.
-
A bill from a member of the Legislature’s happiness committee would require schools to come up with homework policies that consider the mental and physical strain on students.
-
Sixteen Republican lawmakers and legislative candidates from Oregon plan to visit the Arizona-Mexico border on Monday, arguing that lax security around the southern border exacerbates the drug crisis in Oregon, 1,000 miles north.
-
A building occupied by students on the Cal Poly Humboldt campus for the past week was opened on Friday afternoon, though protesters remained inside. The university has said protesters could face legal action or suspension.