Mitch Borden/KNKX At a watch party for the U.S.-Australia match on Juneteenth in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood, hundreds of people set up lawn chairs and laid out blankets in the park outside the ...
Construction at a group of homes on SE Harold Street near SE 122nd Ave., in Portland, April 12, 2023. Oregon is facing a housing shortage, needing to construct tens of thousands of new homes to keep ...
In a test of a new state law, doctors in Eugene went up against a national physician staffing firm seeking to replace them.
The potential super El Niño event this fall and winter could bring much needed rains to the region, experts said.
This story originally appeared on Underscore.news. Before the colonization of what is now the United States, the Clatsop lived on the south shore of the Columbia River. At the river’s mouth, where the ...
On the enormous main floor of the Oregon Convention Center, more than 100 metal strips have been laid out, each about 5 feet wide by 46 feet long. And on each one, two fighters thrust, lunge and ...
It's about who produces the best, most succulent steaks, and how to prepare the meat. Argentina and Texas are two of the top cattle-raising areas of the world, where steak is deeply ingrained in diet ...
Anyeley Hallovà chairs the commission that oversees Oregon's growth management system. She's passionate about developing compact neighborhoods that provide equitable and affordable housing — and that ...
Portland expects to lose more than 100 shelter beds this summer due to a homeless service provider going out of business. Skyler Brocker-Knapp, head of the city’s shelter programs, explained in an ...
Just over three years since Oregon voters passed Ballot Measure 110, elected officials want to repeal key elements, blaming the law for open drug use and soaring overdoses. But it’s their own ...
Christina del Campo surveys her field, pointing out the garlic she hopes will grow on its own, and the blueberries she’ll no longer be able to sell. “This section of the field, I don’t know if I will ...
Daiichi “Charles” Takeoka, a first-gen Japanese American community leader, graduated from the University of Oregon’s law school in 1912. He couldn’t practice because he didn’t have U.S. citizenship.