
Emily Cureton
Oregon Public BroadcastingEmily Cureton Cook is a JPR content partner from Oregon Public Broadcasting. Emily is the former producer of the ÀÏ·ò×Ó´«Ã½ Exchange on JPR and has contributed award-winning programming to Georgia Public Broadcasting. She began her career as a journalist reporting for community newspapers, including the Del Norte Triplicate in Crescent City, California, and the Big Bend Sentinel in Marfa, Texas. Emily graduated from the University of Texas in Austin with degrees in history, studio art and Russian.
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Bend and Prineville break February records, with more on the way for Central Oregon.
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Western Communications controls the fate of local news where no one else delivers it, and the company is in dire straits.
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It was the Republican's first town hall visit to Bend since being booed in 2017, and losing Deschutes County voters to a Democrat in 2018.
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The idea is to put a fire-resistant buffer between one of Oregon’s fastest growing cities and the pine forest routinely burning around it.
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Sixty Central Oregon studentspacked a lecture hall at OSU Cascades recently to learn the basics of design. The objective was to create something innovative.
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Pacific Power says refacing the century-old dam in steel will create a mud flat around Bend's central pond for two weeks.
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Republican Congressman Greg Walden won an 11th term in Congress on Tuesday, after spending more on the campaign to keep his seat than ever before.
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Student voices from Central Oregon: 'Our school is doing a lot to prevent gun violence, but they’re not doing the right things.'
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An herbicide that killed 1,500 iconic pines in Central Oregon is off limits for roadside spraying, as the state investigates how many more trees in the Northwest may have been poisoned.
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Tumalo Irrigation District is the first water user group to get public funding after settling a 2016 lawsuit over the endangered Oregon spotted frog.
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The trees could fall on Highway 20, west of Sisters. And the herbicide killing them has not been restricted by the state in response.
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U.S. Senators from Oregon and California want federal fire managers to start publishing training materials in Spanish again after translations were discontinued last year.