-
Outside of Portland, protests drew hundreds of people in Tigard, Madras, Pendleton, Medford and elsewhere across Oregon on Saturday, as part of the national 鈥淗ands Off鈥 day of action.
-
Staffing uncertainties and delayed reimbursements threaten to gut the U.S. Forest Service鈥檚 capacity to care for the 1.8 million-acre Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest.
-
Colleges and universities in Oregon and California can no longer allow students without permanent legal status access to some federally funded programs meant to help disadvantaged students earn degrees, according to a recent decision from the U.S. Department of Education.
-
Last year California passed a law that prohibits schools from requiring staff to notify parents if a student identifies as transgender. The U.S. Department of Education alleges the law violates parents鈥 rights.
-
Two Oregon lawmakers are calling on major insurance companies to stop using their own internal wildfire risk maps to drop homeowner's policies 鈥 at least until next year.
-
Budget woes, combined with cuts to the federal wildfire-fighting workforce and President Donald Trump鈥檚 tariff and sovereignty threats against Canada, have made it more difficult for state officials to plan for the upcoming wildfire season.
-
Comedic writer and author, Felipe Torres Medina, joins the Exchange to talk about the serious immigration process through a lens of humor.
-
For local governments across Oregon, pandemic funds have dried up and revenue from property taxes have not been enough to keep up with rising costs.
-
The median home price in California is over $800,000 -鈥 according to the California Association of Realtors. That鈥檚 about double what it is nationwide.
-
The legislation is drawing concern among Second Amendment advocates and support from those who want stricter gun laws.
-
The Trump administration clawed back hundreds of millions of dollars in grants to California health agencies, likely affecting investigations into disease outbreaks and other public health services.
-
Oregon food banks face sharp cuts in federal food deliveries, as need for food assistance rises.
-
Most of us would rather not think about what our lives will be like in the aftermath of the Big One 鈥 a magnitude 9.0 rupture of the offshore Cascadia earthquake fault. Yet, it鈥檚 worth considering where you鈥檒l go if your house slides off its foundation or your apartment lacks heat, electricity and running water.
-
Senate Bill 1038 would tie Oregon鈥檚 temporal fate to Washington and California.