-
Laws protecting free speech, along with challenging economic circumstances, make it difficult to cut ties.
-
Coos Bay needs 600 new homes by 2040. A planned subdivision could get the city most of the way thereEconomic development officials along the south Oregon coast say a housing crunch is hindering growth.
-
The program has been running in Clackamas, Jackson, Klamath and Wasco counties. It recently expanded to Corvallis, Coos Bay and Umatilla County.
-
Tidal wetlands trap a lot of carbon dioxide. A recent survey maps those marine carbon sinks, also called 鈥渂lue carbon鈥 ecosystems, on the Southern Oregon coast.
-
The U.S. Department of Interior鈥檚 Bureau of Ocean Energy Management announced Tuesday two final floating offshore wind energy areas off the coast of Coos Bay and Brookings.
-
Efforts to make the Port of Coos Bay a major shipping facility got help from the Oregon Legislature this week.
-
The Port of Coos Bay is the only shipping facility between San Francisco and Portland. Efforts are underway to expand its capacity and create what would be called the Pacific Coast Intermodal Port.
-
A commercial fisherman is alive and well after being rescued by an Oregon State University research vessel staffed with University of Oregon students.
-
Like many communities in the region, the housing market in Coos Bay has been tightening for years, leaving a growing number of people without homes. In response, local organizations are working to build a village of small, manufactured living structures as temporary shelter.
-
The Jordan Cove Energy Project鈥檚 efforts to bypass state regulators suffered another setback Monday.
-
Federal officials have announced this year鈥檚 renovation plan for Coos Bay鈥檚 North Jetty, and it includes almost $35 million worth of repairs to smooth navigation into the port.
-
The Coos Bay City Council voted to approve the latest step towards developing the Jordan Cove liquid natural gas (LNG) pipeline on Tuesday.The decision,鈥