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An Oregon State Police trooper was in the right place at the right time when a car went flying off an embankment, landing 200 feet below.
The agency posted dashcam video of the Feb. 25 crash on Highway 224 near Southeast Tong Road in Clackamas County on Facebook, and said it was caused by the car operator’s “distracted driving.”
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The dramatic four-second video taken from a trooper’s patrol car shows a vehicle approaching from the opposite direction prior to driving into the dirt on the side of the road and launching into the air, falling below.
“The vehicle drove off the roadway after the driver took their eyes off the roadway and landed approximately 200 feet down an embankment,” OSP said in the social media post. Police did not say exactly what the driver was doing before the car went airborne off the cliff.
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The car is seen in the dirt on the side of the roadway before launching off the cliff on Feb. 25, 2024. (Oregon State Police Facebook)
The unidentified driver was able to get out of the car before emergency personnel arrived at the scene and deployed a rope system to carry the driver up the hill to safety.
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The driver, who police say “is fortunate to have survived,” was taken by ambulance to a local hospital for treatment of injuries.
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The car is seen going airborne after leaving the winding Oregon road. (Oregon State Police Facebook)
The Oregon State Police trooper’s dascham video shows a car coming towards them from the opposite direction.(Oregon State Police Facebook)
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“Without someone seeing this happen and responding, the crash could have been missed completely,” one Facebook user wrote in response to the video post.
“I was so intent on watching the road just now saw car fly off to left,” another said about the crash that happened so quickly.
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — Utah tied the record for the warmest Christmas Day in state history before the sun came up.
In the very first hour of Christmas, Salt Lake City had already tied the record for the warmest Christmas ever recorded, with temperatures hitting 59 degrees. This record was set exactly 70 years ago in 1955, according to the National Weather Service.
By the afternoon, the city is forecast to surpass the record, reaching a high of 62 degrees.
The forecast for St. George unsurprisingly shows even warmer temperatures with an expected high of 67 degrees.
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A full rainbow was visible in Garrison, Utah, on Christmas Eve 2025. (Photo: Alicia Wheeler via KUTV Chime In)
This record-breaking weather is not surprising, as Christmas Eve also surpassed the previous recorded high, and this month marks Utah’s warmest December on record.
While there will not be snow in Utah valleys for the holiday, scattered storms are expected to bring wind and rain throughout the northern and south-eastern parts of the state, according to KUTV Meteorologist Sean Kelly. However, the Interstate 15 corridor should be relatively dry in the afternoon.
Windy conditions will blow through the state today and tomorrow, with some reaching speeds of over 50 mph.
MORE | Unseasonably warm December forces Olympic qualifying event to relocate out of Utah
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While fall temperatures have been stubbornly holding on into the winter, Kelly said cold temperatures could be just days away.
A cold front is forecast to reach the state by the weekend, with a possibility of snow by Saturday evening. Temperatures are also expected to drop into the twenties and thirties on Sunday and Monday, with potential highs sitting around or below freezing.
By Jake Goldstein-Street (Washington State Standard)
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Dec. 25, 2025 4:55 p.m.
A road is covered by floodwaters after heavy rains led to historic flooding in the region Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025, in Burlington, Wash.
Lindsey Wasson / AP
U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. declared a public health emergency Wednesday over this month’s flooding in Washington state.
The action from Kennedy, the head of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, is focused on helping meet the needs of Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries. As part of that, his agency is providing access to HHS emPOWER, which gives data on the number of Medicare enrollees reliant on medical equipment dependent on electricity and other health care services that could make them especially vulnerable to a disaster.
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The announcement could be a good sign for the state’s chances of getting a major disaster declaration from President Donald Trump to potentially open up tens of millions of dollars to deal with the flooding’s aftermath.
Gov. Bob Ferguson plans to ask for such a declaration in the coming weeks.
The flooding from heavy rain and overflowing rivers forced thousands of evacuations, breached multiple levees and damaged numerous highways. It still didn’t quite reach the levels some forecasts predicted. One person has been reported dead.
Kennedy’s order follows an emergency declaration from Trump that unlocked federal resources to respond to the storm.
John Knox, of the department’s Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, said in a statement that, “HHS stands ready to assist state and local response efforts in the state of Washington due to the potential health care impacts from severe storms.”
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Health and Human Services has also waived penalties for violating federal health privacy rules under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, for hospitals.
“With today’s declaration and waiver, HHS is helping ensure that residents in the storm’s path have continuous access to the care they need during and after this storm,” Knox said. “ASPR’s highly trained personnel are prepared to support state and local actions to save lives and protect the delivery of health care services.”
The federal Disaster Distress Helpline is also available for crisis counseling. The multilingual hotline, open 24 hours a day, can be reached via call or text at 1-800-985-5990.
The declaration is retroactive to Dec. 9.
A windstorm forecast to arrive in western Washington on Wednesday could exacerbate problems, as saturated soil from the recent rain could make trees and powerline poles especially susceptible to falling over. But the wind is now not expected to be as intense as predicted earlier this week.
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Meanwhile, Washington Attorney General Nick Brown filed a lawsuit with other states against Kennedy on Tuesday for his threats against gender-affirming care providers.
Brown called Kennedy’s move “as cruel and unnecessary as it is illegal, but consistent with an administration that puts politics above health.” It’s Washington’s 49th lawsuit against the federal government since Trump retook office in January.
Washington State Standard is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501(c)(3) public charity.
This republished story is part of OPB’s broader effort to ensure that everyone in our region has access to quality journalism that informs, entertains and enriches their lives. To learn more, visit opb.org/partnerships.
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(Lander, WY) – County 10 got an exclusive interview with the Man in Red himself this year, who recently stopped by the Wyoming Life Resource Center (WLRC) in Lander to spread some Christmas cheer, along with his furry elves Rylee and Aggie. Santa said that he was able to battle the Wyoming wind on his […]