Oregon
College football preview: Red River Rivalry, Ohio State-Oregon and more ahead of Week 7
Week 7 is here as we look toward some exciting conference matchups this weekend that you won’t want to miss.
The Red River Rivalry game is Saturday as No. 1 Texas will face No. 18 Oklahoma at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. In just his second career start, Oklahoma’s true freshman quarterback Michael Hawkins Jr. will be making history. Oklahoma has won four of the past five Red River Rivalry games, but will Hawkins’ poise be enough to take down its top-ranked opponent?
No. 3 Oregon and No. 2 Ohio State will face-off as conference opponents for the first time this weekend, but this isn’t their first time playing against each other. Ten years ago, Ohio State leaned on its third-string quarterback to rally the Buckeyes after injuries rocked the team at the position. Ohio State and Oregon met in the national championship game that year and the Buckeyes’ third-string quarterback did indeed step up.
Our college football experts preview big games and storylines to know about and share quotes of the week ahead of Week 7.
Jump to a section:
Ohio State-Oregon | Red River Rivalry | Get to know your new conference enemy
Quotes of the Week
How Cardale Jones stepped up when the Buckeyes needed him most
Safety Tyvis Powell remembered “all the oxygen” evaporating from Ohio Stadium when J.T. Barrett couldn’t get up with a fractured right ankle. Tailback Ezekiel Elliott called it a “shock” seeing Ohio State’s quarterback get carted off the field against Michigan a decade ago.
“J.T. was having a crazy season,” Elliott said. “He probably would’ve won the Heisman.”
The Buckeyes had already lost star quarterback Braxton Miller in the preseason to shoulder surgery. With the season on the line, Barrett was headed for surgery, too.
“It was like, ‘Oh man, here we go again,’” Powell said. “We overcame the Braxton [injury], which was hard enough. We finally got this train rolling and boom, we get hit by another quarterback injury.”
Powell, Elliott and the Buckeyes felt devastated. But they also knew their third-string quarterback, Cardale Jones, owned a rocket arm.
“I don’t know if I’ve played with a quarterback with a stronger arm,” Elliott said. “We knew he had all the tools. We just hadn’t seen it yet.”
Saturday in Eugene, Ohio State visits Oregon in their first showdown as Big Ten rivals — 10 years after facing off for the national title in Arlington, Texas, where Jones and fourth-seeded Ohio State completed an unlikely championship season.
“The closest person to do what Cardale did was a fictional character by the name of Steamin’ Willie Beamen,” said Powell, referring to the Miami Sharks backup quarterback played by Jamie Foxx in the 1999 film “Any Given Sunday.”
With Jones, the Buckeyes didn’t miss a beat. They finished off Michigan, then annihilated Wisconsin 59-0 for the Big Ten championship, to slip into the inaugural four-team playoff. They stunned Alabama in the Sugar Bowl semifinal 42-35. Then, they took down Oregon 42-20 for the national championship. Over those three games, Jones passed for 742 yards, rushed for another 90 and totaled six touchdowns.
“I knew the expectations. I knew the culture we developed,” said Jones, who, until Barrett’s injury, had never played a meaningful snap. “Everybody was expected to do their job, and that’s how they treated me, from the coaching staff on down. No one babied me, no one tried to walk me into things. It was, ‘Hey, you know your f—ing job, let’s do it.”
Powell realized Jones meant business when he got home from class the Monday after the Michigan game. Powell usually found his roommate playing Call of Duty in the living room. That evening, Jones was at the football facility studying film with then offensive coordinator Tom Herman.
“That was a calming thing, like ‘Oh, you’re locked in,’” Powell said. “At that point, I knew we’re going to be fine.”
Later that week, Herman compiled a highlight tape of Jones’ best plays from Cleveland Glenville High School and showed it to him.
“He wanted to make sure I was reassured that hey, I belong here,” Jones said, “and that I have all the ability in the world to help us.”
Barrett kept telling him the same: “You’re here for a reason.”
After thumping Wisconsin, the Buckeyes didn’t gather to watch ESPN’s playoff selection show. In fact, Jones was driving home to Cleveland when he started getting texts and calls from teammates and coaches, telling him Ohio State had jumped TCU and Baylor, to secure the selection committee’s coveted No. 4 seed.
Ohio State fell behind No. 1 Alabama early in their semifinal matchup. But in the second half on third-and-long situation, Jones lofted a 47-yard touchdown strike to Devin Smith to give the Buckeyes their first lead. They never handed it back.
Against Oregon in the title game, Jones kept on completing big passes, matching the play of Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota. Along with a stingy defense — highlighted by Powell’s fourth-down, goal-line stuff — and Elliott’s relentless rushing, the underdog Buckeyes rolled past the Ducks.
Elliott, who ran for 246 yards and four touchdowns, earned offensive MVP title game honors. Powell, who also had the game-ending interception against Alabama, was named defensive MVP. And Jones, in just a little over three games, cemented an Ohio State legacy. — Jake Trotter
The presence of Oklahoma’s Michael Hawkins Jr.
Dontonio Jordan is the founder of 940 Elite, a Denton, Texas-based, 7-on-7 program. And before Michael Hawkins Jr. started eluding SEC defenders, Jordan chased the young quarterback for the better part of two years.
It took until the spring of 2023 for Jordan to finally get Hawkins to join his team for a training session. When Hawkins stepped onto the turf, Jordan needed all of two minutes to identify the young quarterback’s poise, the same aura Hawkins has oozed since taking over as No. 18 Oklahoma’s starter against Tennessee on Sept. 21.
“I saw it before he even tied his shoes,” Jordan, who played wide receiver at Stanford from 2012 to 2015, told ESPN. “I trained with Andrew Luck and I played with Christian McCaffrey. Guys like that have a certain energy. They don’t even try to do it. It’s just their presence. And Mike Hawkins has that kind of presence.”
Hawkins’ composure, as well as his propensity for hurling himself into and over opposing defenders, has defined a brief, yet bright start to life as Oklahoma’s quarterback. At the Cotton Bowl on Saturday, 38 miles from the high school field where Jordan first worked with Hawkins, the Sooners’ freshman will make Red River Rivalry history against No. 1 Texas.
Hawkins will become the first Oklahoma true freshman quarterback to start against the Longhorns in the 120-game lore of this bitter rivalry, in the same Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex where he once tormented opposing high school defenses and learned to throw under the tutelage of Kyler Murray’s father.
“It means a lot just going to a big stage,” Hawkins said last week. “It’s my first time playing in this stadium and against this team, too. So this is a big moment for me.”
Murmurs of Hawkins’ immediate promise and maturity flowed out of the Sooners’ spring and fall camps earlier this year. But ESPN’s No. 7 dual-threat quarterback in the 2024 class only took center stage after Brent Venables pulled Jackson Arnold before halftime against Tennessee last month, benching the former five-star passer just five games after handing him the reins. Hawkins’s composure showed when he steadied Oklahoma in an eventual 25-15 loss to the Volunteers. A week later, when Hawkins made his first career start at Auburn, his poise overflowed during an 11-point, fourth-quarter comeback, which Hawkins flourished by careening into the end zone on a pivotal, late-game 2-point conversion.
“He’s a guy to bet on just from a maturity, process-driven, consistency [standpoint],” Venables said of Hawkins this week. “How he handles tough moments … he’s got a lot of really good qualities that maybe sometimes a younger player doesn’t have.”
Those qualities quickly became clear to Jordan. From that initial training session, Hawkins joined 940 Elite, and soon, he was a commanding presence within the 7-on-7 program that has produced players such as Cincinnati quarterback Brendan Sorsby, Texas Tech freshman All-American linebacker Ben Roberts, Arizona State wide receiver Jordyn Tyson and a handful of Hawkins’ Oklahoma teammates, including defenders Peyton Bowen and Eli Bowen and tight end Davon Mitchell.
At Frisco Emerson High School, where Hawkins transferred for his senior season after three years at Allen High School, head coach Kendall Miller saw Hawkins’ traits, too. Beyond the physical tools that powered Hawkins’ 4,211 all-purpose yards and 55 touchdowns in 2023, Miller saw something special in the maturity of the quarterback who led Emerson to the 5A state semifinal in his lone season at the school.
“He had the same demeanor in the semifinal as he did in Game 1,” Miller said. “I think he’s just got something inside of him. If I could just find what he has, I’d go get some of it and give it to a lot of other guys.”
Before he became Oklahoma’s freshman quarterback, Hawkins’ poise was a driving force of his game. When he steps onto one of college football’s biggest stages Saturday, it may be his greatest asset. — Eli Lederman
Get to know your new conference enemy
These two programs are not totally unfamiliar with each other. In 2017, James Franklin and Penn State held a 14-point lead heading into the fourth quarter of the Rose Bowl Game. USC then scored 17 points, including a game-winning field goal in the final seconds to win one of the most thrilling versions of the bowl game in recent years.
Now, seven years later, the No. 4 Nittany Lions are headed back to the West Coast to face the Trojans again, this time as a conference opponent.
The Trojans are 1-0 (beat Wisconsin) in home games against Big Ten opponents and 0-2 on the road (lost to Michigan and Minnesota).
The Nittany Lions have one of the best defenses and USC’s offense has looked overpowered in the trenches when facing tougher opponents, which has, in turn, asked a lot of its improved but not flawless defense. This is not exactly the kind of get right game that the Trojans needed after a brutal loss in Minnesota. But it also may be the kind of trap game that Franklin’s team needs to avoid on its quest for a playoff spot.
As Lincoln Riley explained recently, Big Ten games have had fewer possessions and are slower paced than what he and the Trojans are accustomed. Franklin and Penn State, perhaps more than most teams, thrive in such games.
Riley has argued that the Trojans are two plays away from being 5-0. On one hand, that’s not necessarily wrong. On the other, they have allowed themselves to lose two games because of two plays. Whether it’s the slower-paced games with fewer plays, the physicality or simply the travel, USC has struggled to perform. It dropped being ranked No. 11 to unranked after its most recent loss.
This week, the task won’t be any easier. The Trojans will need a win to keep any slim playoff or conference hopes alive. — Paolo Uggetti
Quotes of the week
“[They’re] not a measuring stick for myself or for this program. Their success doesn’t have anything to do with ours. And their lack of success doesn’t have anything to do with ours. So we’re focused on us — the things that we can control. We compete on the field once a season, and it’s a big game, always is.” — Oklahoma coach Brent Venables, on whether his job is more difficult when Texas is riding high.
“I’m buddies with him. He’s a good guy. … Man, he’s a good player. He can sling it. Ball comes out of his hand well. … He’s a dude, for sure. I’m excited to go against him in this big matchup.” — Ohio State quarterback Will Howard, on facing former Big 12 rival and Oregon QB Dillon Gabriel. The two previously faced each other when Howard was at Kansas State and Gabriel at Oklahoma.
“One of the things I think we have to discuss is increasing the size of the runway here and the size of the airport for a lot of reasons, for the university, for the community, for businesses, and for the athletic department. You’re talking about adding another two hours on top of your flight. … That’s pretty much a whole day.” — James Franklin, on Penn State having to drive to Harrisburg to be able to fly across the country to Los Angeles and face new Big Ten member USC.
Oregon
Oregon Lottery Pick 4 results for March 29
The Oregon Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at March 29, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Pick 4 numbers from March 29 drawing
1PM: 2-8-1-3
4PM: 2-8-1-3
7PM: 1-9-8-1
10PM: 2-7-4-3
Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
When are the Oregon Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 7:59 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 7:59 p.m. on Tuesday and Friday.
- Pick 4: 1 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. daily.
- Win for Life: 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Megabucks: 7:29 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by an Oregon editor. You can send feedback using this form.
Oregon
John Day, Oregon: Camel population — 2 – East Oregonian
JOHN DAY — Grant County’s camel population doubled on March 20.
That’s when Hilde, the county’s famous 1,700-pound Bactrian camel, gave birth to Cora.
Talyn and Tabitha Elliott brought Hilde to the county about a year ago. The Elliotts didn’t know it at the time, but Hilde was beginning her 13-month-long gestation period with Cora before she arrived in John Day from Oklahoma.
“What happened is, Hilde was in a field with other female camels and a bull, and she wasn’t supposed to have her first heat until spring,” Talyn said. “She went into heat a year early, and the camel rancher knew she’d gone into heat but wasn’t sure if she’d actually been bred.”
Talyn said it became apparent to Tabitha last summer that Hilde was pregnant, but he was skeptical. In the end, Tabitha was proven correct.
What followed was a gestation period that stretched through the summer, winter and into the springtime, ending with Cora’s birth March 20 on the hill behind the Elliots’ home up West Bench Road.
Talyn said Cora was between 65 and 105 pounds when she was born.
Proud mom
Hilde conducted a sort of official introduction of Cora on March 22 to drivers along West Bench Road, Talyn said, bringing her into the front yard to “show her off” to passersby. Hilde attracted attention from passing cars along the same road, and Cora was no different.
“She’s already getting a lot of socialization for sure,” Talyn said.
Interacting with Cora behind the Elliots’ fence makes one thing apparent — Hilde is never far away.
She’s not threatening or intimidating, and she’ll let people get close to pet the baby — if Cora doesn’t eagerly approach the visitors first.
Talyn said as Cora gets older and larger, Hilde likely will be less protective. For now, Hilde and the occasional grunt she unleashes to remind people that she’s a watchful mom can be expected.
Hilde will nurse Cora for about a year. After that, Cora will move on to the alfalfa, grass hay, rose bushes, thistles and other plants that make up Hilde’s diet.
Hilde is 75% Bactrian, the two-humped camel variety, and Cora’s dad is 100% Bactrian, meaning Cora will have two prominent humps, just like her parents. Her coat will remain white, but its silver patches and streaks will become more prominent as she grows.
Future plans
Talyn called Cora’s birth a welcome surprise and was ecstatic the calf was white instead of Hilde’s traditional brown.
Talyn and Tabitha’s two children, ages 14 and 12, were excited as well.
“They were just kind of in awe of the baby; it was cool,” Talyn said. “They didn’t know what to think at first, and then they just started loving on her, and it was cute.”
Talyn said he hopes to get Cora “excellently trained.” He’s already been picking up the calf’s feet to help her walk better.
The goal is to have Hilde and Cora walk in a line behind Talyn while he makes one of his famous walks through town.
There may be interest to breed Hilde again, but Talyn said that can’t be done for at least two years, so he doesn’t have any plans to do so yet.
“I probably will want to have a little herd of camels,” he said, “but I’m not in any hurry to breed her again.”
For now, Talyn welcomes anybody who wants to make the trip up West Bench Road in John Day to stop by and catch a glimpse of Cora. He asks that visitors stay outside the fence to interact with young camel.
Those who want to keep up with Hilde and Cora can follow hildethecamel on Instagram.
Oregon
How did a small Oregon town become a hub for industrial development?
What to know about Millersburg’s economic development
Millersburg is an attractive place for big companies to build new facilities, making the small town a hub for economic development.
Ball Corporation, Timberlab, ATI and Gordon Truck Centers are pouring a combined $500 million, at least, to build manufacturing plants and other businesses in Millersburg.
That’s the kind of economic development any city would love. Large employers bring jobs and an expanded tax base, among other benefits.
In a city of 3,000 like Millersburg, just south of Salem, those numbers make a major impact.
While some governments get “caught up in red tape and rule books” that make development difficult, Linn County Commissioner Roger Nyquist said, Millersburg city leaders welcome businesses.
“How can we get to yes for you on this?” Nyquist said.
When Millersburg uses the slogan “We Are Open for Business” on its website, it’s not just a line.
Millersburg’s low taxes, large tracts of developable land and easy access to Interstate 5 and rail service have made it popular for businesses. Few cities along Oregon’s predominant north-south arterial highway have experienced the city’s level of industrial growth, and certainly none of its size.
“What the difference is that attitude is from our council,” former City Manager Kevin Krietman said. “I will tell you that historically Millersburg has always had a council that understands the value of the industrial base and protecting that industrial base and growing that base for the benefit of the community.”
Millersburg was incorporated in 1974 to keep taxes low
The town was established as Millers Station in 1871 when a rail station was built for the Southern Pacific Railroad. It became a large shipping point for cattle in the 1880s and renamed Millersburg around 1900.
The U.S. Bureau of Mines established a facility to produce zirconium there in the 1940s. That plant was sold to Wah Chang and the company produced metals including hafnium, tantalum and niobium. The company was later renamed Teledyne Wah Chang and it became a Superfund site.
The environmental clean-up took 20 years.
The Willamette Kraft Corporation built a paper mill along one of the two rail lines that cut through it in 1952 to process wood chips into kraft paper. When it was owned by Weyerhaeuser, the plant was known for a smell reminiscent of rotting cabbage that greeted people driving by it on I-5.
“That was the smell of money, man,” Nyquist said.
Millersburg incorporated as a city in 1974, partially so businesses and residents could avoid being annexed into Albany and pay that city’s higher property taxes.
About a third of the city’s land was designated for residential development, which left lots of room for industrial and commercial growth.
International Paper created new urgency in attracting industry
The paper mill closed for good in 2009 and cost 270 workers their jobs. It was then owned by International Paper and torn down by 2012.
At the time of its closure, the mill was paying about $2.6 million per year in property taxes, the most in Linn County.
“We lost a lot of jobs,” Millersburg Mayor Scott Cowan said. “And so that was a big impact, and then of course as that sort of was the immediate situation once that news got out was of course the financial impact to the city was by the franchise fees and taxes from the IP property, we felt that.”
The loss of that revenue was significant to the taxing districts — officials had to find ways to replace the revenue to pay for city services and road repair, for example.
Millersburg didn’t levy a property tax for its first 40 years because the city earned enough money from franchise fees to pay for basic city services. It now charges the maximum $3.50 per $1,000 of assessed value. Most of that goes to contracted fire and sheriff’s services.
The city long tried to attract businesses to fill the gap left by International Paper.
In 2008, Peak Sun Silicon broke ground on a 10,000-square-foot building where it would employ 500 people to product an ingredient in solar cells.
The state foreclosed on the property when Peak Sun defaulted on a $14 million loan in 2012.
In 2019, the state gave $25 million to Linn County to build an intermodal facility on a portion of the former International Paper property.
That project cost $35 million, but has never operated.
Why companies are building in Millersburg now
When Timberlab was looking to build a new facility to manufacture mass timber, the company considered locations around the Willamette Valley including Independence and Corvallis, President Chris Evans said.
Then Timberlab found a 33.5-acre site in Millersburg. The location had challenges. It had a fish bearing stream, needed an entry road and the main connecting road to Old Salem Highway was under construction.
Still, Timberlab purchased the land from the city and expects to complete its first building this year. That project will bring an estimated 100 jobs to Millersburg.
Gov. Tina Kotek, who attended the March 2025 groundbreaking, said Oregon is “leading the way” in mass timber and pointed to the new roof at the Portland International Airport terminal.
“The city really facilitated taking a lot of the issues out of the sites here, so they could invite somebody into the community and have a quicker turnaround to have something rezoned from agricultural to industrial,” Evans said at the facility’s groundbreaking.
That will include a 185,000 square foot manufacturing facility and it has plans for 85,000 and 126,000 square foot buildings in the future.
Companies that build in Millersburg reap the same tax rewards as its citizens.
Property owners in Millersburg pay a combined tax rate of $15.61 cents per $1,000 of assessed value, one of the lowest rates in the state for a city that offers the services that Millersburg does.
A company building a $100 million facility can save over $1 million per year on property taxes compared to other cities if it builds in Millersburg.
The money brought in from taxes and fees also means residents don’t have to worry about being barraged with bonds and levies from the city.
“But don’t worry, our residents still complain about our taxes,” city manager Janelle Booth said.
Companies like Timberlab also get a tax break by building in enterprise zones, areas designated for large-scale industrial development by the state.
Enterprise zone projects have to meet requirements including a minimum investment cost, employee count and must pay workers between 130% and 150% of the county’s average wage.
Businesses are also exempt from paying property taxes on capital improvements for three to five years. In a rural enterprise zone, such as the one in Millersburg, businesses could be exempt from paying taxes on those improvements for up to 15 years.
In the meantime, the city will still benefit from the Timberlab development as it collects franchise fees from the company. Millersburg received nearly $1.2 million per year from Pacific Power last year, and that will go up with more power being used by Timberlab and Ball Corporation.
That money pays for basic city services like roads, parks and city administration.
“We’re looking at it for that long-term benefit, too,” Booth said.
Infrastructure investments make economic development possible
Millersburg has invested heavily in infrastructure that benefits residents and businesses. The city shares water filtration and wastewater treatment facilities with Albany.
Pacific Power owns and runs a regional operations center in the southern part of the city.
Millersburg city leaders convinced Pacific Power to build a new substation on Conser Road across the street from the Jefferson Fire Department station in 2024. That provides large industrial users with plenty of electricity for whatever they plan to build.
Several large parcels inside the city limits were zoned industrial and never developed. Over the years, Millersburg acquired several of those parcels for free or close to it.
To spur economic development, the city took an active approach in marketing the industrial properties.
The city updated its comprehensive plan in 2020, which essentially served as a sales brochure for prospective development.
“That’s an incentive that we can have with the industries to encourage them to come in,” Kreitman said. “We went through and we put together a presentation and the state asked us to come and talk about it for other communities to look at. It’s really helped us.”
The city council opted to be selective which companies it would sell properties to. For example, they chose not to sell land for warehouses that employ few people.
“As the property owner, the price of the property is one of our tools to get what we want in here,” Booth said.
The city still owns about 70 acres of flat, undeveloped land that is zoned industrial.
Ball Corporation development leads to interest from others
Cowan said Ball Corporation’s plans to build a plant helped spur much of the new economic development in the city.
“We heard about another company that was interested, but it was a lot of this loose interest and no one really serious until Ball came along,” Cowan said. “That really was a big one.”
Ball Corporation’s facility could be larger than 500,000 square feet when it’s finished, according to city planning documents, but will be smaller to start, Kreitman said.
It is unclear how many jobs the Ball facility will provide once it’s finished. The company did not respond to requests for comment from the Statesman Journal.
Center Market is planning a new 5,200 square foot building for its store and offices. Pure Energy is build a 7,480 square foot building.
Several businesses have announced plans for the former International Paper property.
Aymium, formerly known as National Carbon Technologies, signed a 16-year lease on 22 acres in 2022 to build a plant that uses carbon products to produce things like filters. Linn County approved a pause in that lease in 2025.
“And if they don’t go forward, we’ve got, guess what, flat land available at a reasonable price in close proximity to I-5 and rail,” Nyquist said.
In 2024, Omni Energy agreed to lease the site to transfer biodiesel from train to trucks. That still hasn’t happened.
“It’s going to take some infrastructure investment,” Nyquist said. “The operators want to work out a longer-term lease to justify that investment, and so that’s what we’re working on today.”
Corvallis-based Samaritan hospitals owns a 2.3-acre plot of land in the north part of the city at the intersection of Old Salem Highway and the I-5 interchange.
The hospital system planned to build a regional medical center when it purchased the property for $1 million, according to city documents.
“While we do not have definitive plans for that property at this time, we do consider it a very important asset that can help us meet community health needs as Millersburg and surrounding areas continue to grow,” Larissa Balzer, vice president of strategy and planning at Samaritan Health Services, said in a statement.
Millersburg still lacking in commercial, residential development
While Millersburg has a lot of industrial development, it lacks commercial businesses.
Humpty’s Dump Bar & Grill and Oregon Barbecue Company are among the few commercial properties in town.
The Love’s Travel Stop just off the North Millersburg exit, which opened in 2018, is the city’s most recent commercial development.
The city owns about 8 acres along Old Salem Highway between the new fire station, which the city built for $5 million in 2023, and Center Market. It has designated that for commercial development.
Unlike many small Oregon cities, Millersburg doesn’t have a downtown.
“We’re hoping to create one,” Booth said.
The city also lacks affordable housing. The only houses for sale in Millersburg are advertised for over $500,000. There are no apartments or multi-family housing.
“That is the constant feedback we hear from our community and our council and our planning commission, 10,000 square foot lots is the hill to die on for our folks,” Booth said.
There are a couple large parcels of undeveloped property zoned for residential development in the city limits. The city had significant housing growth until 2023, when the last parcel of developable land in the city limits was built on.
City leaders say they can’t expand the urban growth boundary to the north or west because of the prime farmland in those areas.
The city is looking to expand to the east side of I-5 at a long-hoped-for new interchange for more commercial and high-density residential growth.
Millersburg also owns land it intends to use for a YMCA building and a school, something the city hasn’t had since the last one closed in 1983.
“Last we knew, they are very interested in getting something in here,” Booth said.
Bill Poehler covers Marion and Polk County for the Statesman Journal. Contact him at bpoehler@StatesmanJournal.com
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