Oregon
Driver killed after Volkswagen Jetta veers off I-205 near Milwaukie, Oregon, police say
CLACKAMAS COUNTY, OR — A 25-year-old West Linn woman was killed early Thursday when her car left Interstate 205 near Milwaukie and crashed into a tree and a fence, Oregon State Police said.
Troopers responded at 2:41 a.m. Thursday, June 11, 2026, to a single-vehicle fatal crash on northbound I-205 near milepost 13 in Clackamas County.
A preliminary investigation found a black Volkswagen Jetta driven by Sydney Rae Lewis, 25, was traveling northbound when it veered off the road for an unknown reason and struck a tree and a fence. Lewis was pronounced dead at the scene.
The highway was impacted for about three hours during the on-scene investigation.
Oregon State Police said they were assisted by the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office, Clackamas Fire District, the Clackamas County Medical Examiner’s Office and the Oregon Department of Transportation.
Oregon
How to participate in the ‘No Kings’ event in Salem this weekend
Watch as thousands rally in Salem for anti-Trump No Kings protests
An estimated 5,000 people rallied near the Oregon State Capitol for the third iteration of the global No Kings protests on March 28.
The next iteration of “No Kings” demonstrations will be held on June 14, Flag Day and the day of President Donald Trump’s birthday, when the White House is hosting a UFC event on the South Lawn.
The “No Kings” movement began in 2025, organizing and hosting protests against what organizers described as “tyranny and growing imbalances of power.” The first No Kings protests were held a year ago on June 14, 2025.
In Salem, the third and most recent No Kings Day drew thousands of people to the streets around the Oregon Capitol Mall on March 28. More than 100 demonstrations took place across the state that day.
On June 14, the movement is hosting a special livestream event of a 90-minute concert at The Town Hall in New York City titled “Rise Up, Sing Out: A Concert for the First Amendment” and hosted by the Committee for the First Amendment. The lineup for the concert includes Jane Fonda, Patti Smith, Bette Midler, Rufus Wainwright, Joy Reid, Wilson Cruz, Broadway Inspirational Voices and more.
The “90-minute concert event will celebrate the freedoms guaranteed by our First Amendment—of speech, religion, press, assembly, and protest—and the people power that both fuels these rights and is essential to guarantee them,” reads a description of the event.
Indivisible and No Kings are partnering with the Committee for the First Amendment to “counter the president’s spectacle,” said the No Kings website.
Salem Region Indivisible is hosting a watch party at the First Congregational United Church of Christ in Salem, with free refreshments from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Salem Region Indivisible is also hosting another protest on July 4 to “reclaim Independence Day and our flag,” the group said. The July 4 protest will be held at the Oregon State Capitol. Participants are asked to bring their own picnic and peacefully protest.
To find an Oregon event near you, visit the No Kings website.
Dianne Lugo covers the Oregon Legislature and equity issues. Reach her at dlugo@statesmanjournal.com on X @DianneLugo or Bluesky @diannelugo.bsky.social
Oregon
1 dead after small plane crashes into field near Twin Oaks Airpark in Hillsboro
HILLSBORO, Ore. — Officials confirm one person is dead after a small plane crashed into a field near the Twin Oaks Airpark in Hillsboro, Ore., on Friday evening.
No other details were released about the deceased individual or the type of aircraft involved. The Washington County Medical Examiner is on the scene. There were no other reports of injuries or deaths.
The crash sparked a grass fire that then spread to a nearby field. The fire has since been extinguished.
Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue (TVF&R) crews responded to the airpark along Southwest River Road outside of Hillsboro in Washington County.
Investigators with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) have been called to the scene to take over the investigation.
Westbound traffic is closed on River Road from Scholls Ferry past Twin Oaks Airport, according to TVF&R.
The Twin Oaks Airpark is home to flight training programs.
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KATU News has a crew heading to the scene; this story will be updated.
Oregon
Farm groups oppose Oregon recycling fees with ‘no public oversight’ | Capital Press
Farm groups oppose Oregon recycling fees with ‘no public oversight’
Published 8:00 am Friday, June 12, 2026
Agriculture groups claim an Oregon program meant to increase recycling of product packaging is eating into farm profits and want state regulators to suspend its enforcement.
Lawmakers passed the state’s “Recycling Modernization Act” in 2021 but it only became effective last year and critics argue its implementation has been “lackluster.”
Certain growers and other product producers are required to raise money through fees to ensure their packaging materials are recycled under the program.
But the Oregon Farm Bureau and the Oregonians for Food and Shelter agribusiness group argue the fees are set by a “third-party entity” using a “confidential, proprietary methodology” with “no government accountability.”
“There’s no public oversight over who is getting charged how much, or what the overall budget should be,” said Katie Murray, executive director of Oregonians for Food and Shelter. “It’s not how our members should be paying into a regulatory program.”
A designated “producer responsibility organization” — the Circular Action Alliance nonprofit — sets the fee formula, which lacks transparency and doesn’t protect farmers from “arbitrary or unrecoverable costs,” according to the agriculture groups.
A representative of the Circular Action Alliance was not available for comment as of press time.
Farmers who pack their own crops, such as berries, are subject to the fees directly, but they also may end up paying more for inputs, such as pesticides, whose manufacturers are also subject to the fees, Murray said.
“Growers are going to get hit from multiple directions for multiple stacked-up fees from this program,” she said.
Proponents of the Recycling Modernization Act, which passed as Senate Bill 582 five years ago, argued that it’s an extension of the same approach that Oregon uses for recycling cans and bottles, which also initially faced resistance but has since been widely embraced.
“Polls show that our constituents support recycling and are not happy with the current status,” said former Sen. Lee Beyer, D-Springfield. “They don’t like the idea of their recycling going into the dump. This bill begins to address those concerns.”
The program’s opponents counter that farmers oftentimes already contribute to recycling efforts, such as with clamshell containers for berries that incorporate recycled materials, so the fees are duplicative of those efforts.
“The fees could exceed what the average berry farmer earns in a year, putting some farms at risk of closure and driving up food costs for Oregon families,” said Lauren Kuenzi, government and political affairs director for the Oregon Farm Bureau, during a legislative hearing earlier this year.
Farm groups asked lawmakers to exempt certain packaging for berries and meat from the fees earlier this year, which was opposed by the program’s supporters, who argued it would saddle other manufacturers with higher costs.
That proposed exemption, House Bill 4030, was approved by the House Climate, Energy and Environment Committee but ended up dying in the House Rules Committee earlier this year.
Meanwhile, the National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors filed a lawsuit against the program last year and in February won an injunction blocking Oregon’s Department of Environmental Quality from enforcing the program against its members.
A federal judge approved that preliminary injunction after finding the lawsuit raised “serious questions” about the merits of the plaintiff’s arguments and determining there’s a “likelihood of irreparable injury” from the program.
A five-day trial in the case is scheduled for July 13, so critics want Oregon regulators to “pause” its enforcement more broadly at least until the matter of the program’s legality is cleared up.
“Place the program on hold until the courts can make a ruling,” Murray said.
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