Oregon
Oregon program that trains rural adults to combat child sexual abuse shows success, study finds
A big-scale effort to coach adults in rural Oregon to stop and detect little one sexual abuse has confirmed extremely efficient at getting contributors to take concrete steps to maintain kids secure, an outdoor analysis reveals.
This system, Defend Our Youngsters, has supplied one-time coaching to greater than 40,000 adults, primarily in rural Oregon and one Northern California county, in addition to twice-yearly refreshers for leaders from all 17 taking part nonprofits. Individuals primarily work for or volunteer with youth-serving organizations or have been provided coaching by certainly one of them of their neighborhood.
Comply with-up surveys of greater than 10,000 adults who underwent coaching discovered that, even 18 months later, they reported taking eight concrete actions to cut back the chances of kid abuse or to detect {that a} little one wanted safety from an abuser, in accordance with an analysis by the College of Oregon’s Heart for the Prevention of Abuse and Neglect. That was greater than twice as many steps as randomly chosen Oregon adults reported taking to guard kids from abuse.
A lot of this system’s success, contributors reported, was that adults felt the necessity to break the code of silence and disgrace round abuse. Individuals reported a willingness to speak to kids instantly about physique components, private zones and their proper to say no to undesirable touching and to reply brazenly to kids’s questions on our bodies, intercourse and associated subjects, the analysis mentioned.
Individuals who underwent the coaching additionally have been sensitized to the necessity to decrease alternatives for adults or older kids of their neighborhood to have secluded one-on-one time with younger kids, whether or not at soccer apply, Sunday faculty, music classes or at college, mentioned Mary Ratliff, this system’s mission director.
Simple options, she mentioned, embody requiring academics assembly one-on-one with a pupil of their school rooms to maintain a door open, asking a dad or mum who picks up the second-to-last little one at a soccer apply to remain till the final little one is picked up and guaranteeing that teams of youngsters, not a lone little one, use a public toilet that’s out of the sightline of coaches.
This system, launched in 2015 and funded by the Ford Household Basis in Roseburg, chosen a nationwide video-based coaching curriculum, Stewards of Youngsters, as its core coaching.
Facilitators at taking part nonprofits present the movies, then lead structured group discussions which might be the guts of the coaching, Ratliff mentioned. Altogether, these classes usually final 2 ½ to a few hours.
Initially, adults who underwent the coaching have been primarily staff and volunteers at youth-serving nonprofits corresponding to reduction nurseries, Boys & Women Golf equipment and kids’s advocacy facilities, which concentrate on evaluating kids who report having been abused. However finally these companies subsequently reached out to neighborhood members together with enterprise leaders, educators and members of homes of worship to supply them the coaching as effectively, Ratliff mentioned.
The biggest classes of people that reported present process coaching work in public faculties, determine as members of a faith-based neighborhood or work in social service organizations, the analysis discovered.
The coaching began in 2016 in 11 rural communities. Lately, this system has expanded to incorporate nonprofits in Oregon Metropolis, Salem, Gladstone and Portland, the analysis famous. Free or minimal price coaching is now obtainable in 27 of Oregon’s 36 counties, and people who need to participate can discover their county’s contact at www.protectourchildren.org/sources.
New neighborhood expectations this system has created amongst grownup bystanders in small cities are essential, the analysis discovered.
“We’ve made it a social norm,” Ratliff mentioned, “for somebody to say, ‘Jimmy appears to be like like he doesn’t need to be tickled, let’s cease that and transfer on.’” Lecturers have been empowered to talk up, she mentioned, if a colleague meets behind a closed door with a pupil, she mentioned. “They’ll say, ‘Hey, open door coverage! Thanks!’”
Starting final yr, this system shifted from being a mission below contract with the Roseburg-based basis to an unbiased one affiliated with nonprofit accelerator Tides for administrative help.
Toby Luther, CEO of Roseburg-based timber firm Lone Rock Assets and chair of the Ford Household Basis board, mentioned the inspiration stays “as dedicated as ever” to supporting Defend Our Youngsters because it expands to do extra little one abuse prevention work. “Seeing the impacts of our funding so far has been highly effective … how tens of 1000’s of rural of us have joined Defend Our Youngsters and are actually carrying on the dialog throughout our area,” Luther mentioned.
The Ford Household Basis has pumped $7 million into this system over seven years, and Ratliff and basis leaders are satisfied of its worth, Ratliff mentioned.
She cited the instance of 1 nonprofit that educated adults on pink flags {that a} little one could have been abused. She mentioned one of many trainees virtually instantly reported, “I see these indicators in my neighbor’s little one.”
The newly educated particular person referred to as the subsequent day to ask state little one welfare investigators to examine on the kid, Ratliff mentioned. Staff concluded the abuse allegations have been true, eliminated the kid from the house and arrested the abuser, she mentioned. The kid was promptly taken to a toddler advocacy heart and supplied remedy “shortly thereafter,” she mentioned.
“Each penny spent is value it as a result of we all know no less than one little one for a truth has been reported to correct authorities, the abuse stopped for that little one and so they started their therapeutic journey,” she mentioned. “That’s what fuels my hearth.”
– Betsy Hammond; betsyhammond@oregonian.com; @ORPolEds
Oregon
Second man dies after being washed out to sea by king tides on Oregon Coast
King tides on the Oregon Coast 2025
People travel to the Oregon Coast to watch the king tides.
A Happy Valley man died Wednesday after being washed out to sea by abnormally high tides just south of Depoe Bay.
It’s the second fatal incident blamed on the so-called “king tides” — the largest tides of the season — this winter.
Hong B Su, 45, was fishing on the rocks of the shoreline at the north end of Otter Crest Loop when he was “washed out to sea by a wave” at roughly 2:04 p.m., according to Oregon State Police.
Su was in the water for approximately 39 minutes before he was recovered by the United States Coast Guard. He was pronounced deceased when he reached the Depoe Bay Coast Guard station.
The tides were near their highest level of the month on Wednesday. The peak of the king tides was recorded on Jan. 12 at 9.84 feet in Newport, and on the day Su was swept into the sea, Jan. 15, they were just a bit lower at 9.33 feet, according to the National Weather Service. On Friday, high tide was under 8 feet. King tides is an unofficial term for the highest tides of the year.
In December, a 72-year-old North Bend man who went to photograph the king tides at the beach also died after apparently being swept into the surf. His body was recovered nearly a month later in Haynes Inlet.
Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Oregon for 16 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Podcast. He can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or (503) 399-6801. Find him on X at @ZachsORoutdoors.
Oregon
What Gonzaga’s Mark Few said after loss vs. Oregon State
Putting the ball in the basket didn’t seem to be a problem for Gonzaga during Thursday night’s battle with Oregon State in Corvallis, Oregon.
The issue for the Bulldogs (14-5, 5-1 WCC), however, was on the other end of the floor. Led by 29 points from Michael Rataj and 20 from Nate Kingz, the Beavers (14-4, 4-2 WCC) made 58.5% of their field goal attempts to outlast the Zags in a 97-89 overtime final from Gill Coliseum.
“[Oregon State] made shots and [isolated] guys and posted us,” Gonzaga head coach Mark Few said of the Beavers’ attack strategy after the game. “And when we did guard them well, they hit some tough shots [and] some tough pull-ups.”
Here’s more from Few after the loss.
On Gonzaga’s struggles defensively against Oregon State:
“We played really, really good offense. We just could not get consistent stops for longer stretches. Came out in the second half with more intensity on the defensive end. [The Beavers] were still able to get some tough shots. I mean they had some real backbreakers, the bank 3 and contested 3. Even when we did play good defense, they were able to knock in some really tough shots. You almost have to play perfect on offense when you’re playing defense like that.”
On Graham Ike’s big night:
“He was great. Graham was terrific. He delivered time and time again in a high-level game against a very good, physical, big postman. You know, you also got a guard at the other end too. So again, our offense wasn’t the problem — our defense was at pretty much all five spots.”
On the positives the Bulldogs can take from the loss:
“We competed, great environment, fought, dug our way back in after our slow start; played some good ball there in the middle of the second half. We just had a couple of possessions, I think we missed a lay-up on one of those; and then again, just not even some of the stops, we foul a lot off the ball. We fouled on the ball. They were able to get critical free throws when they were in the bonus, and you just can’t do that.”
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Oregon
Oregon State Men’s Hoops Stuns Gonzaga, 97-89 in OT
For the first time in 34 years, Gonzaga brought its men’s basketball team to Gill Coliseum.
Over nine thousand Beavers & Bulldogs fans joined them. The first sellout crowd for a Gill Coliseum men’s basketball game in five years got their money’s worth tonight: an overtime thriller that ended in a court-storming.
In the first four minutes, Oregon State raced ahead. A long-range elbow jumper from Demarco Minor gave Oregon State a 4 point edge, and then Nate Kingz stole a Gonzaga pass, drew a foul, and sank two free throws. At the first timeout, Oregon State led 13-7.
Gonzaga slashed the margin to 1 on a Ryan Nembhard wide open three-pointer, after two Oregon State defenders collided. Then, a Bulldogs’ fastbreak bucket after a Michael Rataj miss gifted Gonzaga their first lead of the night.
Teams traded buckets for the next few minutes. With 7:59 remaining, Josiah Lake stole a cross-court pass from Ryan Nembhard and flew down the floor for a Beavers layup, 25-21 Oregon State.
Late in the first half, Nate Kingz erupted. First, the former McNary HS standout spun free of a Gonzaga defender and drilled a jumper near the top of the key. Then, Kingz launched a three point bomb. The crowd surged, Gonzaga coach Mark Few hastily called for timeout, and the scoreboard lit up 35-29 Oregon State.
In the final moments of the opening period, Michael Rataj kept the pace. The German senior notched a second-chance putback layup, but Khalif Battle upset the Beaver wing’s efforts with a buzzer-beating three. At halftime, Oregon State led by the narrowest of margins, 46-45.
Gonzaga’s Graham Ike opened the second half with a game-tying layup, then seized the lead on a free-throw, and the Bulldogs went on a 9-3 run.
Oregon State pulled within 1 on a Demarco Minor stepback jumper with 12:49 left. Then, Parsa Fallah drew a pair of free throws, but the Beaver big couldn’t convert either attempt, and Gonzaga kept its advantage.
But not for long. Soon, Demarco Minor sprang open. As the shot clock wound down, the Beavers guard nailed a game-tying three pointer with 11:08 remaining.
The two West Coast Conference foes resumed their battle. Following a Nolan Hickman layup that lifted Gonzaga back ahead, Nate Kingz tied it with two free throws. Gonzaga’s Graham Ike swung the lead back to the Bulldogs with consecutive makes, 69-65 with 9 minutes left.
Gonzaga seemed poised to land another blow, ahead 76-71 with 5 minutes remaining, but Ryan Nembhard walked. Possession went to the Beavers, who climbed within three on a Michael Rataj jumper. With two minutes left, Demarco Minor brought the crowd to a fever pitch with a game tying fadeaway. Then Michael Rataj hooked one from the right elbow, soaring the Beavers ahead 79-77.
Under a minute remaining, the game got even better. Michael Rataj extended Oregon State’s lead on a beautiful layup that kissed the top of the glass before dropping through the twine, but Clackamas’ own Ben Gregg answered with a Gonzaga three-pointer.
From there, Gonzaga quickly fouled Oregon State. A pair of Beavers free throws made it 83-80 Oregon State with :20 remaining. Needing a triple, the heavily-favored Bulldogs roared back on a game-tying Graham Ike three-pointer with 4 seconds left.
Overtime swung back-and-forth as the teams traded baskets. Leading 89-87 with 2:01 left, Michael Rataj drove inside, drew a decisive fifth personal foul on Graham Ike, and strolled to the charity stripe. The extinguished Gonzaga big finished with 26 points on 9-14 shooting. Rataj calmly hit a pair of free throws, as Oregon State moved ahead 91-87 with 2:01 in OT.
The next Gonzaga possession was denied by a Josiah Lake steal. As time dwindled under a minute, Gonzaga clawed within 2 on a Braden Huff jumpshot.
They never got any closer. Liutauras Lelevicius spun free for a layup, 93-89 Beavers. Then free throws from Josiah Lake and Michael Rataj shut the door. Fans stormed the floor at the overtime buzzer, and the Beavers earned a signature win.
Oregon State moves to 14-5 overall, 4-2 in West Coast Conference play. Gonzaga drops to 14-5 overall and 5-1 in the conference, a half game behind St Mary’s. The Beavers have now won thirteen consecutive matchups against Mark Few’s blue-chip program from Spokane.
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