Oregon
Oregon senators court tech development near Hillsboro over farm group objections
Oregon lawmakers heard hours of arguments on Monday for and against a contentious bill aimed at attracting more tech companies in Hillsboro.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers says the state needs more industrial land – and tax incentives – to stay competitive and attract more advanced manufacturing jobs. They’re again eyeing acreage north of Hillsboro that’s been at the center of a yearslong conflict over farmland becoming industrial sites.
FILE – Intel’s Jones Farm Campus in Hillsboro, Ore., July 8, 2025.
Morgan Barnaby / OPB
Land conservation watchdogs and some residents say the bill would invite tech companies and power-hungry data centers to pave over some of the best agricultural soils in the Willamette Valley.
“In my area speculators are pricing farmers out, making it nearly impossible for successful farms like mine to expand,” Hillsboro farmer Aaron Nichols said at a senate committee hearing Monday. “Should this development come to pass, it would be far worse.”
Senate Bill 1586 would expand government tax credits for semiconductor and biotech manufacturers to house research and development facilities, if they meet certain criteria.
The bill would also bring in 373 acres of rural land north of Hillsboro into the city’s urban growth boundary for advanced technology industries, and re-zone some 1,400 acres to develop for industrial use within 50 years.
Backers of the bill say Oregon is lagging behind other states on advanced manufacturing and semiconductor job growth. They say the state must do everything it can now to keep Oregon’s future economy viable.
“If we don’t figure out how to grow very modestly in this state, our future economy is going to feel that,” said state Sen. Janeen Sollman, D-Hillsboro, who has repeatedly introduced similar legislation to open up more land for industrial development in Hillsboro.
Elected officials and business leaders have long eyed this specific tract, which is directly south of U.S. Highway 26, because of its close proximity to other semiconductor manufacturing and supply chain businesses.
This is the same land Gov. Tina Kotek considered bringing into the growth boundary in 2024, through a temporary and controversial authority lawmakers granted her during that year’s legislative session.
Kotek ultimately backed off the idea after the state failed to land a federal research hub designation that would’ve brought with it more federal funds for semiconductor research and development.
Usually, expanding urban boundaries into rural farmland is a lengthy process that involves input from the public. SB 1586 would override that process.
Hillsboro Mayor Beach Pace told lawmakers at the hearing that “few sites in Oregon have been studied more thoroughly and none are more ready and better positioned to immediately help the state’s economic recovery.”
“These lands have gone through nearly 20 years of review, regional planning, legislative actions, task force work, multiple hearings and a public hearings in Hillsboro,” Pace said.
The bill would effectively undo a deal from 2014, when Hillsboro city officials agreed to reserve the land for farm purposes for five decades, while designating 1,000 acres elsewhere for industrial use.
The bill’s language would not allow “stand-alone” data centers to be built on the proposed land, unless they are an “accessory” or part of a logistics warehouse, manufacturing or technology and research facility.
The bill courts industry giants like Intel, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of computer chips, and Genentech, a biotechnology company with a 75-acre campus in Hillsboro.
Sollman said it’s not realistic for lawmakers to “say no” to data centers entirely because they are often a key component of technology industries.
“If we wanted to attract a large semiconductor or biotech company, it wouldn’t work for their business model,” she said.
But opponents are skeptical the bill would do enough to check data center development.
“There’s no limitation on the number of data centers, acreage or percentage of the land in data centers [in the bill],” said Nellie McAdams, the executive director of Oregon Agricultural Trust.
“As long as they are attached to some other facility of any other size the land surrounding it could be data centers.”
Oregon has already received roughly $1.3 billion in federal dollars for semiconductor industries and research, and it’s done so without having to expand until rural lands, McAdams said.
FILE – Local residents, farmers and environmental and land and conservation groups rallied outside the Hillsboro Civic Center in opposition of Gov. Tina Kotek’s proposal to bring rural land into the city’s urban growth boundary, Oct. 10, 2024.
Alejandro Figueroa / OPB
Land conservation groups have criticized Hillsboro for permitting data centers that they say provide few jobs across the city. An industry group’s map suggests there are about 14 data centers across the city, but because one site can include multiple buildings, there could be more. Land policy watchdogs say there are nearly 30 in Hillsboro.
Landowners unified under the Northwest Hillsboro Alliance have long lobbied elected officials in favor of development. They say the land around them is no longer appropriate for farming as more urban uses have encroached around them.
Data center industries are booming nationwide, especially as demand for artificial intelligence rises. Many environmental and conservation advocacy groups worry that could come at the cost of the environment, wildlife and the needs of local residents and businesses across Oregon, not just west of the Cascades.
In Oregon, utility watchdogs have accused power companies of shifting the long-term costs to residential customers. In The Dalles, local elected officials are laying the groundwork to pull more water from Mount Hood forest, while denying the quest for water is motivated by Google data centers expanding in the region
Legislators were unable to get through a long list of submitted public testimony for SB 1586 Monday. Most of the written testimony the bill has received comes from the opposition. Lawmakers will revisit the bill Wednesday.
Oregon
Texas man wanted for child sex crimes, theft arrested in SW Oregon
CURRY COUNTY, Ore. (KPTV) – A Texas man wanted for child sex crimes was arrested in Curry County on Tuesday afternoon.
The Curry County Sheriff’s Office says Kenneth Leatherwood of Bastrop, Texas, was arrested with the help of Oregon State Police and U.S. Marshals just after 12:30 p.m.
Leatherwood, who is accused of sex-related crimes involving a child in Texas, was reportedly found camping in a heavy wooded area near Lucas Lodge in Agness.
Investigators say Leatherwood has been on the run from Curry County law enforcement since June 16 after reports that he had been seen with a stolen car in the Agness area.
Leatherwood was also believed to have stolen weapons with him.
His dog was also found and returned to the suspect’s family in good shape, according to the sheriff’s office.
Copyright 2026 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.
Oregon
Fireworks on sale in Oregon until July 6
PORTLAND Ore. (KPTV) – Fireworks are on sale in Oregon until July 6, but state and local rules limit where they can be used and what types are allowed.
In Portland, fireworks use and sales are banned year-round.
Fireworks are also banned on beaches and in state and national parks.
Statewide, fireworks that fly into the air, explode, act unpredictably or move more than 12 feet horizontally are illegal. Banned fireworks include sky lanterns, missiles, rockets, Roman candles, firecrackers, cherry bombs and M-80s.
Fountains, sparklers, ground spinners and smoke devices are among the fireworks allowed under state rules.
Officials said people should not call 911 to report illegal fireworks. They said reports should go to the non-emergency line for the area.
First responders said there were 263 fires across Portland during last year’s fireworks season, and 27 were caused by fireworks.
For more details about fireworks regulation in Oregon, click here.
In Washington, fireworks sales legally begin Sunday and run through July 4.
Copyright 2026 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.
Oregon
Gray whale carcass washes ashore in Gearhart on Oregon coast
GEARHART, Ore. (KATU) — Another gray whale washed up on the Oregon coast last week, this time in Gearhart, according to Seaside Aquarium.
The 41-foot-long male had been dead for months before washing up on the beach, Seaside Aquarium general manager Keith Chandler said.
He noted that there have been 19 total whale strandings or carcasses washing up on beaches just this year on the Oregon coast region.
The Cascadia Research Collective is reporting at least 30 on Washington coastline alone. | TIMELINE
Of those deaths, more than half were at least partially attributed to malnutrition. That could have been the cause in more strandings, however, necropsies were not performed in roughly a dozen of the 30 strandings.
Chandler said strong wind from the west this year has been contributing to why coastal towns are seeing a lot of whales and other things washing up on shore. However he also noted that many of the Grey whales washed ashore were emaciated with necropsies showing signs of malnourishment.
“The food sources have been compromised. The warmer water means the nutrients that they’re getting aren’t as good, so the whole food chain is kind of not as healthy,” Chandler said.
He pointed to the warming waters with climate change as the main reason noting that warm water plankton–Grey Whale’s main food source–is thinner and has fewer nutrients than plankton in cooler waters.
Chandler says this whale will not have a necropsy done because of its level of decomposition.
“The fresher ones, the team from Portland State [University] will come down and they’ll go in and do measurements, take samples and stuff, measurements of the internal organs. But on one this decayed, you won’t gain anything from it scientifically. And it’s just kind of a mess to do when they’re this rotten,” he said.
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You can report a whale stranding to the West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network Hotline by calling 1-866-767-6114.
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