Oregon
Oregon’s Menstrual Dignity Act Hits the Right-Wing Outrage Machine
The Menstrual Dignity Act—an Oregon regulation that may place menstrual merchandise in each restroom in all Okay–12 colleges statewide beginning this fall, is going through sudden backlash from nationwide conservative media shops, from the caustic Libs of TikTok to Fox Information and the New York Publish.
4 days in the past, the TikTok account, which has change into a tip sheet for right-wing media, posted a wordless 20-second clip taken inside a males’s restroom, together with lingering pictures of a urinal and a gradual pan to a tampon dispenser hanging on the wall.
Inside a day or two, the subject was trending on Fox, which invited long-shot Republican gubernatorial candidate Bridget Barton to spout off on the matter.
However advocates who fought for the invoice’s passage in Oregon say that whereas the subject is being forged as “an try and push the LGBTQ+ agenda,” as urged by the Rupert Murdoch–owned Publish, making interval merchandise out there to all is a elementary query of fundamental fairness.
One in 4 teenagers in the US have missed class as a result of lack of entry to interval merchandise, in response to the Portland-based group Interval. In response, the state Legislature handed the Menstrual Dignity Act, which Democratic Gov. Kate Brown signed into regulation in July 2021. The invoice makes Oregon public colleges among the many first within the nation to ensure common entry to tampons and pads for all college students.
The purpose of the act, in response to steerage issued by the Oregon Division of Schooling, is to assist those that get their interval extra actively and comfortably take part in class by “assuaging financial pressure and experiences of disgrace which can be usually limitations for menstruating college students accessing their schooling.”
The merchandise are being positioned in all bogs, in order that “all college students, in all grades, together with those that are transgender, intersex, nonbinary, can entry their schooling with out limitations,” in response to Marc Siegel, the company’s communications director. To assist colleges gear up for the beginning of the requirement, state schooling officers, together with organizations like Interval, lately launched a “Menstrual Dignity for College students Toolkit”—a doc outlining the necessities of the invoice with pupil testimonies, methods to retailer merchandise (it may be so simple as a countertop basket), instructional assets together with a hyperlink to a “how one can use a tampon for newbies” video, and extra.
“Ladies are made to really feel that [menstruation] isn’t one thing we must be speaking about—it’s like a secret that half the inhabitants experiences on a regular basis. And I feel, whether or not it’s intentional or not, that there’s one thing within the right-wing backlash which desires to make [menstruation] one thing that we shouldn’t be speaking about in public, we shouldn’t be taking a look at these items if we don’t have to make use of it, or, I don’t know … one thing,” says Gordon Lafer, a professor of political science on the College of Oregon and member of the Eugene Faculty Board. “There’s one thing bizarre about it that I feel is admittedly unfavorable. I’ve little question that if guys menstruated, we might have had this coverage 20 or 30 years in the past.”
In 2019, Lafer championed a coverage much like the Menstrual Dignity Act in Lane County’s 4J Faculty District, with assist from 4 members of Interval’s Eugene department—Posey Chiddix, Violet Neal, Kira Elliott, and Nabikshya Rayamajhi.
For months, the youngsters confirmed up at Eugene faculty district board conferences, recalling situations by which classmates have been late or skipped class as a result of their interval, and instances after they’d needed to mortgage tampons and pads to classmates who couldn’t afford them. The coverage—which dictated that free interval merchandise be made out there in public faculty restrooms in Eugene—handed unanimously in November 2019, making Eugene the primary district in Oregon to implement a coverage surrounding menstrual inequity. The coverage was applied efficiently and with out a lot, if any, backlash.
“You would not have a rest room with out bathroom paper, so, we should not have bogs with out menstrual merchandise,” says Lafer.
Barton, one in every of 19 Republican gubernatorial candidates within the state, took the other tack, telling Fox this week that the coverage represented one of many “radical leftist woke insurance policies … destroying Oregon from our streets to our companies to our colleges.”
Damaris Pereda, nationwide applications director for Interval, reinforces that the invoice “would not impose individuals to make use of the merchandise’ it simply will increase entry in order that individuals who want them can use them.” Nevertheless, Pereda does acknowledge that it’s in all probability going to take a while for colleges to regulate to this new coverage. At first, there might be potential for irresponsible tampon hoarding conditions, related to individuals hoarding bathroom paper at first of the pandemic, she says. However after some time, it should all die down and, hopefully, change into much more regular to see interval merchandise in all restrooms throughout the gender spectrum.
“There’s all the time a wave of change. The extra we discuss the truth that individuals menstruate, it’d change into much less of a novelty after which it should change into a part of our society. Simply recognizing that some individuals menstruate, some individuals do not,” says Pereda. “And for those who want the merchandise, and so they’re out there at your faculty, go forward and take it so you possibly can proceed studying. And for those who don’t want it, then you possibly can ignore it. And that is OK.”
Oregon
3 Key Numbers from Illinois Basketball’s Win Over Oregon
No. 22 Illinois (10-3, 2-1 Big Ten) traveled to Eugene and put an absolute thrashing on No. 9 Oregon (12-2, 1-2 Big Ten), taking down the home team 109-77 – good for the widest margin of victory by a visiting team against a top-10 opponent ever.
Scorching-hot shooting (57.5 percent from the field) led the Illini to their massive triple-digit night as the Ducks’ usually solid defense (68.7 points allowed per game) offered little resistance against an endless rain of threes and layups.
On defense, Illinois held the Ducks to 30-for-69 shooting from the field (43.5 percent), but something less than the usual effort and focus was required (and may have been applied) on an evening when the offense was firing on all cylinders.
Here are a few key digits that offer further insight into how the Illini were able to pull off the historic win:
The Illini needed this. A 15-for-33 showing from three-point range (45.5 percent) against Chicago State was encouraging, but the Cougars are a winless mid-major. Shooting 16-for-29 from three (55.2 percent) on the road against a top-10 team? That’s how a team gets its confidence back. Also worth noting: After a 5-for-25 stretch from beyond the arc, forward Ben Humrichous went 4-for-7 against the Ducks en route to a season-high 18 points. And no, there’s no expectation that either Humrichous or Illinois as a whole can maintain a three-point shooting mark above 50 percent. But if the Illini can hover closer to 40 percent than 30 percent, they will be well-positioned to make a competitive run for the Big Ten title.
Although the shooting has been inconsistent on a game-to-game basis, Illinois has been rock-solid on the boards all year – and that didn’t change Thursday. The Illini outrebounded the Ducks 43-31, now having won the battle of the boards in every game this season but the home loss to No. 1 Tennessee. Against Oregon, Illinois got a big night on the glass from Tre White – who posted the quietest 20 points and 11 rebounds you’ll ever encounter – while Tomislav Ivisic added eight and Kasparas Jakucionis six. The Illini need to continue their rebounding domination against the bigger, more athletic competition of the Big Ten. If the Ducks game was any indication, that shouldn’t be a problem.
Through 12 games, Illini coach Brad Underwood and his staff had been keeping the rotation pretty tight, with only Will Riley, Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn and Morez Johnson Jr. getting regular, significant minutes off the bench. But that changed on Thursday, and after the performance of Jake Davis, the change could become permanent. Davis – uniform No. 15 – is a Mercer transfer who, after entering the game with 14 points on the season, nearly doubled it with 12 points on 5-for-6 shooting from the field against Oregon. None of that was garbage-time production, by the way. All of Davis’ scoring came in the first half, when the margin was still within single digits and the outcome was still anyone’s guess.
3 Big Takeaways From Illinois Basketball’s Win Over Oregon
Illinois Basketball Rains Threes on Oregon in Record-Breaking Blowout
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Oregon
Sunset Bay State Park evacuated due to flooding; Shore Acres, Cape Arago inaccessible
Safe winter driving tips in Oregon
Here are some tips to keep you safe on the roads.
A popular campground on Oregon’s south coast was evacuated due to flooding Friday morning while two other popular parks were inaccessible after a landslide undercut a highway near Charleston and Coos Bay.
Sunset Bay State Park’s campground was impacted when Big Creek came over its banks between Thursday and Friday night, Oregon Parks and Recreation Department officials said.
“The campground will likely remain closed through the weekend due to high water and tide conditions,” OPRD spokeswoman Stefanie Knowlton said. She added that the Sunset Bay Day-Use Area remains open at this time “but could close if flooding continues.” The restroom is closed, but there are portable toilets available.
Shore Acres and Cap Arago also closed by landslide
Just up the road from Sunset Bay, a “significant landslide has occurred” on Cape Arago Highway.
“The slide has caused substantial undermining of the roadway, leading to its closure,” OPRD said. “As a result, both Shore Acres State Park and Cape Arago State Park are currently inaccessible to vehicular traffic.”
The trio of parks — Sunset Bay, Shore Acres and Cape Arago — are three of the more popular destinations on the south coast. It’s unclear how long the area would be inaccessible.
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
Kennedie Shuler’s last-second drive the difference in Oregon State’s win over Loyola Marymount
Oregon State finally played a West Coast Conference women’s basketball game that didn’t end in overtime.
But it took some last second heroics to make it happen Thursday night, as Kennedie Shuler’s three-point play with two seconds remaining gave the Beavers a 59-56 win over Loyola Marymount at Gill Coliseum.
It’s the first time in four games the Beavers (7-8, 3-1 WCC) haven’t played overtime in a conference play. With the game tied at 56-56, Shuler took an inbounds pass near the top of the key, drove to the basket and floated a shot off the backboard as she was fouled.
Oregon State won its third consecutive game as Kelsey Rees scored 17 points and grabbed eight rebounds to lead the way. Sela Heide and Catarina Ferreira scored 10 each. Heide scored all her points during the third quarter.
Four players accounted for all of Loyola’s 56 points. Brandi Williams hit four three-pointers and scored 17 points to lead the Lions (6-6, 0-4).
Loyola controlled the first half in taking a 33-26 halftime lead. The Lions spotted Oregon State an early lead, then took over with a 9-2 run midway through the first quarter. LMU led 17-14 after one, the difference a three-pointer by Williams on the final possession.
After Ally Schimel hit a three to tie the game at 17-17, LMU scored 10 consecutive points in less than two minutes. OSU got as close as 29-26 on a three-point play by Rees, but the Lions scored the final four points of the quarter to take a seven-point halftime lead.
Oregon State’s zone defense made a difference in the third quarter, as the Beavers outscored the Lions 20-10 to take a three-point lead. Loyola missed nine consecutive shots and went scoreless for nearly seven minutes as OSU ran off 10 consecutive points to take the lead.
OSU couldn’t shake Loyola during the fourth quarter. Shuler gave the Beavers a five-point lead with eight minutes left, but the Lions scored the next seven points to overtake the Beavers. Ferreira’s pair of free throws with 1:44 left put OSU in front by three points, but the Lions tied it less than a minute later, on a three-pointer by Naudia Evans.
Oregon State earned a chance to win it after forcing Loyola into a tough shot on its final possession. The Beavers called timeout with 4.4 seconds and set up Shuler for the game winner.
Oregon State’s next game is noon Saturday at Washington State.
–Nick Daschel can be reached at 360-607-4824, ndaschel@oregonian.com or @nickdaschel.
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