Oregon
Oregon’s new Treasury office is ready for the next disaster
Sitting on 28 base isolators and designed to resist a 9.0 earthquake, a brand new south Salem constructing is meant to verify Oregon’s authorities can nonetheless pay staff, distribute catastrophe funding and get profit funds to residents it doesn’t matter what’s occurring exterior.
The outside of the Oregon State Treasury’s new Salem workplace, designed to be absolutely operational after a 9.0 earthquake (Rachel Alexander/Salem Reporter)
When the Beachie Creek wildfire blanketed Salem in ash within the fall of 2020, the state’s monetary servers felt the ache.
On the Oregon State Treasury – then housed in one of many marble buildings on the Capitol Mall with an growing older air filtration system – staff needed to wipe ash off the servers that guarantee state staff receives a commission on time and Oregonians get their meals stamp and unemployment funds.
It’s the kind of work that may’t fail, state Treasurer Tobias Learn mentioned. By means of wildfires, ice storms, sustained energy outages and the long-awaited main Cascadia earthquake, Oregon’s state authorities has to have the ability to minimize checks.
“Cash doesn’t come into the state or depart the state with out Treasury’s profitable operation,” Learn mentioned.
That’s the rationale for the Treasury’s new workplace on Southeast Hawthorne Avenue, a stand-alone constructing subsequent to Denny’s and throughout from the previous south Salem Costco.
The “resiliency constructing” was designed to be absolutely operational instantly after a 9.0 earthquake, and to proceed functioning by way of disasters starting from wildfires to the algae bloom that left Salem’s water undrinkable in Could 2018.
It stands on 28 base isolators that enable the constructing to maneuver 18 inches in any path throughout an earthquake. Duct work and pipes run overhead and aren’t buried beneath ceiling tiles, permitting them to be simply inspected after a quake.
Different variations are meant to permit the division to maintain functioning even when metropolis utilities aren’t. These embrace about 240 kilowatts of photo voltaic panels on the roof and design modifications to make use of much less energy, like massive home windows to attract in pure mild. The constructing has net-zero vitality use, which means it generates sufficient energy to maintain its operations, a battery financial institution that may retailer sufficient solar energy for about 24 hours of operations, and a backup diesel generator. There’s additionally a properly in case metropolis water stops working or turns into undrinkable following a catastrophe, and an upgraded HVAC system to filter out wildfire smoke.
Photo voltaic panels on the roof of the brand new Oregon State Treasury workplace in Salem (Rachel Alexander/Salem Reporter)
The upgrades make Treasury distinctive amongst state authorities workplaces for his or her potential to perform by way of a pure catastrophe.
“That is definitely above and past something that some other constructing has,” mentioned Andrew Phelps, Oregon’s emergency supervisor, throughout a tour Friday.
The resiliency constructing is the primary in Oregon to obtain a platinum score from the U.S. Resiliency Council, a nonprofit engineering group selling constructing readiness for earthquakes and different pure disasters.
It’s privately owned by Salem developer Steve Freeburg, who spent about $40 million to design and assemble it to the Treasury’s specs. The company is leasing the constructing at a price of $181,159 monthly, with an preliminary lease just below 20 years and choices to resume for a decade as much as eight instances. About 133 staff will work out of the workplace, although the company’s funding staff will stay in Tigard.
Oregon State Treasurer Tobias Learn speaks at a ribbon chopping ceremony Thursday, June 30 exterior the Treasury’s new workplace constructing in south Salem (Rachel Alexander/Salem Reporter)
Learn and different Treasury officers celebrated with a ribbon chopping ceremony Thursday. The constructing has been open since March, however many Treasury staff have continued working remotely within the months since. The workplace returns to hybrid work Friday, mentioned spokeswoman Amy Bates, and Treasury leaders are hopeful the constructing’s environment – which incorporates a big stairwell mural and preserved moss partitions in a number of spots – will make folks wish to be within the workplace.
“You possibly can see the outside from nearly any spot,” Learn mentioned. He works out of a small ground-floor workplace simply contained in the constructing’s important entrance, having vacated his prior quarters within the Oregon Capitol as a consequence of seismic renovations there.
The constructing additionally options an eclectic choice of names for its convention and break rooms, a lot of which pay tribute to Oregon. Bates mentioned the names had been chosen by staff who gained a raffle. In consequence, the break room is known as “Dunder Mifflin,” and convention rooms embrace “Rip Metropolis” and “Prefontaine.”
A mural contained in the Oregon State Treasury Resiliency Constructing (Rachel Alexander/Salem Reporter)
Learn mentioned throughout the ribbon chopping ceremony that he hoped the division’s work would encourage different Oregon corporations and companies to take related steps towards preparedness.
“As proud as we’re of this and as blissful as we’re to be the primary instance of it, we don’t wish to be the final,” Learn mentioned. “We’ve bought to be an instance for different state companies, native governments and the personal sector.”
Preserved moss is among the many decorations inside the brand new state Treasury workplace in Salem, meant to present the area a pure really feel (Rachel Alexander/Salem Reporter)
Contact reporter Rachel Alexander: [email protected] or 503-575-1241.
JUST THE FACTS, FOR SALEM – We report in your neighborhood with care and depth, equity and accuracy. Get native information that issues to you. Subscribe to Salem Reporter beginning at $5 a month. Click on I wish to subscribe!
Oregon
Oregon private colleges offer support to Southern California students impacted by wildfires
Some private universities in Oregon are offering extra assistance — from crisis counseling to emergency financial aid — to students who call Southern California home.
This comes amid the devastating wildfires currently burning in Los Angeles.
Lewis & Clark College, University of Portland and Reed College sent out messages of support to students with home addresses in Southern California this week.
Administrators at Lewis & Clark contacted around 250 undergraduate students in the region affected by the blazes. These students represent close to 12% of the college’s current undergraduate students.
The school, which begins its next term on Jan. 21, is opening up its dorms early for Southern California students at no extra cost.
“We will keep communicating with students in the weeks and months ahead to know how this impacts their next semester and beyond,” said Benjamin Meoz, Lewis & Clark’s senior associate dean of students. “That will mean a range of wraparound academic and counseling support.”
Lewis & Clark also pushed back its application deadline for prospective students from the Los Angeles area to Feb. 1.
Oregon crews arrive in Southern California to aid wildfire response
Reed College began reaching out to about 300 students who live in Southern California on Wednesday. In an email, the college urged students and faculty impacted by the fires to take advantage of the school’s mental health and financial aid resources.
Reed will also support students who need to return to campus earlier than expected. Classes at Reed do not begin until Jan. 27.
Students at University of Portland will be moving back in this weekend as its next term begins on Monday, Jan. 13. But UP did offer early move-in to students living in the Los Angeles area earlier this week. A spokesperson with UP said four students changed travel plans to arrive on campus early.
Students are already back on campus at the majority of Oregon’s other colleges and universities, with many schools beginning their terms earlier this week.
Oregon
Why Oregon lawmakers are asking Elon Musk to stop plan to kill 450,000 barred owls
Tips to manage poor air quality
Smoke from wildfires is increasingly impacting the Willamette Valley. Here are a few tips to manage poor air quality.
Four Oregon lawmakers are calling on Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to help stop a plan that would kill 450,000 barred owls in an effort to save endangered spotted owls over the next 30 years.
The entrepreneurs were named by President-elect Donald Trump to lead the so-called Department of Government Efficiency.
In a letter sent Tuesday, state Rep. Ed Diehl, R-Stayton, Rep. David Gomberg, D-Lincoln County, Rep. Virgle Osborne, R-Roseburg, and Sen.-elect Bruce Starr, R-Yamhill and Polk counties, asked the incoming Trump administration officials to stop the reportedly more than $1 billion project, calling it a “budget buster” and “impractical.”
Environmental groups Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy in late 2024 filed a federal lawsuit in Washington state to stop the planned killing of the barred owls.
Here is why the Oregon lawmakers are opposed to the plan, what the plan would do and why it is controversial.
Why the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wants to kill barred owls
In August 2024, after years of planning, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service came up with a proposal to kill a maximum of 450,000 invasive barred owls over 30 years as a way to quell habitat competition between them and the northern spotted owl.
Spotted owl populations have been rapidly declining due in part to competition from invasive barred owls, which originate in the eastern United States. Northern spotted owls are listed as a threatened species under the federal Endangered Species Act.
According to the USFWS plan, barred owls are one of the main factors driving the rapid decline of northern and California spotted owls, and with their removal, less than one-half of 1% of the North American barred owl population would be killed.
The plan was formally approved by the Biden administration in September 2024.
Why environmental groups want to stop the plan to kill barred owls
Shortly after it was announced, Animal Wellness Action and the Center for a Humane Economy immediately responded in opposition to the plan to kill barred owls. They argued the plan was both ill-conceived and that habitat loss is the main factor driving the spotted owls decline.
“Spotted owls have experienced significant population decline over decades,” a news release from the groups filing the lawsuit said. “This decline began and continues due to habitat loss, particularly the timber harvest of old growth forest. The plan is not only ill-conceived and inhumane, but also destined to fail as a strategy to save the spotted owl.”
In their complaint, the groups argued the USFWS violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to properly analyze the impacts of their strategy and improperly rejecting reasonable alternatives to the mass killing of barred owls, such as nonlethal population control approaches, spotted owl rehabilitation efforts and better protections for owl habitat.
Why Oregon lawmakers are asking Musk to stop the plan to kill barred owls
The four Oregon lawmakers are siding with the environmental groups and calling for Musk and Ramaswamy to reverse the federal government’s plan to kill the barred owls. It was not immediately clear how the two could stop the plan.
The lawmakers letter stated the plan was impractical and a “budget buster,” with cost estimates for the plan around $1.35 billion, according to a press release by the two groups.
The letter speculates there likely isn’t an excess of people willing to do the killing for free: “it is expected that the individuals doing the shooting across millions of acres – including within Crater Lake National Park – will require compensation for the arduous, night-time hunts,” according to the press release.
“A billion-dollar price tag for this project should get the attention of everyone on the Trump team concerned about government efficiency,” Diehl said. “Killing one type of owl to save another is outrageous and doomed to fail. This plan will swallow up Americans’ hard-earned tax dollars for no good reason.”
USFWS says they aren’t trying to trade one bird for the other.
“As wildlife professionals, we approached this issue carefully and did not come to this decision lightly,” USFWS Oregon State Supervisor Kessina Lee said in announcing the decision in August. “Spotted owls are at a crossroads, and we need to manage both barred owls and habitat to save them. This isn’t about choosing one owl over the other. If we act now, future generations will be able to see both owls in our Western forests.”
Statesman Journal reporter Zach Urness contributed to this report.
Ginnie Sandoval is the Oregon Connect reporter for the Statesman Journal. Sandoval can be reached at GSandoval@gannett.com or on X at @GinnieSandoval.
Oregon
Santa Clara’s last-second overtime tip-in hands Oregon State men a heartbreaking defeat
A rebound basket with 3.5 seconds left in overtime allowed Santa Clara to escape with an 82-81 overtime win over Oregon State in men’s basketball Thursday night.
The Beavers, looking for their first road win of the season and their third since 2021, just missed when Tyeree Bryan’s tip-in with 3.5 seconds left was the difference.
Oregon State, leading 81-78, had two chances to rescue the win.
Adama Bal, fouled while shooting a three-pointer with 10 seconds remaining, made his first two free throws but missed the third. But Bal outfought OSU for the rebound, then kicked the ball out to Christoph Tilly, whose three-point shot glanced off the rim. Bryan then knifed between two Beaver rebounders, collecting the ball with his right hand and tipping it off the backboard and into the basket.
OSU (12-5, 2-2 WCC) came up short on a half-court shot at the buzzer.
The loss spoiled what was a 12-point second-half comeback for Oregon State, which led by as many as four points in overtime.
Parsa Fallah led the Beavers with 24 points and seven rebounds. Michael Rataj had a double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds, while Isaiah Sy scored 12 points and Damarco Minor 11.
Elijah Maji scored 21 points for Santa Clara (11-6, 3-1), which has won eight of its last nine games.
The game was tied at 32-32 at halftime following a first half where OSU trailed by as many as 12 points. Fallah and Minor combined to score the final eight points as OSU finished the half on a 10-2 run.
The game began to get away from the Beavers again as Santa Clara built a 60-48 lead with 9:43 remaining. Sy got OSU going with a three-pointer, as the Beavers whittled away at the deficit. OSU eventually grabbed the lead at 67-65 with 5:19 left on another three by Sy. It was a defensive brawl for the rest of regulation, as neither team scored during the final 1:58.
Oregon State never trailed in overtime until the final three seconds. A Sy three with 1:29 left gave the Beavers a four-point cushion. After the Broncos later cut the lead to one, Fallah’s layup with 17 seconds left put OSU up 81-78.
Oregon State returns to action Saturday when the Beavers complete their two-game road trip at Pacific. Game time is 7 p.m.
–Nick Daschel can be reached at 360-607-4824, ndaschel@oregonian.com or @nickdaschel.
Our journalism needs your support. Subscribe today to OregonLive.com.
-
Business1 week ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Culture1 week ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado
-
Sports1 week ago
The top out-of-contract players available as free transfers: Kimmich, De Bruyne, Van Dijk…
-
Politics1 week ago
New Orleans attacker had 'remote detonator' for explosives in French Quarter, Biden says
-
Politics1 week ago
Carter's judicial picks reshaped the federal bench across the country
-
Politics6 days ago
Who Are the Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom?
-
Health5 days ago
Ozempic ‘microdosing’ is the new weight-loss trend: Should you try it?
-
World1 week ago
Ivory Coast says French troops to leave country after decades