Oregon
Workers Memorial Day ceremony to honor Oregon workers who died on the job in 2022 – KTVZ
SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) – It’s a day to recollect those that died on the job. It’s a day to grieve with households, buddies, and communities. It’s a day to resume our accountability to create and keep secure and wholesome workplaces for all employees in Oregon.
Oregon employees who died on the job shall be honored with a ceremony Friday, April 28, at midday in Salem. The Occupational Security and Well being Division (Oregon OSHA) – a part of the Oregon Division of Shopper and Enterprise Providers – and the Oregon AFL-CIO invite all Oregonians to attend the Employees Memorial Day observance.
Oregon AFL-CIO will livestream the ceremony at www.fb.com/oregonaflcio.
The in-person occasion will happen on the Fallen Employees Memorial exterior the Labor and Industries Constructing, 350 Winter St. NE, on the Capitol Mall. The memorial service, coordinated by the Oregon AFL-CIO, will function remarks from Bob Livingston, labor liaison for Gov. Tina Kotek, and state Reps. Dacia Grayber and Travis Nelson.
The ceremony will embrace the studying of the names of Oregon employees who died on the job in 2022.
“Employees are the spine of this state,” Gov. Kotek stated. “Immediately and every single day, we should honor Oregon employees who’ve tragically misplaced their lives whereas working to make our state a greater place. As we stand with their households and help them by means of their grief, I’ll decide to at all times pushing for safer working situations throughout the state to make sure the well being and well-being of our employees.”
Oregon OSHA Administrator Renée Stapleton and Oregon AFL-CIO President Graham Trainor will even be among the many occasion audio system.
Oregon workplaces are safer and more healthy right now than in earlier a long time. But, there are nonetheless far too many preventable on-the-job deaths every year.
“We now have to do higher for Oregon’s employees, as a result of everybody deserves to count on to return residence safely from a day’s work,” Trainor stated. “We’ve made progress on office security, however our work isn’t accomplished. Annually, 1000’s of employees are killed, and tens of millions extra undergo damage and sickness due to harmful working situations which might be preventable. On April 28, Oregon’s unions will recommit ourselves to doing all the things we will to enhance office security.”
By a partnership of labor, enterprise, and authorities working collectively to bolster office security and well being, Oregon’s fatality and damage and sickness charges have steadily declined for many years.
Nonetheless, there may be room for enchancment.
“As we honor the recollections of the lives tragically taken from us, we should not waver in our dedication to defending the security and well being of all employees in Oregon,” Stapleton stated. “As a substitute, we should renew our dedication. We should achieve this by persevering with to coach employees about their unequivocal proper to a secure and wholesome office. We should achieve this by redoubling our efforts to verify the message to employers is equally unmistakable: That they’re obligated to guard their employees from hurt. And we should achieve this by directing our sources to the utmost extent doable to establish and get rid of office hazards.”
The annual Employees Memorial Day serves as a nationwide day of remembrance. The observance is historically held on April 28 as a result of Congress handed the Occupational Security and Well being Act on that date in 1970.
Sources can be found to employees and employers to advance on-the-job security and well being in Oregon, together with:
Oregon OSHA
DCBS Multicultural Communications Program
Ombuds Workplace for Oregon Employees
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Oregon OSHA, a division of the Division of Shopper and Enterprise Providers, enforces the state’s office security and well being guidelines and works to enhance office security and well being for all Oregon employees. For extra data, go to Oregon OSHA.
The Division of Shopper and Enterprise Providers is Oregon’s largest enterprise regulatory and client safety company. For extra data, go to DCBS.
The Oregon AFL-CIO is the statewide federation of affiliated unions, representing greater than 300,000 working Oregonians. For extra data, go to Oregon AFL-CIO.
Oregon
Powerball ticket worth $328.5 million sold in Oregon
Powerball, Mega Millions jackpots: What to know in case you win
Here’s what to know in case you win the Powerball or Mega Millions jackpot.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
The first Powerball jackpot of 2025 was sold in Oregon and is worth $328.5 million, according to lottery officials.
The winner purchased the winning ticket in Beaverton on Thursday, Jan. 17, the Oregon Lottery said. The retail location will not be revealed until a winner has come forward.
The winning numbers for the Saturday drawing were: 14, 31, 35, 64 and 69 and Powerball 23.
The winner has a year to claim their prize, Oregon Lottery spokesperson Melanie Mesaros said. After the winning ticket is presented, “it will take time before a winner can be identified due to security and payment processes.”
Oregon lottery winners, with few exceptions, cannot remain anonymous, Mesaros said.
The winner will have a choice between an annuitized prize of $328.5 million or a lump-sum payment of $146.4 million, according to lottery officials, which are both options before taxes.
Last year, the largest Powerball prize won in Oregon — a $1.3 billion jackpot — was split between a Portland man, his wife, and friend.
Before Saturday, the most recent Powerball jackpot was sold in December in New York and was worth $256 million.
Powerball is a multi-state jackpot operated by 44 states, plus the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.
Fernando Cervantes Jr., a news reporter for USA TODAY, contributed to this story.
Cherrill Crosby is the executive editor of the Statesman Journal and The Register-Guard. Reach her at crosbyc@gannett.com
Oregon
Oregon’s Dan Lanning visits 5-star recruit Cantwell, top TE Premer during Midwest run
Oregon head football coach Dan Lanning has been a busy man.
But when you’re the man tasked with running one of the top college football programs in the country, burning jet fuel to shake hands and take photos is a big part of the gig. And Lanning was doing plenty of that last week.
A native of Kansas City, Mo., Lanning returned home last week on a two-day tear recruiting some of the top 2026 prospects in the country.
Lanning’s known stops included Lee’s Summit on Jan. 16, where the Tigers have 2027 interior line prospect Zach Harsha (6-5, 260) and 2028 tight end Max Trillo (6-4, 225).
He was even busier the following day. He had stops at Raymore-Peculiar, where he visited with and offered four-star uncommitted running back DeZephen Walker (6-0, 205) who is believed to be heavily considering Kansas and Nebraska.
He also headed to Illinois, where he swung by Lincoln-Way East to visit with quarterback Jonas Williams, who agreed with the Ducks on Aug. 3, 2024,
A trip to the Springfield, Mo. area was also on the docket, as Lanning traveled to Nixa High School to again meet with the country’s No. 1 2026 offensive lineman, Jackson Cantwell, on Jan. 16. The 6-8, 315 offensive tackle has offers from just about everyone in the country, though he has spoken highly of Lanning and his relationship with the Ducks coach – making Oregon one of the favorites for his services.
Cantwell was honored by the Kansas City Chiefs on Jan. 18 during their AFC Divisional playoff game against the Houston Texans after he was selected to represent the Chiefs at the ‘Nike Ones’ showcase during Super Bowl weekend in New Orleans.
Lanning concluded his trip with a little basketball in Hutchinson, Kan., where he watched Great Bend tight end Ian Premer (6-6, 215) – the top tight end in the 2026 class – take on Hutchinson. Premer, a three-sport star in football, basketball and baseball, impressed with 22 points in the game.
The Midwest swing adds to a busy month for Lanning, who also has been spotted with Utah No. 1 athlete Salasi Moa and recently secured a visit with top 2026 quarterback and Nashville native Jared Curtis.
Oregon
People with disabilities are extra vulnerable in major disasters like wildfires, says Oregon advocate
Jake Cornett, Executive Director and CEO of the advocacy group Disability Rights Oregon, says he will forever be haunted by Ashlyn Maddox’s death during the 2021 Oregon heat wave.
The Portland woman, 36, was disabled and living in a group foster home. She was dropped off by a medical transport company, but the company didn’t make sure she made it safely into her air-conditioned home. She ended up wandering around for hours in the heat, and died only 50 feet from safety.
Cornett says, “These deaths are preventable with the right planning, the right strategy for mitigation, the right preparedness and a response plan that complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act and respects the needs of people with disabilities.”
Cornett spoke with “All Things Considered” host Geoff Norcross about Oregon’s ability to help people with disabilities during a natural disaster, such as the deadly wildfires burning in the Los Angeles area.
This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.
Geoff Norcross: If we were to transport those fires in Southern California here, would we see a similar catastrophe for people with disabilities?
Jake Cornett: Surely, we fear that the same disasters we’ve seen play out in the catastrophes in the lives of people with disabilities in LA would play out right here in Oregon as well. And I don’t think this is just a theoretical question. It’s only a matter of time before we have major wildfires along Highway 20, very close by in Portland and in other major cities throughout our state.
Norcross: What is the obligation of local governments to provide for people with disabilities when disaster strikes? I guess I’m asking if the Americans with Disabilities Act applies here.
Cornett: Absolutely. The Americans with Disabilities Act requires that cities, counties, the state and the federal government are taking into account what the needs are of people with disabilities, and providing accommodations for those needs when engaging in disaster planning.
Norcross: Getting information out to people quickly in a disaster is so critical, especially for something that’s as fast-moving as the LA wildfires. For people who are deaf or blind, can you talk about how that’s extra complicated?
Cornett: Absolutely. You know, emergency response notification systems that happen on your phone are a great tool if you have a phone, or if you have the technology to make your phone provide you the information you need. And that’s particularly important for folks who are blind.
I think about a blind person who may not have the same visual access to information as others. If police run around your neighborhood and put a notice on your door that says “get out of town, there’s an evacuation order, you’re under wildfire threat,” that notice on your door might not be enough because you can’t access that information.
And this is where cities, counties and the state really have an obligation to adjust to how they communicate so that it’s effective for all people with disabilities.
Norcross: And again, when you say obligation, you mean a legal obligation, not just because it’s the right thing to do.
Cornett: Absolutely. There’s a legal obligation to do that under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Norcross: Even if an evacuation order gets to affected people quickly, there’s this expectation that most people will get in their car and they will leave. How does that expectation leave people with disabilities in even greater danger?
Cornett: Yeah, that’s another huge issue for people with disabilities, especially when it happens quickly like the LA fires. People think evacuating is getting in the car, driving quickly away to safety.
But many people with disabilities don’t have access to a car, or they can’t physically drive a vehicle. They’re totally reliant on others to transport them to safety. So just providing that notice is not an adequate way to ensure that we are saving the lives of people with disabilities in the way it needs to be done.
Norcross: Is there an event here in Oregon that you can point to that shows us how situated we are to help people with disabilities when disaster strikes, good or bad?
Cornett: Here in Oregon, we’ve seen hundreds die or have serious injuries because of heat in the past few years. Climate change is real. We live in a warming environment, and it’s having a really disproportionate impact on seniors, on people with disabilities and people with underlying medical conditions.
And I’ll forever be haunted by a story of a 30-something year old woman who was dropped off by a medical transport company, but didn’t wait in their air-conditioned van to make sure that she got inside her home where there was air conditioning. Instead, they took off. She wandered around for hours before dying of heat, just 50 feet from her adult foster home.
These deaths are preventable with the right planning, the right strategy for mitigation, the right preparedness, and a response plan that complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act and respects the needs of people with disabilities.
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