Turner Fire burns 30 acres of former prison farmland

A semi-truck ran through power lines on Southeast Gath Road, sparking a 30-acre fire that led to multiple evacuations along Turner Road in Salem and in the northeast corner of the city of Turner.
What’s showing at Salem galleries, museums in July

This month, Salem’s galleries will show work by internationally recognized Afro-futurist artist Nikesha Breeze, take guests around the world through paintings and explore the life of Caralyn B. Shelton, who served as Oregon’s governor for three days in 1909.
Salem’s newest bookstore offers much more than something to read

Beauty, Beverages, and Books, a combination used book store and salon, recently opened on Northeast Broadway Street. Owner Andrea Randall’s effort to build a community space with unique offerings has created a haven for book lovers.
Willamette Art Center to move to southeast Salem

Salem’s longstanding community ceramics classroom has moved out of its home at the Oregon State Fairgrounds, and will reopen by early fall off of Southeast Fairview Industrial Drive.
Salem adds space for court-ordered behavioral health treatment

The newly completed Marion and Polk County Secure Residential Treatment Facility will serve people with severe and persistent mental illness who have been ordered by a judge to receive treatment. It adds capacity to a strained statewide system which leaves many without such options for longer term care.
Salem doctors, nurses ask lawmakers to fight harder against cuts to Medicaid

Over 600 doctors around the state have added their names to a joint letter asking Oregon’s state and federal lawmakers to stop proposed federal cuts to Medicaid. Many on the list work in Salem Health’s emergency department.
Former Oregon State Fair artisans find place to land at Salem Art Fair

A group of artisans who previously brought their craft to a secluded area of the Oregon State Fair plan to boycott it this year. Many of them have accepted an invitation to join the Salem Art Fair two weeks later.
In final days of session, lawmakers combine two controversial mental health bills

The Legislature is considering some of the largest changes in years to Oregon’s system of committing people to mental health treatment who pose a serious danger to themselves or another person. A last-minute decision to tie those changes into a larger bill may have muddied the waters, said some working in Marion County.
White oaks, soil get a needed break at Bush’s Pasture Park

Taller grass and more mulch are among the recent changes in the upper area of Bush’s Pasture Park. They’re signs of a ‘no-mow’ effort by parks staff to strengthen historic white oak trees and revitalize the soil.
Summer dig zeroes in on Salem’s lost Indian Manual Labor Training School

An open house on Friday, June 13, at Willamette University shared the latest leads in an excavation looking for the foundation of a historic building once used by Methodist missionaries to force Indigenous children to work.

