Resignation of Crater Lake head leaves Oregon congressional delegation concerned, clueless

Kevin Heatley, who led Crater Lake National Park for just five months, resigned May 30 over concerns about staffing cuts ordered to the National Park Service by President Trump.
Bill to protect residential electricity customers from subsidizing data centers moves forward

The POWER Act would create a separate rate class for data centers so their grid expansion and infrastructure needs are paid for by tech companies that own them.
Progressive Democrats unveil plan for transportation funding driven by doubling of gas tax

The latest package from Oregon Democrats would raise revenue for electric vehicles, buses, mass transit and bridges through higher taxes and fees on cars, gas and payrolls.
Slate of bills to modernize Oregon water laws await votes in final month of session

Bills from Gov. Tina Kotek and a bipartisan duo of representatives would streamline water rights transfers and impose new environmental reviews.
Group formed to grant money from Oregon’s Monsanto settlement

The Oregon Environmental Restoration Council will help invest and dole out nearly $700 million in funds the state received from a settlement with Monsanto.
Federal judges side with Oregon in striking down tariffs imposed by President Trump

New tariffs imposed on nearly all imports into the U.S. since April were struck down Wednesday by three federal judges in the U.S. Court of International Trade in New York City. The judges ruled in favor of Oregon and 11 other states…
After reaching historic lows, hydropower generation in the Northwest expected to rise in 2025

Hydropower in the region is expected to increase about 17% compared to last year, but will still be below the 10-year average.
U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz insists Republicans “not cutting” Medicaid, SNAP

Oregon's lone Republican in Congress, Cliff Bentz, said he consulted with former Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber, a Democrat, weekly for input on the Medicaid portion of the Republican budget.
Fears over Columbia Basin dams, hydroelectricity grow as agencies lose hundreds of employees

Hundreds of federal employees managing the nation’s main hydropower corridor have retired, resigned or been released due to Trump orders and hiring freezes.
Federal chaos leaves Oregon’s economic outlook sluggish, uncertain, short hundreds of millions

Oregon lawmakers will have nearly $756 million less than they anticipated to spend in next two years, according to state’s May revenue forecast.

