good girl. i think it makes a world of difference. it does for me. reporter: for capitol police officers caroline edwards and jeff albanese the sights and sounds of january 6th are still vivid today. those images, the smells, the yelling, the you know, the chaos. that day was a war zone. just hearing the calls for help, hearing the locations that people needed help. reporter: the two officers are among many battling anxiety, depression, and lingering injuries from the attack. four responding officers from that day have also since died by suicide. capitol police now working to prioritize the mental health of officers with tools like peer to peer counseling, helping cops talk to other cops about what they ve experienced. over time all agencies have recognized that it takes a lot more than just physical wellness to have a well officer. petting a dog can make your whole day better. you re like five times as happy talking about it. hey. reporter: a new best friend fo
This City Club program is the second in a three-part series on local housing issues.
From the City Club of Eugene:
Oregon’s Legislature took the historic step to re-legalize traditional “missing middle housing” in 2019, but the work to build housing diversity and more inclusive neighborhoods has just begun.
One promise of “missing middle housing” is that it can deliver “affordability by design” that per-unit development costs can come down when we design more efficient housing units and share land costs among multiple homes. In Portland, where the City’s missing middle housing implementation was ahead of Oregon’s new state law, some community members raised the objection that affordability was not guaranteed by the policy changes. In response, housing advocates crafted Portland’s “Deeper Affordability” code amendments: an affordable housing density bonus equivalent to a $150,000 subsidy for each project. It turns out that accomplishing affordability is abo