PENDLETON â One of Pendletonâs most prominent buildings is on the market, and all anyone needs to buy is as little as $2 million.
On behalf of Pendleton Grain Growers, Realty Marketing/Northwest is auctioning off PGGâs mostly vacant Pendleton facility for the reserve price of $1.995 million, a slight reduction from the companyâs $2.1 million asking price.
The 3-acre, 1000 S.W. Dorion Ave. property includes a 42,000-square-foot building that once housed the grain co-opâs headquarters, retail showroom, automotive service center and warehouse. Once a thriving organization with agricultural and retail operations across Eastern Oregon, the Pendleton facility has sat mostly vacant for about a half-decade after it decided to shutter retail operations in 2014 and voted to completely dissolve the co-op in 2016.
Bill requiring emergency preparedness plans for electricity and gas facilities in Texas passed, accountability questions remain
‘Right now, we are still vulnerable,’ says Houston-area State Representative
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HOUSTON – On Monday, Senate Bill 1750 was passed requiring emergency preparedness plans from those facilities that are within the Texas chain of electric and natural gas.
“The weakness in all the legislation that has passed so far is that there are easy outs,” House Representative Jon Rosenthal of District 135 in the Katy area said.
Rosenthal is a mechanical engineer who has worked in the oil and gas industry for over 20 years.
He told KPRC 2 Investigates the state and its system to supply millions with power and heat is still very exposed.
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EXCLUSIVE: NEW PLAYBOOK WRITER! After more than two years and 600 newsletters (really, today is my 600th edition of Massachusetts Playbook) this is my last week. I’m moving over to POLITICO’s campaigns team to write our
When James Eagan Holmes shot and killed 12 people in an Aurora, Colorado, movie theater in 2012, one of the weapons he used was an AR-15-style rifle manufactured in Massachusetts.
The Bay State has banned civilians from purchasing or owning assault weapons and high-capacity magazines for decades, but companies like Smith & Wesson, headquartered in Springfield, can still build them here and sell them elsewhere.
Backed by parents who lost children to mass shootings and the Stop Handgun Violence organization, a group of Democratic lawmakers launched an effort Tuesday to change that dynamic, filing legislation that would extend the existing assault weapon ban to cover their manufacture for civilian use as well.