Jun. 10 More than 1,500 acres west of Tenino will be conserved through a deal between a nonprofit and the Washington state Department of Fish and Wildlife. The Conservation Fund purchased a 1,567-acre ranch from Dr. William Barnett, according to a Wednesday news release. The non-profit will hold the property until the state finds funding to acquire it and incorporate it into its future Violet .
Thu Feb 27 2014 at 17:50:05
The year was 1959: Oregon celebrated its Centennial, the United States was in the midst of the Cold War, and people didn t go to Dutch Bros. or Starbucks for a Hazelnut Macchiato, they went to a café for a cup of coffee.
George Rutherford pulled into Roseburg, Oregon around 8:30 pm on a typical hot August night. It was too late to make his two deliveries outside of town. He decided to park the new 2-1/2 ton red Ford delivery truck he was driving on Pine Street, just a few feet from Gerretsen s Builder s Supply, an act which would prove disastrous for downtown Roseburg and many of its citizens. The truck contained 6.5 tons of explosives from the Pacific Powder Company of Tenino, Washington.
Good news came out of Olympia last week, as well as Boise more than two weeks ago. COVID-19 vaccine availability has increased to the point where basically anyone who needs to get the jab can. Itâs paid for as well, so in order to do my part to get back to normal â and I mean REAL normal â I… More Headlines
In Washington state lawsuit, Idaho sisters accuse then-church pastor of sexual abuse
Laura Bauer and Judy Thomas, Idaho Statesman
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Courtesy Steve Wilson
BOISE (Idaho Statesman) – A man who runs three Christian reform schools in Missouri is the subject of a lawsuit in Washington state that accuses two churches where he was the pastor of failing to protect sisters who say he molested them.
The civil suit, filed in the Superior Court of the State of Washington, alleges that the churches knew their pastor, David Bosley, was grooming and then sexually abusing the three sisters for several years beginning as early as 1996 but did nothing to stop it or protect future victims.
Washington Ports Lead Charge for Rural Internet Service
Though ports cannot legally “light” fiber-optic infrastructure, some have taken it upon themselves to lead the way on connectivity issues. Officials say they are frustrated with the pace set by lawmakers and big ISPs. by Marissa Heffernan, The Daily News / February 1, 2021 Slow or unreliable internet access is a reality for millions of Americans. ben dalton/Flickr, CC BY-SA
(TNS) When the coronavirus pandemic sent most people to Zoom meetings, Port of Woodland Executive Director Jennifer Wray-Keene learned that one of her commissioners was still using dial-up Internet. I said Paul, why don t you have Comcast? And he said Well, it doesn t go upriver, she said of Commissioner Paul Cline.