09-20-2024  11:48 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Plan to transfer waste into storable substance at Washington's Hanford site will require hundreds of millions of extra dollars

RICHLAND, Wash. (AP) -- The federal government says a one-of-a-kind plant that will convert radioactive waste into a stable and storable substance that resembles glass will cost hundreds of millions of dollars more and may take longer to build, adding to a string of delays and skyrocketing price tag for the project.

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Loss of Oregon State football player raises larger questions

OSU football tackle Fred Thompson's tragic death raises the question: Why do so many young athletes die of heart problems?

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'There are a lot of good programs the government offers but we need to find more ways to get people to them'

There were years when Wendy Williams thought she would be on the street. She was under fire from the IRS and she didn't have a working bathroom for three years. Williams' fortunes changed when she got involved with Portland Community Reinvestment Initiatives (PCRI) and their Free Homeownership Retention Program for seniors.

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Multnomah Youth Commission wants all students to have a YouthPass

High school students in Portland have secured free transportation through the TriMet YouthPass until the end of this school year. Multnomah Youth Commission wants to expand the program but no secure funding has been identified.

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Local efforts to give youths a boost into higher ed come at just the right time

Racial segregation and concentrated poverty are increasing in our nation's schools, suggesting that we are backtracking on the successes of the civil rights movement

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State Court of Appeals has thrown out the conviction on a judge's error; now Ephrata braces to revisit "heavy wounds"

EPHRATA, Wash. (AP) -- Nearly eight years have passed since police found the battered body of 13-year-old Craig Sorger in a central Washington park, the victim of a beating and stabbing so brutal the tip of a knife was left in his skull.

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The money at stake is from a 1999 jury award in a lawsuit filed by the family of Jesse Williams, a janitor who had died two years earlier of lung cancer

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- Tobacco company Philip Morris USA Inc. must pay Oregon 60 percent of a $79.5 million award in a long-running lawsuit filed by the family of a Portland smoker, the state Supreme Court ruled Friday.

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The research was launched last year to dig into the reasons why African American babies are disproportionately underweight, and why they suffer the highest infant mortality in the area

Black mothers in Oregon often give birth alone, are afraid during their hospital stay, and rarely take birthing classes or breastfeed their babies. That's according to the preliminary results of a groundbreaking survey of African American women on their birth outcomes.

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Marcus Mundy: I expected him to be a force in Portland for decades

The tragic death of Rob Ingram from a heart attack, Sunday, comes as a shock to many Portlanders.  Our hearts go out to his wife Dana and his five children. Here are a few tributes to Rob from some of  those who knew him best.

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The group holds an Urban Jobs Initiative Community Forum at Humboldt Gardens from 6-7:30 p.m. on Nov. 30

The Urban League of Portland is rolling out a new jobs initiative to target multigenerational unemployment in the Black community. "Unemployment has had a devastating effect on Portland," says director of Advocacy and Public Policy Midge Purcell Purcell.

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