11-09-2024  12:19 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Opinion

As chief executive of a 25-year-old community media organization, I can empathize with the president, congressional leaders and local lawmakers when it comes to figuring out how to get people back to work—or in my case, how to save jobs. Since 1981, Portland Community Media has had a successful contractual relationship with the City of Portland, which provides a significant amount of PCM's budget. The funding comes out of the City General Fund, which generates franchise revenue from an agreement with Comcast Cable to indirectly fund local public, education and government access channels, and in this case, PCM. . . .

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Oregon Attorney General John Kroger is warning Oregon citizens about a jury duty scam that seeks to trick consumers into providing personal, confidential information.
The scam involves emails and telephone calls that claim recipients have missed jury duty and will be arrested or face other legal sanctions if they do not turn over Social Security numbers, bank accounts information or dates of birth. . . .

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Some 300 volunteers have signed up on a website to help launch a recall campaign against Mayor Sam Adams.
The group behind www.recallsamadams.com says it believes that "the city needs a new leader after Adams admission that he lied to the public about sexual relations with a teenager and orchestrated an elaborate cover-up to win the 2008 mayoral election. . . .

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Seattle Arts & Lectures Pulitzer Prize-winning hosts novelist Junot Diaz Tuesday, Feb. 24, at 7:30 p.m. at the S. Mark Taper Foundation Auditorium. Diaz' book, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, is the story of a Black teenaged nerd from the Dominican Republic who longs to be a science fiction writer, but is forced to struggle with issues of racism, political violence and adolescent love as an immigrant in New Jersey. The book won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize. . . .

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South Seattle Community College is offering a variety of full-year resident tuition scholarships for the 2009-2010 academic year to graduating high school seniors. The application deadline is 4 p.m., Monday, March 2, 2009.
Applicants must: . . .

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King County Councilmember Larry Phillips' is calling on Olympia for legislation to help stabilize King County services and prevent transit cuts.
"In tough economic times, people rely even more heavily on public transit as a means to save money getting to and from work and other activities, but the latest forecasts show that service cuts will soon be unavoidable unless we find effective solutions," he said in a statement. "We need legislation from Olympia that will provide Metro with stability during economic downturns and the means to keep service growing with demand." . . .

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Puget Sound Energy announced today that beginning immediately the utility is offering a $1,200 instant rebate to the first 400 PSE residential customers (and an $800 instant cash discount to all other residential customers) who install energy-efficient ductless heat pumps through the end of the year.
According to PSE, ductless systems can be installed without costly and difficult remodeling and provide major energy-efficiency savings in homes with electric-baseboard and forced-air heating systems. . . .

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Bellevue Community College's Black Student Union presents two acclaimed hip-hop artists, an internationally-noted hip-hop scholar and a Washington state legislator with expertise in civic responsibility and social change, in a series of four free, public Black History Month lectures.

  • Mohammed Bilal . . .
  • Boots Riley . . .
  • State Rep. Eric Pettigrew . . .
  • Prof. Tricia Rose . . .
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·         Free Dental Appointments for Kids
·         New Resume Resource at Public Library
·         State's unemployed workers may qualify for extended benefits
·         Salary Commission Meets in Vancouver on Feb. 17
·         Big Brothers/Sisters Has New Website
·         GenerationBIG Community Information Sessions

·         Scholarship Luncheon Celebrates Education

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As Vancouver reels from 30 percent absences, Portland keeps its cool

At the beginning of February, the Vancouver and Evergreen school districts experienced an increase in the number of respiratory infections among students.
After reporting a high of nearly 30 percent absenteeism in some schools, Dr. Alan Melnick, of Clark County Public Health, said the illnesses are now ebbing to normal.
"It was typical respiratory illness," Melnick said. . . .

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