11-14-2024  2:11 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

State's findings call on prosecutor's offices to increase oversight

When Janine Robben saw the results of a new audit of the state's victim's restitution system, she wasn't surprised. As a former prosecutor, she knew all too well that the state's restitution laws lacked the authority to adequately address the problem...

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With few job opportunities, ex-offenders have few options

EVERETT, Wash. (AP) -- Diane Loop bought her house six years ago and planned to live a quiet life.
Did she ever go in another direction. Loop opened her home to women who have no place to go when they leave prison...

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Experts blame cyclical El Nino ocean warming

SEATTLE (AP) -- January's warm temperatures in Western Washington may set a record...

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Thomas Brennan was concerned about sergeant's conduct

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- A Portland police officer transferred to work at a property evidence warehouse has filed a whistleblower complaint against the Portland Police Bureau claiming he is being punished for speaking out...

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The Z Man Foundation hosted its first annual Wrestling Tournament Saturday, Jan. 23, at Grant High School.
All proceeds benefited the foundation, which provides scholarship opportunities for local youth to attend local college prep high schools.

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A rollercoaster. A business park. An aquarium.
Last night, dozens of architects, designers and visionaries presented their plans to convert the Memorial Coliseum into something they believe will better suit the city's needs.

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Warm winter weather system isn't over yet

SEATTLE (AP) -- With winter half gone, some weather experts say the Green River Valley south of Seattle may have avoided catastrophic flooding, at least this season. The El Nino weather pattern affecting the Pacific Coast has helped bring a warm January to the Pacific Northwest, along with drenching rains and snow to California.

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'Rocket Stoves' can burn a variety of materials at low cost

COTTAGE GROVE, Ore. (AP) -- Ben West was scheduled to fly into Haiti's second-largest city on Jan. 15, to launch a project designed to address a critical problem in a country stripped of as much as 99 percent of its forests. Haiti needed stoves. Haiti needed stoves because an estimated 800,000 of its residents cook either on an open fire or with an unimproved stove that resembles a baby's crib with no mattress in it -- "horribly inefficient," said West, general manager of the fledgling company StoveTec, a for-profit spinoff of the Cottage Grove nonprofit Aprovecho Research Center...

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