Portland State University's Student Recreation Center is collecting used tennis shoes to recycle as a way to show support for the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing.
Oregon State Police will be accepting applications to hire entry level recruits for trooper positions, starting April 29, 2013.
Police Chief Mike Reese is pushing ahead with hiring for the new Behavioral Health Unit. But critics say Reese's hiring choices are eroding community confidence.
Luck-One gets a lot of questions about his lyrics. Instead of complaining about people not understanding, he wants to share critical thinking tools and promote literacy through the Luck-One Book Club.
April's "Race Talks" discussion looked at the divisive issue of fluoridation. Portland City Council voted in favor of water fluoridation last fall, but a campaign, named "Clean Water Portland," gathered 43,000 signatures in one month, enough to put the issue on the ballot this May. Voters will have an opportunity to vote for or against water fluoridation in the May 21 special election.
In the midst of heated gun control debate on Capitol Hill, Florida Atlantic University researchers say one startling statistic is going unnoticed. Homicide is the number one killer of young Black men.
Sen. Chip Shields has sponsored a bill in the Oregon legislature targeted at changing the terms of the Portland Police Bureau contract. Senate Bill 747 would remove officers' right to state arbitration when they are fired or disciplined for misconduct or use of force
Police have asked the public to look out for a medically endangered woman last seen around 8 p.m. Friday, April 5, in the 4600 block of N. Michigan Ave.
After serving in Vietnam, Cleveland McCord was given a brief medical exam, a fresh uniform and a one-way bus ticket to Oregon. That was in 1970. In 2010 McCord was awarded 90 percent service connected disability benefits from the Veterans Administration. That was after years of filing claims and appealing rejected claims.