Make the McKenzie Connection!

Articles written by Lynne Terry


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  • More extreme weather?

    Lynne Terry|May 4, 2023

    It’s likely to be hot again this summer in Oregon, and that trend is likely to continue. An Oregon State University study on climate change released earlier this year estimates that temperatures will rise 5 degrees Fahrenheit by the 2050s, with more surges ahead. ”Heatwaves are becoming more frequent,” said Erica Fleishman, director of OSU’s Oregon Climate Change Research Institute, which produced the report. “They’re becoming longer and more intense in temperature.” The study does not pred...

  • U.S. Treasury grants $22 million to Oregon

    Lynne Terry, Oregon Capital Chronicle|Apr 13, 2023

    The federal government has awarded seven financial institutions in Oregon a total of $22.3 million in grants to help underserved communities recover from the pandemic. The money, announced Monday, is part of $1.7 billion awarded to more than 600 institutions nationwide through a U.S. Treasury program to boost recovery among low-income and moderate-income communities that were the hardest hit during the last three years. The grants are designed to provide capital and financing for small...

  • Up to 300,000 could lose health insurance

    Lynne Terry, Oregon Capital Chronicle|Apr 6, 2023

    The Oregon Health Authority starts a months-long review of the state’s 1.5 million Medicaid members this week to determine who still qualifies for the health insurance. Normally, states review the financial eligibility of members annually, but during the pandemic, the federal government expanded benefits to states that kept members insured. Medicaid, known as the Oregon Health Plan in Oregon, provides free medical, behavioral health, and dental coverage. The extra federal benefits ended F...

  • Oregon's unaffiliated voters: more partisan than you might think

    Lynne Terry, Oregon Capital Chronicle|Sep 22, 2022

    If Oregon’s registered Democrats vote Democratic in this November’s general election, and the Republicans vote Republican, those numbers alone won’t come close to settling the deal. A big reason: The largest group of voters in Oregon are the NAVs – those who register as “nonaffiliated.” (Disclosure: I’m one of them.) But what does that mean for the outcome of the general election in another couple of months? If you dive into the numbers – which is where elections are won and lost – you find...

  • State offers $10 million in grants to help 2020 wildfire property owners

    Lynne Terry, Oregon Capital Chronicle|Jul 21, 2022

    Thousands of Oregonians whose homes or businesses were damaged by the 2020 wildfires are eligible for state grants to help protect them from future wildfire damage. The state Department of Consumer and Business Services said Monday it is offering up to $7,500 for a manufactured home or $6,800 for another home or business to pay for renovations that “harden” the structures against wildfire damage. The grants cover roofs, walls, decks and porches, windows and skylights, overhangs, and ven...

  • Oregon entomologists brace for the arrival of 'murder hornets'

    Lynne Terry, Oregon Capital Chronicle|Oct 21, 2021

    This summer a pair of Oregon entomologists traipsed through the woods in northern Washington on the hunt. They were looking for a dangerous predator: Asian giant hornets. Native to south and east Asia, they've earned the name "murder hornets" for their ability to decimate a honey bee hive in an hour or two. They can even kill humans. The Japanese enjoy them fried as a delicacy on skewers or in liquor: Their venom gives it a kick. But they're also a menace. They kill pollinators like European...

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