HP Inc. will get $53 million to expand and modernize its Corvallis facilities as part of the federal CHIPS and Science Act. The Biden Administration announced the grant award Monday. President Joe Biden has made reviving the U.S. semiconductor industry a priority of his administration.
Oregon DEQ officials said that they have concluded their emergency response to the January 4 train trestle collapse and derailment in Corvallis after a week of mitigation measures.
A Corvallis woman is still recovering from a New Years Eve fire that took the lives of her two dogs and left her with nothing but the clothes on her
Junior forward Michael Rataj racked up a career-high 29 points to help Oregon State to one of its biggest wins in recent program history.
Many Oregon school districts have been notified that a data breach of Carruth Compliance Consulting, which manages retirement plans, may have compromised names, social security numbers and financial account information.
Corvallis Democratic state Rep. Sarah Finger McDonald announced this week she’s facing colon cancer again but doesn’t expect it to disrupt her work in Salem. Her diagnosis was first reported by the Oregon Capital Chronicle.
The Oregon House will get its first Japanese American representative after Multnomah and Washington county commissioners voted to appoint Bethany Democrat Mari Watanabe to a vacant seat in the state House.
The Oregon House will get its first Japanese American representative after Multnomah and Washington county commissioners voted to appoint Bethany Democrat Mari Watanabe to a vacant seat in the state House.
This story originally appeared in the Oregon Capital Chronicle and is used with permission. Rep. Sarah Finger McDonald is starting her first term in the state House as she undergo
Corvallis School District spokesperson Kelly Locey said via email the district notified staff who had 403 (b) and/or 457 (b) retirement plans with Carruth about the incident on Jan. 14, but didn’t know how many of its employees were impacted.
The impromptu party on Oregon State's home court hadn't died down by the time Gonzaga coach Mark Few started a postgame interview one level below in a basement hallway next to the visiting locker room at Gill Coliseum.
He founded what became the state’s largest provider of caregivers for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. During a 12-month period ending last summer, that company, called Rever Grand (French for “dream big”), billed the Oregon Department of Human Services $170 million.