April Ehrlich
Oregon Public BroadcastingApril Ehrlich is JPR content partner at Oregon Public Broadcasting. Prior to joining OPB, she was a regional reporter at Jefferson Public Radio where she won a National Edward R. Murrow Award for her reporting on the impacts of wildfires on marginalized groups.
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The federal ruling Thursday reaffirms an initial order last week, which preserved access to a widely used abortion drug in Oregon, Washington and 16 other states
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Oregon’s commercial Dungeness crab season opens Jan. 15 for much of the coast after a weekslong delay.
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Oregon’s utility regulator on Thursday announced approved rate increases for Pacific Power and Portland General Electric customers, citing increased costs to produce and purchase electricity.
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New national estimates show Oregon is losing population, as deaths outpace births and fewer people move here from other states.
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Oregon continues to face a historic strain on its hospital systems as pediatric and adult respiratory illnesses slam the state.
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Oregon Gov. Kate Brown is extending last month’s state of emergency as a surge of respiratory illnesses strains the state’s hospital systems.
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The measure, which narrowly passed this month, bans magazines that can hold more than 10 rounds and requires Oregonians to get a permit to buy a gun.
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Oregon’s attorney general is backing a Washington state lawsuit against grocery chain Albertsons over a massive payout to shareholders amid its proposed merger with Kroger.
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Oregon elections officials say they’re fielding a higher-than-usual volume of calls about how votes are counted.
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Event organizers considered canceling the Drag Queen Storytime event due to hateful and threatening messages, but instead pushed forward, with extra security precautions.
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During his second day in Portland Saturday, President Joe Biden stood in front of a couple of hundred people at the East Portland Community Center and highlighted the Democratic Party’s recent legislative achievements in health care.
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Even as interest rates rise, and prices start to level out, Oregon's housing market is still “red hot,” Realtors say.