Oregon

The Environment in Oregon

NWEA has been involved with protecting human health and the environment in Oregon since its inception in 1969.  Since then, we have worked to protect the Columbia and Willamette Rivers from harmful dredging and toxic pollution.  We have sought better logging practices in its coastal watersheds where clear-cut mountain tops are the norm.  We have used the Clean Water Act to provide force better protection from many forms of pollutants—from toxics to temperature—for Oregon’s streams and rivers.  We have worked to limit the use of pesticides and for measures that will help recover species—such as salmon and steelhead—that are threatened and endangered under the Endangered Species Act.  And, we worked for the closure of the state’s only commercial nuclear power plant—the Trojan Nuclear Plant—now shut down, and for policies that encourage the use of energy efficiency and renewable energy sources.

Related News

NWEA Continues Legal Fight to Bring Cold Water to Salmon, Steelhead, and Bull Trout in Oregon

In December, a federal court heard oral argument in NWEA’s six-year old case challenging Oregon’s water quality standards for temperature. Salmon, steelhead, and bull trout are the Pacific Northwest’s “canary in the coal mine,” making the temperatures of our ...

NWEA Works to Stop Sewage Sludge Dumping

Dumping sewage sludge (called “biosolids” in the trade) on land is the solution promoted by the federal government since dumping the waste in the ocean was banned in 1992.  Neighbors abutting one ranch where the ...

Oregon’s Sneak Effort to De-Regulate Unsafe Levels of Iron and Manganese

In Oregon’s recent rulemaking to make the state’s toxic criteria the most stringent in the country, the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) also sought to remove its water quality standards for iron and manganese. DEQ told its advisory committee repeatedly ...

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