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April 27, 2024

Klamath Basin News, Friday, Jan. 12 – Winter Storm Warning In Effect Through Saturday Night For The Klamath Basin; 16 Year Old In Police Custody For Making Threats at KUHS

The latest and most comprehensive coverage of local News, Sports, Business, and Community News stories in the Klamath Basin, Southern Oregon and around the state of Oregon from Wynne Broadcasting’s KFLS News/Talk 1450AM / 102.5FM, The Herald and News, and BasinLife.com, and powered by Mick Insurance, your Local Health and Medicare agents. Call 541-882-6476.

Friday, January 12, 2024

Klamath Basin Weather

Winter Storm Warning in effect today– Friday, January 12, 4:00AM  until Saturday, January 13, 10:00PM.
Today
Mostly cloudy. Hazardous weather conditions with patchy blowing snow, high near 34 degrees. New 40% chance of snow this afternoon. Visibility one quarter mile or less at times. Windy with southwest winds 20 to 30 mph. Snow likely this evening and overnight rain, snow and freezing rain. Snow level 3300 feet.  Snow accumulation of 2 to 4 inches. Low near 27 degrees. South winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation 80 percent.
Saturday
Rain, snow and freezing rain in the morning, then rain with snow and slight chance of freezing rain in the afternoon. Snow level 3600 feet rising to 4100 feet in the afternoon. Snow accumulation of 2 to 4 inches. High of 35. South winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of precipitation 90 percent.  Saturday evening freezing rain and snow then good chance of rain and snow after midnight. Snow level 3800 feet. Low temp of 25. Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph decreasing to 5 to 10 mph well after midnight. Chance of precipitation 90 percent.
Sunday
Mostly cloudy with a 30% chance of rain and snow. Snow level 4200 feet. High near 38 degrees. West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday, Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Partly sunny, with a high near 32.
 

See Road Camera Views around the Basin:

Lake of the Woods
Doak Mtn.
Hiway 97 at Chemult
Hiway 140 at  Bly
Hiway 97 at GreenSprings Dr.
Hiway 97 at LaPine

 

Today’s Headlines

Klamath Falls City police responded to a major threat online made by a 16-year old at Klamath Union High School yesterday.

The threat, posted on Snapchat, mentioned the use of a firearm and violence at the school dated January 11th, yesterday.

KFPD uniformed officers and detectives spent the better part of the day at the school.

The proper computer forensic investigation was done and the person that allegedly posted it was taken into custody and is lodged at the Klamath County Detention Center for juveniles.

file photo of Klamath County Juvenile Center

The KFPD said in a press release that they do not take lightly any threats to any students in school and will be diligent in response to such cases.

 

 

 

 
Winter storms are affecting travel throughout Oregon with impacts from snow, ice, high winds and heavy rain. Some highways have seen closures or delays this week.
Blowing snow and heavy winds have made tough driving conditions in the Klamath Basin. 

Winter weather will continue to affect travel in the coming days. The National Weather Service is forecasting snowy and icy conditions again this afternoon and tomorrow in Klamath County and in central, southern and eastern parts of the state. Lower elevations could also see snow.

Note: Conditions can change quickly; closures are subject to change. For the latest information, visit Tripcheck.com.

Crews are working hard to clear roads, but their job becomes more difficult when disabled cars and trucks block traffic. To help reduce traffic and stay safe, consider working from home or taking public transit. Delays and closures are common during winter storms. Expect to encounter chain restrictions if traveling in mountain passes. Check the weather forecast along your route and visiTripCheck.com for the latest road conditions.  

 

Mt. Ashland

Three regional downhill ski
/snowboard areas — Willamette Pass, Mt. Ashland and the Mt. Shasta Ski Park — are now open. See their websites for hours and costs.

Mt. Shasta and Willamette Pass, which is in Klamath County, began operating Wednesday while Mt. Ashland begins its season Thursday, which coincidentally is exactly 60 years since it first began operating in 1964. The ski areas include:

WILLAMETTE PASS

More than 35 inches of recent snow is allowing Willamette Pass, located off Highway 58 at milepost 62 in far northwestern Klamath County, to open Wednesday. The lodge will open at 8 a.m. with the Twilight and Sleepy Hollow lifts, which offer beginner and intermediate trails, operating at 9. Early arrivals will receive free Voodoo Donuts. Other services include the Summit House Lounge, ski and ride school, and rental shop.

“Skiers and riders should expect early season coverage,” Willamette officials said. “We also want to remind everyone that the recent storm has brought in for deep snow immersions pockets and guests are strongly encouraged to enjoy only open trails and to refrain from going out of bounds.

Chairlifts operate from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For ongoing updates, visit the Willamette Pass website at www.willamettepass.ski.

 

SHASTA SKI PARK

Recent storms have allowed the Mt. Shasta Ski Park to open Wednesday. Lifts will operate from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily with night skiing to 7 p.m. on Fridays and 6 p.m. Saturdays. A full schedule of services if offers includes a rental shop, learning center and, at a to-be announced date, restaurant/bar.

Ski Shasta is located on the flanks of Mt. Shasta and offers miles of trails for all skills of skiers and riders, from beginner to intermediate. The area boasts that it “has something for everyone during both our day or twilight operations. Miles of trails cates to all ski levels, thus providing fun for everyone … The park is a cruisers paradise and a powder hounds delight.” The area’s summit elevation is 7,356 feet with 38 conventional trails, a total skiable area of 635 acres with the longest run being 2-plus miles.

For more information, visit the website at www.skipark.com.

 

Mt. ASHLAND

After a slow start to winter, Mt. Ashland has received heavy snow in the past week. Today the area will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and plans to offer beginner, intermediate and advanced terrain for downhill skiers and snowboarders.

All mountain services will be open, including the Granite Grill Restaurant, Siskiyou Mountain Sports retail shop, and the Snowsports Center, which offers equipment rentals and lessons for skiing and snowboarding. Shuttle service to and from the mountain will be relaunched later this winter but is not currently operating.

Mt. Ashland plans to be open Thursdays through Mondays. Twilight skiing sessions are scheduled to begin on Thursday, Jan. 18. New for this winter, Mt. Ashland is adding an extra night of twilight skiing to open on Saturdays until 9 p.m. through February.

 

At their regular board meeting earlier this week, the Klamath Falls City Schools board voted unanimously to appoint two of its members to a committee that would start the transition of EagleRidge High School from a stand-alone public charter to a KFCS high school.

KFCS Director of School Improvement Fred Bartels said the transition is pending public input that would take place via polling. The district expects the plans for EagleRidge coming aboard to be finalized by the end of January.

In another unanimous vote, the board approved giving students from Crosspoint Christian School the opportunity to play for teams at Klamath Union High School in sports that are not offered there. For example, Crosspoint does not offer baseball or softball, and student athletes wanting to play could for KU.

Other meeting topics included public comments from Roosevelt Elementary parent David Hays who expressed concerns that “class sizes, poor instruction and high transfer rates from low-performing schools” had caused a hardship on teachers.

In a statement read by Board Chair Trina Perez, Hays said he thought his son’s teacher was overwhelmed, and now his son hates school and has suffered “plummeting grades.” Hays also suggested that the community would greatly benefit from a unified school system, instead of the current two school districts “in such a small community.”

A presentation was given by Roosevelt Elementary’s principal, Scott Olsen. Olsen cited regular student attendance rates — especially on Fridays — as a concern for the school, and that regular attendance “is a district- and state-wide issue.”  

EagleRidge High School also announced its next steps for the future in a new 5,000-square-foot building to house a Career and Technical Education program at the high school.

All EagleRidge Board of Directors were in attendance for the groundbreaking, including KFCS Superintendent Keith A. Brown and Director of Operations, Daymond Monteith, as well as EagleRidge students and staff. EagleRidge School Board vice chair Cecelia Amuchastegui said.

“Working together, we were able to obtain some ESSER funds. We could not have the ESSER funds if we did not have the city schools … to build a building to expand programs” Amuchastegui was KFCS Superintendent from 2004-2010. The new space will be located behind the school, just off Plum Avenue. The new building will replace a space across the street on Commercial Street, which EagleRidge currently rents and holds classes.

Amuchastegui mentioned several phases to take place during the building’s construction, which is expected to be completed in time for the 2024-2025 school year. The first phase will be fundraising to go toward the new space, which will be two separate buildings to support EagleRidge’s Construction Pre-Apprenticeship Program, along with its Business Management and Digital Media programs.

Mark Wendt will be the contractor and Kinsman Construction is the subcontractor for the new building.

Adkins Engineering and Surveying also has been a partner to EagleRidge. EagleRidge students will be seeing first-hand how the new building will be built as under the instruction of Dominic Herrera, will assist in how the building will be built.  

 

Klamath County will be taking a scrutinizing look at its land development code with help from consulting firm Jet Planning.

Desiring to create a new code to better regulate and be more consistent with the city of Klamath Falls in joint planning development within the Urban Growth Boundary, the Board of Klamath County Commissioners accepted a quote from Jet Planning for an analysis of the existing county and city codes during their weekly meeting on Tuesday.

Jet Planning will also be comparing the county’s land development codes against other comparable counties in Oregon to add additional concepts for a finalized expanded code analysis. Nobel told the Herald and News that once the analysis is complete a survey will be going out to Klamath County residents for feedback.

The Urban Growth Boundary has approximately 45,000 people with roughly half living within the city limits and half living in unincorporated areas. The city provides the full range of urban services to support development within the city limits, whereas Klamath County (except for water service), through special service districts, provides services to the unincorporated areas. During Tuesday’s meeting, the commission also agreed to allow Klamath County Community Corrections to contract with the Sacred Sol Healing Institute to provide focus groups to people who have been involved with the justice system, and who have or are currently participating in a Klamath Justice Advancement Collaborative grant-funded program(s).

Stemming from a Justice Reinvestment Grant awarded to Klamath County for 2023-2025 where Klamath County stated they would seek feedback from historically underserved populations participating in one of the grant-funded programs, Sacred Sol Healing Institute will begin by surveying participants to collect program feedback and demographics.  

 

Cascade Health Alliance and Healthy Klamath will host a Family Fun Day from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday at the Merrill Civic Center. The event is free and open to the public, and is the first of two being held to increase awareness of community resources.

Event-goers will be treated to free tacos and raffle prizes, and there will be a bouncy house for kids. Denise Martinez of Klamath Community College said the event’s purpose is “to help get the word out in smaller communities that there are resources available to them.”

Currently, there are regular weekly outreach efforts in Merrill, Chiloquin, Sprague River, Klamath Falls and Keno, and are scheduled as follows:

Klamath Falls — Every Tuesday, 2 to 4 p.m., at the Klamath County Courthouse, 316 Main St.

Keno — Every 2nd and 4th Thursday, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., at Keno Tractor, 15555 Highway 66, Keno Merrill — Every 3rd Wednesday, 1 to 3 p.m., Merrill Water Department., 301 E. First St., Merrill

Malin — Every 3rd Thursday, 2 to 4 p.m., Malin Library Conference Hall, 2307 Front Street Malin Chiloquin — Every 2nd and 4th Friday, Farmer’s Market Lot, Chiloquin

Sprague River — Every 2nd and 4th Friday, Sprague River Community Center, 23411 Sprague River Road.

Organizations and vendors can join by contacting jenniferd@cascadecomp.com.  

 

Changes are ahead for a long-standing program that has benefited Crater Lake National Park operations in the winter months.

Crater Lake Superintendent Craig Ackerman said the park is adopting a Preventive Search and Rescue (PSAR) program that will handle incidents on a year-round basis. For the past 40-plus years the Crater Lake Ski Patrol, a volunteer group, has assisted the park with a variety of winter programs, including patrolling areas used during winter months by cross country skiers and snowshoers, helping in emergencies and providing general information to park visitors.

The ski patrol has included volunteers from the Klamath Basin, Rogue Valley and others regions of Southern Oregon and far Northern California.

Ski patrol members were required to attend one to two weekends of training in search and rescue, first aid and various duties on a yearly basis.

The sessions were coordinated by park rangers. In a statement, Ackerman said, “While the PSAR plan is approved it is not presumed that it gives clearance to abolish the Crater Lake Ski Patrol or their relationship with the park. First, because we have no authority to abolish an independent organization, and second, because I believe it is unwise to simply abandon a 40-plus year relationship with an organization that has provided support for our operation over a long history and has a significant amount of partner support. According to park rangers helping to develop a PSAR program, Crater Lake sees a varying degree of search and rescue incidents throughout the year.

“Year to year we are seeing increased visitation in the summer and throughout the winter.” According to a park statement, in 2012 the ski patrol’s leading council was abolished by the Park Service, but was reestablished a year later “after a change in park staffing and with a push from retired park service staff who have led the volunteer group.”  

 

Pacific Power is monitoring these winter storms across the Pacific Northwest. The forecast weather indicates strong winds could result in system interruptions, causing possible power outages in Oregon.

Pacific Power encourages customers to always be prepared for outages and supports state and local emergency management organizations, recommending Oregonians have an emergency plan for up to 72 hours without essential services. Here are some simple steps customers can take to prepare and stay informed:  

Visit pacificpower.net/outages for restoration estimates. As a reminder, stay away from all downed power lines and utility lines. Even if the lines are not sparking, they could be energized and extremely dangerous. Customers should avoid both downed trees and powerlines as well as keep pets far away from those areas.   Call 911 and report the outage to Pacific Power at 1-877-508-5088.    

 
The Klamath Chorale will begin regular weekly rehearsals for its 2024 spring concert season on the Martin Luther King holiday, from 7 p.m.-9 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 15, in the choir rehearsal room at Ponderosa Middle School.

The group’s spring performance is titled “From Stage To Screen,” and will take place at the Ross Ragland Theater on Sunday, May 5. The program includes well-known songs from Broadway musicals that have been made into popular movies. The Klamath Chorale is the oldest and largest choral group in the Klamath Basin, at times having up to one hundred members.

The group was formed in 1979 by people who enjoyed singing together, and has presented two concerts each year for over 40 years. The group has been led by director Robin Schwartz since 2009, and accompanied by Bill “Slippery” Eaton for many years. Seasonal dues of $25 per person help to defray the cost of purchasing music for its semi-annual concerts.

Dues scholarships are available to high school students who wish to join the Chorale. For more information, contact Production Coordinator Charles Cossey at (541) 884-848

4. Klamath Chorale can also be found on Facebook athttps://www.facebook.com/klamathchorale/  

 

The Linkville Players announce the opening of their second show of the 2023-24 season, “A Company of Wayward Saints.” The play opens at 7:30 p.m. on Friday at the Linkville Playhouse.

Written by George Herman, “Saints” is a tribute to the dedication and heart of actors, as well as the understanding and truth-telling that can come out of acting.

The play follows a comedic acting troupe, with familiar Renaissance-era characters such as Pantalone the greedy old man, and Capitano the swaggering braggart, as they find themselves broke and broke down right here in Klamath Falls.

A wealthy patron offers to pay their way home — if they can impress him with an improv show on the topic of his choosing. The tale that ensues takes us through the history of man from the garden of Eden to the assassination of Julius Caesar, up into modern life.

But, when improv goes awry the troupe is forced to look beyond the slapstick and costumes and face the redeeming powers of humor and understanding.

The show, produced by special arrangement with Concord Theatricals, features an all-local cast including Em Barr, Brian Green, Chris Malloy, Mathew Landsiedel, Jared McCleve, Corrie Judd, Rikkilea McGuffy and newcomers Aidan Coe and Hanna Levesque.

Performances take place Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m., with the exception of one Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. on Jan. 21. The play will enjoy a seven-performance run, ending on Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024.

Tickets can be purchased for $15-18 in advance at Poppy (522 Main Street) or up to half an hour before curtain at the Playhouse directly.

 

Around the state of Oregon

Asante Rogue Regional Medical Center, now at the center of a police investigation into drug diversion claims, recently settled a Medicare probe claiming billing fraud. 

According to the Lund Report, the probe is connected to a lawsuit claiming that hospital management ignored billing fraud. 

“It was based on a whistleblower lawsuit filed by one of the hospital’s own doctors that accused management at the Medford hospital of ignoring billing fraud,” the Lund Report said. “Instead, the suit claimed, management targeted the doctor who reported it.”

The lawsuit was secretly filed under seal in 2021, the Lund Report said, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigated the allegations. After investigating, the federal government joined the whistleblower’s suit to “recoup funds.” 

Court records identify Dr. Charles Carmeci as the doctor accused of overbilling, the Lund Report said. A judge approved a settlement between the doctor and Asante in October. 

“A cardiothoracic surgeon who worked at the Asante Rogue Regional Medical Center in Medford, claimed his then coworker, Carmeci, billed government health programs for procedures he didn’t do and performed unnecessary procedures to boost his compensation,” the Lund Report said. “No criminal charges have resulted from the claims and the federal investigation.”

The surgeon found out about Carmeci’s practices in 2019, the Lund Report said.

 

An average of 645-thousand acres are burned by wildfires in Oregon every year. The state run is always scrambling to find money to pay the cost.

Now Oregon lawmakers are looking for more stable sources of funding. A bill is being proposed that would add a ten-dollar fee on all properties in the state. It was raise 20-million-dollars a year. That bill is expected to be considered in next month’s session. Planning will continue with more proposals expected for 2025.

 

More information coming from NTSB says that the left door plug on that Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 slid off its hinges, disconnected from the fuselage and blew off the airplane. Federal officials are providing a detailed account of the mechanics of what they believe happened a week ago.

It’s unclear if the four bolts intended to prevent the door plug from disconnecting were in place, National Transportation Safety Board aerospace engineer Clint Crookshanks said at the late news briefing, accompanied by the board chair.

The accident happened minutes after the plane lifted off from Portland International Airport at 5:07 p.m. Friday. The sudden decompression tore a shirt off of a young passenger but did not cause any serious injuries. The captain circled back to the airport and landed.

Federal actions have taken several tacks since the accident. The Federal Aviation Administration ordered all airplanes of the same model to be grounded and inspected. 

United Airlines has said its inspections revealed loose bolts connected door plugs to airplane frames and Alaska Airlines said it has found loose hardware, too.

Whether similar issues caused or contributed to the door plug blowing off midair on Friday won’t be known for sure until the National Transportation Safety Board completes its analysis, which involves reviewing records, inspecting the airplane frame and door plug and interviewing crew members, among other necessary steps.

 

Several Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 passengers were hurt when a side of the Boeing 737 MAX 9 burst midflight last week — but injuries could have been much worse had circumstances been slightly different, according to local aviation medicine experts.

The aircraft was about 20 minutes into the flight, headed to Southern California, and had climbed about 16,000 feet when a door plug blew out and left a wide hole in the plane. If the MAX 9 had been at cruising altitude — around 30,000 to 40,000 feet — injuries might have been “catastrophic,” said Dr. William Bensinger, a Seattle aviation medical examiner who’s spent more than 40 years treating and evaluating pilots.

On Flight 1282, no one was in the seat directly next to the blowout, but a 15-year-old was sitting in the window seat directly ahead of the hole as the air rushed out of the passenger cabin. His mother, sitting in the middle seat next to him, described to The Seattle Times seeing her son’s seat twisting backward toward the hole, his seat headrest ripped off and sucked into the void and her son’s arms jerked upward.

She held on to her son tightly, hooking her arms beneath his arms and wrapped around his back. It wasn’t until after the flight, she said, that she noticed his clothing had been torn off his upper body.

The 10,000- to 20,000-foot difference in altitude means a significant difference in air pressure and available oxygen levels, according to Bensinger. At 16,000 feet, air pressure is “about 90% lower” than what people are used to at sea level, and passengers have about half the level of oxygen they’d normally have, he said. At 30,000 feet, even less oxygen is available in the air — and temperatures are much colder.

 

Oregon business startups are slow and endured an anemic year of fundraising in 2023, with venture capital investment in the state plunging by more than half, according to new data from the National Venture Capital Association and PitchBook.

The $460 million raised by Oregon entrepreneurs was the state’s weakest total since 2017. It’s the second straight year that venture activity in Oregon declined by around 50%.

Venture capital is the fuel that powers ambitious young companies, aimed at igniting explosive growth and big paydays for their investors. When the money flows, it’s a sign that the state is producing lots of promising new businesses that have captured investors’ imagination, or that those startups could soon become viable — and profitable — for the long-term.

The state netted a record haul of $2.1 billion in 2021 as investors poured money into startups while the economy roared back from the pandemic recession.

That excitement fell off as the economy cooled and interest rates rose, a response to the Federal Reserve’s fight against inflation.

 

Oregon Governor Tina Kotek has signed two executive orders this week to extend work on homelessness in the state.

Kotek says she exceeded the goals she set last year to reduce homelessness in the state. Over a thousand new shelter beds were created, nearly 13-hundred homeless households were placed into permanent housing, and over 88-hundred households were kept from becoming homeless.

One executive order adds capacity to the state’s shelter system. The other order continues the state’s Interagency Council on Homelessness which advises the Governor on policy.  

 

Governor Kotek says her top priority for the legislature this year is to increase affordable housing for Oregonians, likely a pipe dream according to critics.

Kotek is asking the legislature to approve 500-million-dollars on top of the 650-million-dollars approved last year to increase affordable housing. She says it’s a focused, menu driven approach using one-time dollars. She says it’ll jump start affordable housing construction across the state.  

 

Wishing to raise higher, Oregon ranks now near the middle of the pack in a new list ranking the Best And Worst States To Raise A Family.

Personal finance company Wallet Hub looked at factors such as family fun, health and safety, education and childcare, affordability, and socio-economics. Oregon ranked 26th in the nation. The top five states are Massachusetts, followed by North Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska, and New York. Arkansas, Alabama, West Virginia, Mississippi, and New Mexico are the bottom five or worst states to raise a family.

 

The season of giving extends into the new year for the Cow Creek Umpqua Indian Foundation.

This month, it is awarding more than $800,000 to community outreach efforts as part of its biannual awards program. The Cow Creek Umpqua Indian Foundation (CCUIF) said $61,160 went to seven Josephine County nonprofit organizations, part of $817,330 for CCUIF’s January 2024 round of giving, which itself is part of $24,071,273 in total giving by the Foundation since 1997.

It said 83 charities in southwestern Oregon from Jackson, Josephine, Klamath, Coos, Deschutes, Douglas and Lane counties are among recipients in this round of the Foundation’s semi-annual giving, including these Josephine County efforts: Cow Creek Umpqua Indian Foundation also gave $7,500 to Klamath County nonprofit Chiloquin Care Program Food Pantry to help fill the Chiloquin Care storeroom with nonperishable supplies to have on hand for emergency needs.

It makes its financial outreach awards semi-annually in January and June.  

 
Oregon delegates to the Republican National Convention this summer must pledge to back the winner of the state’s presidential primary, a top state party official confirmed.

Tracy Honl, Oregon’s Republican national committeewoman, clarified the party’s rules for the 31 delegates who will cast the state’s votes for the GOP presidential nominee at the July convention in Milwaukee, Wis. A national reporter sparked confusion among some Oregon political analysts last week by asserting the state party would select delegates at a May 25 convention independent of the May 21 primary.

The Oregon Republican Party’s bylaws call for a convention where precinct committeepersons — the elected local party officials who vote on party business, including nominating replacements for candidates or elected officials who don’t finish their terms — will select their delegates and alternates.

While the bylaws don’t require delegates to support the winner of the primary, a separate set of rules adopted by the state party’s central committee do.

Those rules lay out qualifications for delegates, including that they submit a written pledge to support the presidential candidate who wins the state’s primary election.

Oregon’s delegates would be free to vote for other candidates if the national convention doesn’t choose a nominee after two rounds of ballots. Oregon’s secretary of state, LaVonne Griffin-Valade, told critics pushing to get Trump off the ballot that she didn’t have the authority to bar any candidate in a presidential race.

That case is now on appeal before the Oregon Supreme Court, which has asked for legal briefs by Jan. 9. Trump has appealed the Colorado case to the U.S. Supreme Court.  

 

The American Red Cross is experiencing an emergency blood shortage as the nation faces the lowest number of people giving blood in 20 years. 

The Red Cross blood supply has fallen to critically low levels across the country, and blood and platelet donors are urged to make a donation appointment to help alleviate the shortage and help ensure lifesaving medical procedures are not put on hold.

Over the last 20 years, the number of people donating blood to the Red Cross has fallen by about 40%. When fewer people donate blood, even small disruptions to blood donations – such as the nearly 7,000-unit shortfall in blood donations the Red Cross experienced between Christmas and New Year’s Day alone – can have a huge impact on the availability of blood products and dramatic consequences for those in need of emergency blood transfusion. 

Blood products are currently going to hospitals faster than blood donations are coming in, and in recent weeks, the Red Cross has had to limit distributions of type O blood products – among the most transfused blood types – to hospitals. 

To make an appointment, download the Red Cross Blood Donor App, visitRedCrossBlood.org or call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767). The Red Cross and the National Football League (NFL) are partnering this January, during National Blood Donor Month, to urge individuals to give blood or platelets and help tackle the emergency blood shortage.

Those who come to give blood, platelets or plasma in January will automatically be entered for a chance to win a trip for two to Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas. For details, visit RedCrossBlood.org/Super Bowl.  

 

John Exley doesn’t play the Keno game often but bought a ticket at the Oregon City Safeway on December 23 to try his luck.

The 60-year-old from North Bonneville, Wash. wagered on a 10-spot game, meaning he’d need to match all ten numbers drawn between 1-80 to win. He added the Special Keno game play option for no additional cost. To his surprise, he hit all ten for the $1 million win.

Claiming a 10-spot win is rare, with Oregon’s last known $1 million Keno winner dating back to February 16, 2000. The odds for this type of win are also higher at about one in 8 million. Last year, Oregon saw 8.5 million winning Keno tickets, averaging $8.71 per claim. Keno games are drawn every four minutes and feature an 8-spot rolling jackpot bonus that is based on sales and continues to grow until the 8-spot game is won.

In 2023, Keno players claimed $74 million total prizes in Oregon. The Oregon Lottery recommends that you always sign the back of your winning ticket to ensure you can claim your prize. In the event of winning a jackpot, players should consult with a trusted financial planner or similar professional to develop a plan for their winnings.

Players have a year to claim their prize. For more information on the Oregon Lottery visit www.oregonlottery.org.

 

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