Community Resources for Southern Oregon Fires

Our hearts are with everyone in the Rogue Valley and across Oregon dealing with the severe climate fires that are impacting our loved ones, supporters and communities. The Almeda, Obenchain and Slater fires have devastated large portions of the Rogue Basin and local communities leaving many without their homes and businesses. Recovering from the impacts of these wildfires will be a community effort. If you can safely do so, we encourage anyone who is able to support direct relief efforts that are being organized across the Rogue Valley. Here are some immediate resources to help support communities in southern Oregon impacted by the Almeda, South Obenchain, and Slater Fires.

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Field Checking the Proposed Jordan Cove LNG Pipeline Crossing on the Rogue

Last week, the Rogue Riverkeeper team took a socially distanced trip to get out on the river and check out the proposed site of the Jordan Cove LNG pipeline crossing near Shady Cove. The cold, clear water and the other boaters floating past made it hard to imagine that this could ever be the site of a massive Horizontal Directional Drill (HDD) cutting through bedrock deep below the river to build a 36-inch, high pressure fracked gas pipeline. Learn more about what you can do to help stop Jordan Cove LNG this summer!

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Oregon Legislature Passes Bipartisan Private Forestry Reforms

On June 26th, the Oregon legislature passed bipartisan legislation that adopts common sense reforms for current practices on private industrial timber lands in Oregon. This vote is the result of decades of hard work by community members, organizers, and scientists calling for change. It is also just the first step in what will be a long process over the next two years to secure lasting protections for healthy forests and clean drinking water for all Oregonians.

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(Modified) Summer Water Quality Program Kicks Off!

Each summer, Rogue Riverkeeper works with volunteers to collect water samples at popular recreation sites across the Rogue Basin to test for E Coli bacteria and let you know where it is safe to recreate. And it’s that time again! Waterkeepers across the country, including us, are making significant changes to their water quality monitoring programs to address the potential risks due to the coronavirus pandemic.

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320 Miles of Increased Protections for Salmon + Steelhead Streams on Private Forest Lands

On June 3rd, the Oregon Board of Forestry voted unanimously to improve stream buffer standards for southern Oregon streams. This decision brings protections for approximately 320 miles of small and medium salmon and steelhead streams across 1 million acres of private forest lands within the Rogue watershed up to the same standards applied to the rest of western Oregon in 2017. Although this temporary rule is a step in the right direction, it does not fix the significant threats to clean water from harmful forest practices in Oregon that are decades behind other states.

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Trump Environmental Protection Agency puts Polluters Before People

On June 1st, the Trump Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized a new regulation gutting the Clean Water Act to fast track harmful fossil fuel projects, such as the Jordan Cove LNG project proposed in southern Oregon. This new regulation was finalized in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic and widespread protests against police brutality and systemic racism.

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Challenging FERC's Approval of Jordan Cove LNG

On May 27th, we joined with Rogue Climate and eleven other community and environmental organizations to challenge the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (FERC) conditional approval of the Jordan Cove LNG project. Last week, a group of impacted landowners along the pipeline route filed their own challenge to the project.

With two denials from the state of Oregon, Jordan Cove LNG should never have made it this far. Today, we’re challenging FERC’s conditional approval of this harmful project that has already shown it can’t meet state standards that protect clean water and the health of our communities.

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Jordan Cove LNG fight heats up in Spring 2020

While our communities continue to stay home to save lives during the global coronavirus pandemic, efforts from Pembina (the Canadian corporation behind the project) to move the Jordan Cove LNG project forward haven’t slowed down. Here’s a review of what’s happened since January 2020 and how you can make a difference in stopping the Jordan Cove LNG project once and for all!

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Improving Protections for Small Streams from Harmful Logging Practices

Currently, streams in southern Oregon are left with a less protective stream buffer standard under the Oregon Forest Practices Act that allows logging closer to streams that support salmon and steelhead than in the rest of western Oregon. Cutting trees near streams means less shade and warmer, dirtier water, which can harm salmon and put clean water at risk. The Oregon Board of Forestry needs to update its rules to require the more protective stream buffer standard for the Siskiyou region that applies to the rest of western Oregon. The Board will decide whether or not they need to change these rules in July.

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What does Earth Day Mean to You?

In the middle of a global health crisis, it might be a little hard to answer that question. Even a month ago, most of us had no idea how our world would change with the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19). Although fifty years later Earth Day 2020 looks a little different than in 1970 when 20 million Americans gathered together at protests and rallies, the heart of this day remains the same. No matter where you are, you can make a difference. Will you join us?

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Connect with your neighborhood creeks + streams!

How well do you know your neighborhood creeks? If you can safely get outside while following the Governor’s stay at home order and public health requirements, now is a great time to get to know your local waters. Like the roots of a tree, the small headwater streams and wetlands that flow into larger creeks and rivers are critical to the health of the entire Rogue River. But right now, some of these smaller waterways will lose protections under the Clean Water Act if a Trump Environmental Protection Agency rule is finalized. Learn more about how you can help take action to protect these waters!

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Earth Month is Here!

Celebrate Earth Month! There’s never been a better time to “Think Globally but Act Locally”. While we all deal with the current global pandemic by Staying Home to Save Lives, Rogue Riverkeeper is bringing our usually packed month of events online to you! Check out our blog to see what’s coming….

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Rogue Riverkeeper
Federal Agency Approves Jordan Cove LNG During Public Health Emergency

While the focus of our communities over the past few weeks has been on staying healthy and supporting each other in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) decided to conditionally approve certification for the Jordan Cove LNG project yesterday on March 19, 2020. This federal approval does not give the “go ahead” until the project receives critical permits from the state of Oregon.

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Oregon Denies Coastal Zone Permit While Federal Agency Holds Off on Jordan Cove LNG Decision

On February 19, 2020, the Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD) denied the Coastal Zone Management Act permit for the Jordan Cove LNG project! This is one of multiple state permits that the project needs to move forward. Yet again, Jordan Cove LNG has failed to qualify for a critical state permit. Less than 24 hours later, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) voted 2-1 against Jordan Cove LNG. Critically, however, the Commission clearly stated that this is not a denial of the project, but rather reflects the need for more time to review the state of Oregon’s permit denial the night before. FERC’s delay doesn’t change the fact that the project can’t move forward without critical state permits, which the project continues to fail to quality for.

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A First Step to Reforming Oregon’s Forest Practices

Oregon’s current forest practices are already decades behind other states, and our streams and salmon can’t wait another decade. On February 10th, 2020, we joined with groups from all sides to adopt a process that we hope will lead to improved protections under current forest practices on state and private forestlands. This agreement is a first step towards closing the gap to reform forest practices in Oregon to better protect clean water, thriving forests, and healthy communities.

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Winter Update on the Jordan Cove LNG Project

Seeing the writing on the wall that the Department of State Lands removal-fill permit could be denied by the state, Pembina withdrew its application for the Jordan Cove LNG project on January 24th before the agency’s deadline to make a decision on the permit by January 31st.  The removal-fill permit is a critical state permit that Pembina needs in order to construct the Jordan Cove LNG project. We know that the fight is far from over. Our communities will continue to show up and speak out until this harmful project that puts our clean water at risk is stopped for good.

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