Oregon Rural Action Oregon Rural Action

“House Representatives discuss Boardman water issue”

East Oregonian - By Rick Haverinen - Nov. 29, 2023

BOARDMAN — Residents of Boardman sensed increased interest from the Oregon Legislature in the community’s water pollution issues as three members of the House of Representatives visited the city Monday, Nov. 27, for a tour and a public meeting with locals.

The officials — Annessa Hartman, Gladstone, Ricki Ruiz, Gresham, and Khanh Pham, southeast Portland, all Democrats — made the trip from Salem to sense what the nitrate pollution problem was about and the frustration locals face enduring slow government action to help.

Hartman is vice chair of the House Committee on Agriculture, Land Use, Natural Resources and Water.

“I found out about this issue when I first got elected as the vice chair of my committee and immediately was surprised this issue had gone on for so long,”

Hartman commented between a community tour and the following meeting at the Boardman campus of Blue Mountain Community College.

By Rick Haverinen | East Oregonain | November 29, 2023

BOARDMAN — Residents of Boardman sensed increased interest from the Oregon Legislature in the community’s water pollution issues as three members of the House of Representatives visited the city Monday, Nov. 27, for a tour and a public meeting with locals.

The officials — Annessa Hartman, Gladstone, Ricki Ruiz, Gresham, and Khanh Pham, southeast Portland, all Democrats — made the trip from Salem to sense what the nitrate pollution problem was about and the frustration locals face enduring slow government action to help.

Hartman is vice chair of the House Committee on Agriculture, Land Use, Natural Resources and Water.

“I found out about this issue when I first got elected as the vice chair of my committee and immediately was surprised this issue had gone on for so long,”

Hartman commented between a community tour and the following meeting at the Boardman campus of Blue Mountain Community College.

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“Boardman community organizer’s truck catches fire; labeled ‘suspicious’”

Oregon Public Broadcasting - By Antonio Sierra - Nov. 28, 2023

A truck belonging to an organizer against nitrate pollution in Eastern Oregon burned at a Boardman home shortly after three state legislators visited the home Monday as a part of a tour.

The Boardman Fire Rescue District considers the fire “suspicious” but closed its investigation without determining a cause. No one was injured by the fire, nor did the fire spread beyond the vehicle before firefighters extinguished it.

Oregon Rural Action, a group based out of La Grande that has been active in pushing state officials to address decades of groundwater pollution in Morrow and Umatilla counties, announced the fire in a press release Monday. The group called on local and state authorities to fully investigate the fire and protect its employees.

By Antonio Sierra | OPB | November 28, 2023

A truck belonging to an organizer against nitrate pollution in Eastern Oregon burned at a Boardman home shortly after three state legislators visited the home Monday as a part of a tour.

The Boardman Fire Rescue District considers the fire “suspicious” but closed its investigation without determining a cause. No one was injured by the fire, nor did the fire spread beyond the vehicle before firefighters extinguished it.

Oregon Rural Action, a group based out of La Grande that has been active in pushing state officials to address decades of groundwater pollution in Morrow and Umatilla counties, announced the fire in a press release Monday. The group called on local and state authorities to fully investigate the fire and protect its employees.
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“Morrow, Umatilla counties get $1.7M for nitrate contamination solutions”

Hermiston Herald - By Travis Snell - October 12, 2023

UMATILLA COUNTY — Umatilla and Morrow county officials learned Tuesday that the counties will receive $1.7 million in federal aid to address nitrate contamination in private wells.

According to a press release from Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, Environmental Protection Agency funding will help find long-term solutions to a water crisis in the Lower Umatilla Basin.

By Travis Snell | Hermiston Herald | October 12, 2023

Umatilla and Morrow county officials learned Tuesday that the counties will receive $1.7 million in federal aid to address nitrate contamination in private wells.

According to a press release from Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, Environmental Protection Agency funding will help find long-term solutions to a water crisis in the Lower Umatilla Basin.

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“Oregon counties receive $1.7M to address nitrate contamination”

Capital Press - By George Plaven - October 11, 2023

Two counties in northeast Oregon are getting $1.7 million in federal aid to address nitrate contamination in residential wells.

The funding, part of a $1.7 trillion congressional spending bill, will go to Umatilla and Morrow counties where officials are seeking long-term solutions for elevated nitrates in the Lower Umatilla Basin Groundwater Management Area, or LUBGWMA.

By George Plaven | Capital Press | October 11, 2023

Two counties in northeast Oregon are getting $1.7 million in federal aid to address nitrate contamination in residential wells.

The funding, part of a $1.7 trillion congressional spending bill, will go to Umatilla and Morrow counties, where officials are seeking long-term solutions for elevated nitrate levels in the Lower Umatilla Basin Groundwater Management Area, or LUBGWMA.

The federal aid will be used to develop and implement a standardized well testing program for domestic wells as well as develop a feasibility plan for permanent solutions such as public drinking water systems.

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“State coalition, ORA differ on well-testing outcomes”

By TRAVIS SNELL Hermiston Herald - By Travis Snell - October 6, 2023

"There's still a lot of work to do here, and we need state personnel to start working with a sense of urgency sooner, not later.”

"Todavía queda mucho trabajo por hacer aquí y necesitamos que el personal estatal comience a trabajar con sentido de urgencia pronto, no después”.

By Travis Snell | East Oregonain | October 7, 2023

“Everyone in this community deserves to make the choice whether they want tested or not, but even with Gov. Kotek’s deadline now passed, most folks still haven’t had that opportunity,” [Kaleb Lay] said.

However, he expressed frustration that testing wells is “just the tip of the iceberg” when it comes to nitrates.

“Nothing has been done to rein in polluting industry,” he said. “Not one well user has been connected to a permanent source of safe water, and we’ve heard nothing from the epidemiologists brought in to study what this has done to the community’s health. There’s still a lot of work to do here, and we need state personnel to start working with a sense of urgency sooner, not later.”

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“All water well owners in the Lower Umatilla Basin offered nitrate testing, Oregon officials say”

Oregon Public Broadcasting - By Antonio Sierra - October 4, 2023

“It’s a matter of public health,” he said. “For some folks, it’s a matter of life and death.”

"Es una cuestión de salud pública", afirmó. "Para algunas personas, es una cuestión de vida o muerte".

By Antonio Sierra | OPB | October 4, 2023

Kotek helped secure money from the Legislature to help fund well testing, filters and clean water deliveries through June 2025. In an interview, Oregon Rural Action organizer Kaleb Lay acknowledged that collecting 1,000 well water samples represented significant progress.

Even so, Lay said OHA could have made more face-to-face contact with well owners, especially given the urgency of the situation.

“It’s a matter of public health,” he said. “For some folks, it’s a matter of life and death.”
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“Most well-water users in northeast Oregon counties still in the dark about toxic contamination”

The Oregon Health Authority has failed to meet Gov. Tina Kotek’s expectation on well water testing for harmful contamination in northeast Oregon, rural advocates said.

Local organizers with the nonprofit environmental and social justice group Oregon Rural Action said the state’s testing campaign failed to meet Kotek’s expectations set in May that all wells would be tested by the end of September.

“The governor came out and looked people in the eye and said this would be dealt with, that testing would be done by Sept. 30,” said Kaleb Lay, an organizer for the group.

By Alex Baumhardt | Oregon Capital Chronicle | October 3, 2023

The Oregon Health Authority has failed to meet Gov. Tina Kotek’s expectation on well water testing for harmful contamination in northeast Oregon, rural advocates said.

Local organizers with the nonprofit environmental and social justice group Oregon Rural Action said the state’s testing campaign failed to meet Kotek’s expectations set in May that all wells would be tested by the end of September.

“The governor came out and looked people in the eye and said this would be dealt with, that testing would be done by Sept. 30,” said Kaleb Lay, an organizer for the group.
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“Deadline passes for Oregon State efforts to test wells for nitrate contamination”

By Kaitlyn Smock | NonStop Local - Tri-cities/Yakima | October 2, 2023

According to Oregon Rural Action, the majority of well owners in the lower Umatilla Basin remain unsure if their drinking water is safe.

It is estimated that 3,300 wells domestic wells exist in the lower Umatilla Basin.

The September 30 deadline set by Governor Tina Kotek, has passed with only 1,001 domestic wells being tested.
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“Rural Oregon’s struggles for drinking water frame Senate talks of national crisis”

At a Senate subcommittee hearing Wednesday, Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden rattled off a list of Oregonians struggling to meet basic water needs. He mentioned dry wells in Southern Oregon, polluted groundwater in Eastern Oregon and Central Oregon, and years of boil water notices on the Warm Springs Reservation.

Wyden called on several federal agencies to collect national data on who doesn’t have safe water and direct more funding toward rural residents and Tribes.

“It’s hard to believe that in 2023 our country doesn’t even have some basic facts about the key issues to improve water quality, like who has indoor plumbing in America that actually works,” he told members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

By Emily Cureton Cook | OPB | September 21, 2023

At a Senate subcommittee hearing Wednesday, Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden rattled off a list of Oregonians struggling to meet basic water needs. He mentioned dry wells in Southern Oregon, polluted groundwater in Eastern Oregon and Central Oregon, and years of boil water notices on the Warm Springs Reservation.

Wyden called on several federal agencies to collect national data on who doesn’t have safe water and direct more funding toward rural residents and Tribes.

“It’s hard to believe that in 2023 our country doesn’t even have some basic facts about the key issues to improve water quality, like who has indoor plumbing in America that actually works,” he told members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
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“Reports of groundwater pollution in Oregon surface in a US Senate hearing”

Oregon Public Broadcasting - By Emily Cureton Cook - Sept. 11, 2023 6 a.m.

Across rural Oregon, state and federal laws don’t protect clean drinking water. That’s because these safeguards exclude private domestic wells, with consequences that were highlighted by U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley last week at a congressional hearing on infrastructure spending.

At Thursday’s hearing of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Works, the senator pointed to OPB’s reporting on two regions: In Eastern Oregon where more than 4,000 wells are at risk from decades of nitrate pollution by agricultural interests, and in Central Oregon, where dozens of people blame a gravel mine for sudden plumbing disasters and health concerns.

By Emily Cureton Cook | OPB | September 11, 2023

Across rural Oregon, state and federal laws don’t protect clean drinking water. That’s because these safeguards exclude private domestic wells, with consequences that were highlighted by U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley last week at a congressional hearing on infrastructure spending.

At Thursday’s hearing of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Works, the senator pointed to OPB’s reporting on two regions: In Eastern Oregon where more than 4,000 wells are at risk from decades of nitrate pollution by agricultural interests, and in Central Oregon, where dozens of people blame a gravel mine for sudden plumbing disasters and health concerns.
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