Lookout Eugene-Springfield
At a Eugene Safeway, this artist’s canvas is a cookie
Armed with a cookie cake and a palette of colorful buttercreams, Maxwell Schultz has found a fresh outlet for his artistic training — along with an active, well-followed Instagram account.
Read the original at Lookout Eugene-SpringfieldMore audio from Lookout Eugene-Springfield
-
2mTimber industry shenanigans continue to go unchecked | Letter to the editor
Two recent op-eds in Lookout Eugene-Springfield — one by Zeph Van Allen and the other by Michelle Holman — lament how the Lane County Watershed Bill of Rights was crushed by cash from logging, oil, real estate and Koch‑connected groups that totaled 14 times the amount raised by Measure 20-373’s supporters. Corporate shenanigans like this […]
-
3mWill Springfield leaders learn from other payroll tax misfires? | Letter to the editor
Regarding the Springfield City Council’s approval of a local payroll tax, I’m wondering if the council reviewed some of the local tax history before making its decision? Did the councilors, for example, consider what happened when the city of Salem imposed a payroll tax in 2023 without first consulting the electorate? The citizens forced a […]
-
3mFencing off the Eugene downtown federal building raises important First Amendment concerns | Letter to the editor
I am a sophomore at South Eugene High School, researching the state of protests in Eugene for a group project in Civics class. My classmates and I are exploring potential ways to create a safer environment for protestors and law enforcement officials. This research is for a school project, but the topic of protests is […]
-
4mDucks in hunt for podium as NCAA track and field championships set to begin at Hayward
The men’s team is ranked second heading into the meet. The women’s team is currently No. 3.
-
7mMiles of Lane County roads are in a no-man’s land, with no government on hook to fix them
County officials say 124 miles of so-called “local access roads” are not their responsibility. Property owners who live along the public roads are stuck with the potholes — and costs when they take on the maintenance and repairs themselves.