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Homeless Deaths in Portland increase dramatically – again

Homeless Deaths in Portland increase dramatically – again

In another example of well meaning but misguided homeless advocacy policies, Portland is seeing a dramatic increase in suffering and death – at much higher rates than the rest of the country that is seeing declines. A report from the Multnomah county medical examiner shows homeless deaths have been increasing at a dramatic rate year over year – despite some of the strongest implementation and policies that spending millions in free tents, permit free camping, wide distribution of free ‘harm reduction’ drug use kits, legalization of drug use, suspension of prosecution for drug crimes, and open door offers of free treatment.

It turns out that after a decade of homeless advocacy groups encouraging these policies, they are actually increasing deaths at an alarming and clear rate far higher rates than even imprisonment ever did. The death rates can be mapped almost 1-1 with policy implementation. The end result is dramatically more suffering and deaths.

Which should be no surprise. Activists and advocacy groups are not medical or scientific groups. They’re simply (at best) social workers with a particular agenda – many without any training or background in the causes they are behind. It’s probably time we started questioning the policies and money spent by activists and advocacy groups just like we do the proposed policies of politicians. If someone truly cares about the plight of homeless, it’s our duty to question and hold these groups accountable for the deaths the policies are causing.

All of this also in spite of a massive new homeless income tax – proving once again that it’s not a money or compassion problem – but a leadership problem.

Data available in the annual Domicile Unknown Multnomah County Health Department report.

2025 Lincoln City Glass Floats events

2025 Lincoln City Glass Floats events

Finders Keepers runs the yearlong hidden glass float events on the central Oregon coast and just released its 2025 schedule Tuesday, detailing its 16 special drops over the course of the year, in addition to its daily drops on Lincoln City beaches.

  • Jan. 3-5 – 25th Anniversary Opening Weekend: 100 floats
  • Feb. 8-17 – Antique week: 100 Japanese antique-style floats
  • Feb. 14-16 – Valentine’s Day: 50 Red/pink/white floats
  • March 22-April 19 – Spring break: 200 floats
  • April 19-22 – Earth Day: 50 Earth Day floats
  • May 9-11 – Mother’s Day: 50 floats
  • June 13-15 – Father’s Day: 50 floats
  • June 20-21 – Casino Anniversary: 30 floats
  • June 21-22 – Summer Kite: 10 floats
  • Aug. 30-Sept 1 – Ocean Conservation: 40 floats
  • Sept. TBD – Celebration of Honor: 50 Red/white/blue floats
  • Sept. 20-21 – Fall Kite: 10 floats
  • Oct. 11-14 – Indigenous Peoples Day: 50 floats
  • Oct. 31-Nov. 2 – Halloween: 50 floats
  • Nov. 14-16 – Restoration Pow-Wow: 50 floats
  • Dec. 12-14 – Holiday: 50 floats

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Having strange dreams? Call this number!

Having strange dreams? Call this number!

The best description I have heard of Portland when I got here in the late 90’s was that it was a city full of shipwrecks and refugees – where people wash up on it’s shores with few prospects and sketchy pasts. Portland is nothing if not a strange place. You’ll find odd things posted on poles all over town. Every now and again, someone will dig into one of these to find out what they’re about. The Willamette Valley Dream Survey is one of those. Long story short: the most recent branch of this that showed up in Utah revolves around a doomsday prediction on Sept 5th, 2020.

Nexpo did a little over-dramatic dig into the phenomenon by going so far to buy a burner phone and calling them. He also digs into a local 2600-like hacker group called Futel (he pronounces it wrong, it’s pronounce Few-tell – like ‘futile’ as a play on words about telephone monopolies and other alt-conspiracy type plays on words). that converts old payphones into free (likely VOIP) phones.

Only 15% of Steam users are playing your new game

Only 15% of Steam users are playing your new game

Valve’s Year In Review for Steam revealed that only 15% of Steam players spent their time on games released in 2024. 47% of players devoted their time to games from the past 1-7 years (or “recent favorites”), and 37% played titles from eight or more years ago (“classics”).

That 15% is a significant increase over the 9% of playtime spent in 2023 on new games released that year (though it’s down on the 17% of time folks spent in new games in 2022). So 2024 has actually seen a bit of a bounce back from last year.

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Maximizing your PTO time off in 2025

Maximizing your PTO time off in 2025

Want to maximize your time off in 2025? Take these 12 additional days as vacation days and get the maximum number of long weekends!

  • Wednesday, Jan. 1 (New Year’s Day): Take off Jan. 2–3 for a five-day weekend. If you also have Dec. 31 off, take Monday, Dec. 30 for a full week of vacation.
  • Monday, Jan. 20 (Martin Luther King, Jr. Day): Take off Friday, Jan. 17
  • Monday, Feb. 17 (President’s Day): Take off Friday, Feb. 14
  • Monday, May 26 (Memorial Day): Take off Friday, May 23
  • Thursday, June 19 (Juneteenth National Independence Day): Take off Friday, June 20
  • Friday, July 4 (Independence Day): Take off Thursday, July 3
  • Monday, Sept. 1 (Labor Day): Take off Friday, Aug. 29
  • Monday, Oct. 13 (Indigenous People’s Day): Take off Friday, Oct. 10
  • Tuesday, Nov. 11 (Veteran’s Day): Take off Monday, Nov. 10
  • Thursday, Nov. 27 (Thanksgiving Day): Take off Friday, Nov. 28. If you already have this day off, request Wednesday, Nov. 26 to get a five day weekend.
  • Thursday, Dec. 25 (Christmas Day): Take off Friday, Dec. 26. If you have Dec. 24 off as well, you get a five-day weekend. Or take off Dec. 22–24 and Dec. 26 to get a nine-day vacation with only four days of PTO.

Contiki also has a calendar calculator to help you out (If you squint enough. Time to hire a better graphic designer). Enter a dummy email address since it displays it, not emails it to you.

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Oregon ranks at bottom of medium salaries

Oregon ranks at bottom of medium salaries

ADP, the payroll company, has shared the lowest and highest median salaries by state. They used the wages and salaries of almost 10 million employees over 12 months to collect their data.

The results? Oregon is 48th – essentially tied with Arkansas and below Nevada as having the worst pay in the country.

RankStateAverage annual salary
48Oregon$50,100
49Arkansas$50,000
50Mississippi$46,000
51New Mexico$40,200

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The end result of high regulatory limits on house building

The end result of high regulatory limits on house building

The housing shortage in Portland seems to be improving – until you look at why. It’s not because Portland (with some of the most housing unfriendly policies in the country) is building more houses (they are a little bit) but because people are leaving.

What is happening in San Francisco—and in Portland, to a lesser extent—is that the housing shortage is temporarily improving, not because of the construction of new housing but because people are moving away to cheaper places.

In a case study on San Francisco, the Up for Growth report noted an issue that a report from the Common Sense Institute Oregon highlighted earlier this week.

“Household formation in these areas significantly decreased. Driven in no small part by the high cost of housing, households that could have formed in these communities formed somewhere else instead

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