As proposals to help save local journalism gathered dust in Congress and mostly fizzled in state legislatures over the last year, 136 more newspapers closed, according to a new report.

 

Editorials

 
Expecting the unexpected and solving the unsolvable

So much of what local government entities do for their constituents is so mundane and routine it seldom gets any attention until things go wrong. Then a hue and cry arises. Everyone wonders why someone ...

Rachel Thompson/News-Register file photo

 
Suicide prevention a cause we can all come to embrace

In the face of troubling social issues, our first instinct has traditionally been to simply keep them out of the public eye, thus avoiding the messy necessity of addressing them. When that fails, our fallback ...

Bond right-sized for Mac, deserves support at polls

We have but one issue before us on ballots mailed to us this week in connection with Oregon’s Nov. 4 general election. The question is: Can our community afford to spend $72.5 million on a new combination ...

 
Local government doesn't get the credit it actually deserves

If you limited your local government exposure in these parts to online forums and social media channels, you would find yourself subjected, in large measure, to a torrent of highly charged and sharply ...

 
Transportation bill serves as starting point on rough road

Until Sept. 29, Oregon hadn’t enacted a major new transportation funding package since 2017. In the world of politics and public policy, that’s a veritable eon ago. Over the course of the ...

 
City needs to remember it's not paying the piper

Big box shock? Pardon us, but we don’t find it shocking at all that national chain discounters, operating on a high-volume, low-margin basis, would be looking for McMinnville Landing building spaces ...

 
State faces big challenges; we need to step up locally

This isn’t your father’s Oregon anymore. And that isn’t a good thing, not by any stretch. During the last 25 years of the 20th century, plentiful stores of land and energy, a superior ...

 
Nothing's what it seems with edicts descending from D.C.

Sometimes it seems as though we’ve tumbled down Alice’s Wonderland rabbit hole and joined her at the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, where nothing is as it seems. At least it has in the eight ...

 
Private and public failings leave toxic stench in Sheridan

Late last month, one of North America’s largest treated-wood producers pleaded guilty in Yamhill County Circuit Court to 10 misdemeanor counts of unlawful water pollution, based on a legacy of toxic ...

 
Fire district can't allow revenue to go untapped

“Declining Medicare reimbursement from the federal government, combined with an increasing Medicare patient load, have driven up the cost of providing ambulance service in the last few years. “The ...

Letters

News-Register Letters Policy

The News-Register welcomes written opinions about issues of public interest and about the content of this newspaper. Letters from non-local writers are accepted only if they focus on local issues. This ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Oct. 31, 2025

Long tradition Citizens of McMinnville helped pay for public facilities long before I moved here in 1978. In fact, since McMinnville’s naming in 1856 and platting in 1876, its residents have most ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Oct. 24, 2025

Places to thrive Over the summer, I spotted something different happening around McMinnville. I began to see young people with fishing poles in their hands instead of phones. On an early fall paddle ...

Letters to the Editor: Oct. 17, 2025

Living within means This November’s ballot includes a $98.5 million bond for a new recreation facility, along with improvements to the library, senior center and park system. The bond will increase ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Oct. 10, 2025

Chance to be heard Attention Yamhill County citizens: Please attend upcoming hearings to let Commissioners Mary Starrett and Kit Johnston know they aren’t fooling anyone with their Oct. 2 attempt ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Oct. 3, 2025

Destroying democracy Thank you, Mayor Kim Morris, for putting a stop to the intellectual lynching of Sal Peralta. But sadly, this is not over. It didn’t take long for Season 2 of the Trump Show. ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Sept. 26, 2025

Just keeping pace I am not a landlord, but found it amusing reading the article about how rent prices have risen 54% from 2014 to 2024. The article stated the median apartment rent in 2014 was $847, ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Sept. 19, 2025

Parks for all Thank you for your July 25 editorial, “County takes first step in making parks a priority.” The Yamhill County Parks Advisory Board deeply appreciates your recognition of how ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Sept. 12, 2025

Oregon, not Ohio Thank you for highlighting in your Sept. 3 edition the quirk found in Dayton. When one sees these things every day, they can be taken for granted. Regarding the sign: When you Google ...

 
Letters to the Editor: Sept. 5, 2025

Lost trust The subject of mail-in ballots has been in our news lately, and not surprisingly, our left-wing Democrats don’t want the practice to stop in Oregon. As a Republican, I have to admit ...

Commentary

Jeb Bladine: No Republicans or Democrats – only swimmers

Today brings an admittedly odd combination of topics: 1) Launch of a new politically conservative column in our Viewpoints section; 2) McMinnville’s proposed $98.5 million bond to build a new aquatic/community ...

New Viewpoints feature debuts

New Viewpoints feature debuts Times are tough in the newspaper business, as Brier Dudley’s piece in today's N-R amply illustrates. Never tougher, for that matter, nor do they show promise of ...

Jonah Goldberg: Trump serves to unify both Democrats and Republicans

The only thing the parties can agree on is that Donald Trump is the central issue of our time.

 

 
Brier Dudley: News deserts grow as more local papers close

As proposals to help save local journalism gathered dust in Congress and mostly fizzled in state legislatures over the last year, 136 more newspapers closed, according to a new report.

 

Investigating the Bible: Who can be trusted?

A recent headline ran, “Religious leaders arrested on charges of running a forced labor camp and money laundering.” David E. Taylor, who calls himself an apostle, and Michelle Brannon were arrested on charges of money laundering and forced labor.

 
Quirk of the Week: Garden-variety oddities

Good things often come in threes, such as water, soil and light — the basics for garden growth. And three is the exact number of garden examples of Quirk to observe this week. Starting just outside ...

 
Kirby Neumann-Rea: Obsolete optimism

A retrospective on those slippery Escheresque stairs of 2019 and early 2020

Investigating the Bible: Do what we can

Lyndon Baines Johnson and Richard Nixon were longtime enemies. The late Senator Bob Dole wrote that before Watergate LBJ made an astonishing prediction. He compared his old foe to a Spanish horse “… who runs faster than anyone for his first nine lengths and then turns around and runs backward. 

Jeb Bladine: Dontcha just love our messy U.S. democracy?

Last time I checked, our American experiment still was a democracy. And “the people” still were in charge, despite their occasional lapses in holding their government both responsible and accountable. Reportedly, ...

 
Erik Lukens: Business climate rankings give Oregon falling scores

Every summer, CNBC releases a widely followed business-climate ranking. America’s Top States for Business, as it’s known, gives each state an overall ranking as well as rankings in 10 categories, ...

Jeb Bladine: Legal notices augmented by online databases

First, a quick survey: Do you read “legal notices” in the newspaper (you should)? Do you know what a legal notice is (many people don’t)? When a legal notice relates to real property ...

Investigating the Bible: The value of discipline

By DAVID CARLSON PASTOR   In the Reader’s Digest, Robert Moore described a grueling day of boot camp for his son, a ten-mile hike and a challenging obstacle course. As his son lay exhausted ...

Jennifer Green: Health of a community starts with connection

By JENNIFER GREEN As a pediatrician, I spend my days sitting with families who are doing their best to raise healthy, happy children. When they reach the age of 3, I begin asking parents about their ...

 
Offbeat Oregon: The world’s steepest street is in Oregon City − it runs straight up

The cities of San Francisco and Pittsburgh are currently in a battle for bragging rights: Which town is home to the world’s steepest street? Is it Canton Avenue in Pittsburgh, a 21-foot stretch of ...

 
Quirk of the Week: Switching back to Mac

Folks living west of Hill Road might beg to differ, but McMinnville is essentially a flat town. Walkers and bikers are almost always on the level. Yet, head out Northwest Wallace Road to where, in this ...

 
John Olson: Parks and recreation bond an investment in community

Imagine a McMinnville where families, young professionals and businesses all thrive — a city with modern recreational facilities, vibrant community connections and strong economic growth. That vision is within reach, but it requires action.

 

Jeb Bladine: Shutdown crisis reports spawn more questions

Every crisis-related news report about our 9-day-old federal government shutdown seems to raise as many questions as it answers. Warnings of air transportation gridlock cite understaffing because so many ...

 
Quirk of the Week: Curiosities mark time-tested YCHS ballpark in Yamhill

There’s life in the Yamhill Carlton High School softball park, but the place looks a bit bedraggled. For years now, the vinyl sponsor banners on the north side of the field house have steadily deteriorated. ...

 
Quirk of the Week: Nailing down a grab bag of oddities, from the obscure to the obvious

Time for an autumn grab bag. Quirk this week includes a bit of new, a revisit or two and something seen in the rear-view … also, something obvious. Since it’s October and that means basketball ...

Investigating the Bible: Being like salt

By DAVID CARLSON PASTOR Jesus told his followers: “You are the salt of the earth, but if the salt has lost its taste, how shall its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything except ...