Grimm TV series benefits Portland economy
NBC pilot ‘Grimm’ has a $7 million budget, and they hope to spend $4 million locally while filming in Portland.
NBC pilot ‘Grimm’ has a $7 million budget, and they hope to spend $4 million locally while filming in Portland.
Over $5.4 billion has been invested in renewable energy in Oregon, according to data by the Renewable Northwest Project.
Northwest Natural Gas Co. and TransCanada Corp. withdrew their application to build the controversial Palomar pipeline.
Nearly 6,000 Oregon families are awaiting word that they’ve qualified for aid from the Oregon Homeownership Stabilization Initiative.
Farmers in Eastern Oregon have begun USDA-mandated training in order to grow Monsanto-made Roundup Ready beets.
A local environmental group is developing a market-based approach to the enduring challenge of conserving freshwater habitat.
Oregon’s film and television industry has never looked stronger. Vince Porter, executive director of the Governor’s Office of Film and Television, predicts that the state will pull in more than $90 million from television shows and films shot here in 2011. And that record windfall could be just the beginning.
After an uncertain start, the state law that bans trashing electronic waste has kept heaps of toxic material out of landfills and created jobs. But just how many jobs is unknown, and as the Legislature considers expanding the program it is also looking to tweak the rules with job creation in mind.
It’s tax time again, unless you happen to be one of the thousands of Oregonians who don’t pay taxes.
Big deals of the month.