Readers report mixed findings on green practices
This month’s Input asked readers about their organization’s green practices.
This month’s Input asked readers about their organization’s green practices.
Leatherman is the only manufacturer of foldable, all-in-one multi-tools to build all of those products in the U.S. Its CEO plans to keep it that way.
When the Sendai quake and tsunami hit last March, many Japanese residents took refuge in “vertical evacuation structures,” reinforced concrete buildings that were strong enough — and tall enough — to withstand the force of the waves. Now officials in Cannon Beach aim to build a similar tsunami-resistant structure — the first in the United States.
Naturally Advanced Technologies uses enzyme technology on flax to make a patented material softer than linen and cheaper than cotton.
Warm Springs Composite Products, a tribal enterprise that manufactures fire-rated door components, finds success with fire code certification.
Most tales about rapid and sometimes reckless growth east of the Cascades tend to center around the fortunes of Bend. But the latest Census figures show that the Central Oregon town that grew fastest over the past decade was Sisters.
A coalition of sport fishermen and related businesses is luring legislators to ban commercial gillnet fishing in the main stem of the lower Columbia River below Bonneville Dam.
Oregon craft beer, despite fear of falling sales and a hesitation to expand throughout the recession, is doing better than ever.
The Steens Mountain Wilderness Resort was bought by Mark Webb for about $200,000. He got 16 acres, a mobile home, eight cabins and a whole lot of work necessary to upgrade after years of neglect.
Farm-direct pushes boundaries of the local meat industry.