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The Archie Creek Fire continued burning for nearly eight weeks, scorching more than 130,000 acres, 67,000 of which was owned by the federal government.
The federal government sued PacifiCorp Thursday, claiming that negligence by Oregon’s second-largest energy company was responsible for the 2020 Archie Creek fire, court records show. PacifiCorp ...
GLIDE, Ore. — Salvage logging and replanting were two topics of discussion during a May 10 tour of the Archie Creek Fire area east of Glide, Ore. TrendingAgriculture secretary pledges […] ...
The settlement resolves years of legal wrangling over the Archie Creek Fire, which burned more than 130,000 acres along the North Umpqua River near Glide, Oregon.
PacifiCorp will pay out hundreds of millions of dollars to end a lawsuit over its alleged role in the devastating Oregon wildfires in 2020.
The Archie Creek Fire exploded on Sept. 8, 2020, growing to over 150 square miles in the first 48 hours as it was fanned by strong easterly winds.
Anne Dorsey, a victim of the Archie Creek fire, testified remotely Friday at a hearing of the Legislature’s Joint Committee on Tax Expenditures.
The Archie Creek Fire burned more than 130,000 acres over six weeks, about half of which was federal land.
Two Oregon families settle with PacifiCorp over Archie Creek fire Electric company PacifiCorp has settled a lawsuit with two families who were victims of Oregon's catastrophic Labor Day fires in 2020.
The federal government has filed a lawsuit against PacifiCorp for negligence over the 2020 Labor Day fires.
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