Related News
Related News
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Fourth graders learn about power line safety through EWEB program in schools
"Power Town" is a demonstration table that uses live voltage to show what happens when different objects come in contact with electricity.
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Leaburg Forest Management Plan: Spring 2026 16 acre variable retention cut
EWEB, Trout Mountain Forestry enacting variable retention harvest on the Leaburg Forest as part of providing long term structural diversity and habitat opportunities
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Spill response update
EWEB staff stand by their initial assessment that the spill will have no adverse impacts to drinking water quality at this time.
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EWEB deploys spill response on McKenzie River following semi-truck crash near Belknap Springs
Emergency response crews worked quickly after a tanker truck carrying an estimated 275 gallons of diesel and between 5,000 and 7,000 gallons of milk crashed this morning near Belknap Springs, releasing diesel and milk into a creek that flows into the Upper McKenzie River.
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Beaver Removal at Leaburg Canal
EWEB completed targeted management wildlife activities at Leaburg Canal after increased beaver activity and repeated dam removals during 2025 raised concerns about the stability of the canal embankment.
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EWEB Finalizes Transfer of McKenzie Valley Electric Customers to Lane Electric
EWEB has officially completed the transfer of electric customers in the McKenzie Valley to Lane Electric Cooperative, effective May 1, 2026. This milestone marks the culmination of nearly a year of research, analysis, community engagement, and coordinated efforts between the two utilities.
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EWEB, watershed partners begin South Fork Phase 3 Floodplain Project
Multi-agency effort will restore habitat, improve water quality, strengthen river resilience
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2025 State of the McKenzie Watershed Report
EWEB assures the McKenzie River is an excellent source for Eugene’s drinking water – even as the watershed continues to recover from the 2020 Holiday Farm Fire.
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Sustainability Snapshot - Celebrating Energy Efficiency Projects in the Community
Sustainability Snapshots highlight impactful projects completed by EWEB's Customer Solutions department, as a way to celebrate the meaningful work happening behind the scenes.
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EWEB Customers Drive Record Energy and Water Savings in 2025
At a time when energy demand is growing across the region, who are saving energy are doing more than lowering individual bills - they're helping reduce overall demand, support grid reliability and limit the need for new, costly energy resources.
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Carmen-Smith Recreation Sites Open May 1
EWEB completes major overhaul of Trail Bridge Campground and other sites connected to hydroelectric project.
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Oregon Utilities Warn of Rate Impacts Following Federal Court Order on Columbia Dam System
EWEB joins coalition urging Governor Kotek to drop expensive litigation and engage directly with consumer-owned utilities
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This month, EWEB celebrates 115 years of service Eugene
EWEB celebrates 115 years serving Eugene. As our community grows and challenges increase from aging infrastructure, extreme weather, and climate impacts, EWEB is making thoughtful, long-term investments to ensure safe, reliable service for decades to come.
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EWEB and the UO extend energy generation study
The study is testing whether the UO’s on-site generator can bolster grid reliability and support climate and greenhouse gas reduction goals.
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EWEB Board of Commissioners Approves Employment Agreement with John Hairston as Next General Manager
“EWEB is a public treasure,” Hairston said. “I’m eager to listen to staff, learn from the community, and build on the strong foundation already in place."
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EWEB electric and water crews support other utilities through mutual aid agreement
January 19, 2023 • Rachael McDonald and Robyn Smith, EWEB Communications
If someone needs help and you have the tools, the experience, and the availability to assist, what would you do?
At EWEB, we do what we can to help others in need. That’s been the reality for several of our electric and water crews over the past few weeks as we’ve responded to mutual aid requests for storm response and drinking water restoration, locally, and out of state.
EWEB was able to provide this assistance because we did not foresee or experience any severe weather events effecting EWEB territory, and we felt comfortable with the current workload and system maintenance to send crews to assist others in need.
"There's times when we're not able to lend help due to brewing weather in EWEB’s territory or priorities that can’t be delayed, but this was one of those times when we could,” said Tyler Nice, EWEB electric operations manager.
Doing this also keeps our crew workers connected with others in the industry and builds relationships should we ever need such support in the future.
“In the 2016 winter storm we had over 30 crews that came to our aid. Opportunities like this strengthen relationships with other utilities should we need help again down the road,” said Nice.
January 5 – EWEB crews aid California storm response
After an atmospheric river caused widespread outages in northern California at the beginning of January, several utilities requested mutual aid to restore, at one point, more than 400,000 outages. They needed help and EWEB answered. EWEB sent a 5-man crew to assist with storm restoration near Redding. EWEB crew members Brian Read, Justin Woods, Matt Groff, Jeramie York, and Garrett Littrell have spent the first part of 2023 away from their families, helping others to get the power turned back on. The crew finished up near Sacramento on the 15th and returned home.
This is a glimpse into the crew's world of storm response - removing damaged power poles, installing new poles, clearing debris on private property and replacing electric transformers, all while being far from home.
EWEB responded to this request through the Western Region Mutual Assistance Agreement (WRMAA), adopted by many utilities throughout Western North America to support one another in the event of emergencies affecting generation, transmission, distribution, or other business operations.
December 29 – Line Crews assist PGE in Wilsonville
Shortly after Christmas, we experienced relatively few outages from a 48-hour windstorm that blew through the Willamette Valley. Our crews were able to respond and restore power within a few hours. Other utilities in the area did not fare so well.
Because EWEB had minimal equipment to repair from the wind event, and tree related damage was manageable within one workday, we were able to respond to a request for aid from our neighbors to the north, Portland General Electric (PGE), after the initial impact of the windstorm left over 100,000 PGE customers without power. With our local outages restored, EWEB sent two, two-person crews to help PGE with outage restoration.
Line workers Matt Groff, Caleb Robbins, Jeramie York, Ryan Oosthof worked on power restorations through the night and finished the next morning in the Salem area. PGE expressed gratitude for our assistance and mutual aid partnership.
December 27—Water crews assist the town of Mapleton
EWEB’s water utility helped Mapleton when it lost drinking water late last month. The small community between Eugene and Florence experienced a double whammy with the ice storm followed by heavy rains, which caused some leaks and put its water treatment plant out of commission.
All 260 Mapleton customers were without running water a couple of days after Christmas. EWEB sent troubleshooters to help identify the leaks and also sent out a team with our mobile water distribution trailer to get drinking water to Mapleton residents right away.
“We’re talking about a community with no drinking water,” Hunt said. “When it comes to drinking water, that’s public health. And when a small community loses water, it can really affect that area. Kudos to the EWEB team and EWEB management who said, yes, go out and do what we can do.”
Hunt said EWEB plant operators were able to assist in getting Mapleton’s water treatment plant back up and running.
“It was an outstanding response from our team at every level. From management, supervisory, administrative and staff level,” EWEB Water Operations Manager Mike Masters said. “We’re really proud of the opportunity and the ability to help out a neighbor like that.”
Jeremiah Hunt, Jeanine Parisi, Wallace McCullough, Ray Leipold, Lucus Moran all assisted on the administrative level. Ron Oosthof, John Franklin, John Stevens, Justin Valley, Justin Doan, Toby Dixon, Aaron Eisele, Steve Groat, Hunter Hamilton, and Shane Buck were all boots on the ground assisting with the Mapleton water crisis.
EWEB got the request to help Mapleton through what’s called the Oregon Water/ Wastewater Agency Response Network (ORWARN) Mutual Aid Agreement. ORWARN member utilities assist each other during emergencies.
Masters said EWEB is fortunate to be in a position to assist other utilities which speaks to our resiliency, resources, and preparedness.