Related News
Related News
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Hydro-powered Recreation Sites Open for Community Exploration
EWEB, the USDA Forest Service, and local construction partners celebrated the reopening of Carmen-Smith Recreation Projects on Friday, cheering on the partnerships that made possible the renovation of these treasured outdoors community spaces.
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EWEB concrete, copper and steel ensure reliable, resilient delivery of water and power
From the power source to the switch and from the water source to the tap, essential infrastructure is necessary to keep power and water flowing.
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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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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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Power Restoration Efforts Move Into High Gear
February 26, 2019
Eugene Water & Electric Board and contract line crews made significant progress restoring power overnight Monday and into Tuesday, with more than 6,300 customers returned to service.
As of 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, there are about 7,600 EWEB customers without service, down from more than 14,000 without power at 5 p.m. Monday.
There are 15 full crews, five two-person teams, four triage crews and eight assessor squads working in the field Tuesday, assisted by eight tree crews.
The focus of the Eugene-area crews is to restore major feeder lines. The remaining damaged feeders are located in the south and southeastern parts of the city. Crews working in the McKenzie River Valley are concentrating on repairing several sections of the damaged transmission lines that parallel Highway 126.
Some customers in the Eugene service area, primarily in south and southeast parts of the city, should prepare to be without power for another 48 to 72 hours, assuming weather conditions do not deteriorate further.
Many customers in the McKenzie River Valley could be without service through the end of the week due to the devastating amount of tree damage. Seven crews will work upriver overnight Tuesday and into Wednesday.
We follow a "hierarchy of repair" when restoring power during major outages. This system is used throughout the utility industry to restore the highest number of people as quickly as possible.
The order of priority means first repairing downed transmission and major feeder lines that will restore power to the most number of people, then we focus on repairing smaller distribution lines that serve fewer customers.
Repairing one large transmission line, for example, can restore power to thousands of customers, while repairing a small "tap" line that serves a few people in a neighborhood often is more time consuming. The repair of the individual service line that provides power to a single home is often last on the restoration priority list.
We've also doubled our phone line capacity, so while customers may have had trouble reaching us earlier, we are now able to handle higher call volume. If you are without power call 1-844-484-2300, or text OUT to TXEWEB (893932). Please follow all prompts so the outage is recorded and placed on a restoration plan.
Customers without power may want to contact family and friends to make arrangements to stay overnight if possible. If you have elderly neighbors without power, please check on them.
Customers can follow us on Facebook or Twitter (@ewebutility) for up-to-date information, or check the status of current outages with our outage map: http://www.eweb.org/outages-and-safety/power-outages/power-outage-map.
Please remember that safety is the first priority in any prolonged outage. There's no way to know if a downed line is energized, so play it safe and keep your distance. If you see a downed power line, assume it is live and stay away. If the downed line is across a street or sidewalk, call 911.