Oregon continues its lottery winning streak as a $328.5M Powerball ticket was sold in Beaverton, following last year's record $1.3B jackpot win.
A person has come forward with a ticket matching all six Powerball numbers for Saturday's $328.5 million jackpot sold at a Fred Meyer in Beaverton.
The first Powerball jackpot of 2025 was sold in Oregon and is worth $328.5 million, according to lottery officials. The winner purchased the winning ticket in Beaverton on Friday, Jan. 17, the Oregon Lottery said. The retail location will not be revealed ...
BEAVERTON, Ore — Lightning has struck twice for Oregon lottery players as a $328.5 million Powerball ticket was sold in Beaverton, marking the state's first jackpot win of 2025. The winning ...
A lottery player in Oregon won the estimated $329 million Powerball jackpot on Saturday night, according to the Powerball website. Only one ticket matched all six numbers to win the jackpot, which has a cash value of $146.4 million. It was not immediately known where in Oregon the winning Powerball ticket was sold.
The first Powerball jackpot of 2025 was sold in Oregon and is worth $328.5 million, according to lottery officials. The winner purchased the winning ticket in Beaverton on Friday, Jan. 17 ...
Emergency contraception purchases have increased since inauguration day across the country, including in Oregon.
The group behind the Beaverton Startup Challenge and other west side startup resources is seeking a new executive director.
Someone has come forward to claim the $328.5 million Powerball jackpot. But we won’t know the person’s identity for a while. The massive jackpot was hit during the Saturday, Jan. 18, drawing, McClatchy News reported. It wasn’t until Jan. 22 that someone came forward to claim the prize, the Oregon Lottery said in a Jan. 24 news release.
The Clackamas Community College Environmental Learning Center is hosting free weekly workshops with industry professionals that will discuss gardening for wildlife and water quality, with a theme on climate resilience and impacts of climate change on wildlife.
The judge said her ruling is intended to "maintain the status quo." It does not block the Trump administration from freezing funding to new programs.
Oregon and 22 other states are suing the Trump administration after it ordered an abrupt freeze to many federal payments, leaving state agencies unable to access reimbursements for Medicaid and child care programs and sending state officials scrambling to determine the total effect.