567 episodes

OPB's daily conversation covering news, politics, culture and the arts. Hosted By Dave Miller.

Think Out Loud Oregon Public Broadcasting

    • News
    • 4.5 • 243 Ratings

OPB's daily conversation covering news, politics, culture and the arts. Hosted By Dave Miller.

    Longtime head of Willamette Riverkeeper moves to land conservation work

    Longtime head of Willamette Riverkeeper moves to land conservation work

    As the head of Willamette Riverkeeper, Travis Williams has worked to protect the river for much of his professional life. The environmental nonprofit’s efforts have been both wide and deep, from helping enforce the Clean Water Act, clearing up trash, restoring habitat, contributing to the Portland Harbor Cleanup, working to protect fish populations and preventing concentrated animal feeding operations, or CAFOs, along waterways in Linn County.  

    Williams says the nonprofit is strong and does not expect any interruption in the work when he steps away in the coming months to focus on the Willamette River Preservation Trust. It’s a land trust focused on conserving creeks, rivers, floodplains, oak savanna, upland forests and more for the mid to northern Willamette Valley. We sit down with Williams about the health of the Willamette over the last two dozen years, and how his past work relates to his future plans.

    • 15 min
    Multnomah County DA Mike Schmidt makes a case for reelection

    Multnomah County DA Mike Schmidt makes a case for reelection

    Attorney Mike Schmidt is facing a challenge from one of his own senior deputy attorney’s, Nathan Vazquez. Schmidt came into office as a reformer, with the goal of ending mass incarceration and racial disparities in the criminal justice system. We talk to Schmidt about his tenure, and his case for why he deserves to be reelected. We talk to Vasquez on Monday, April 29th.  

    • 19 min
    Landowners, state, federal agencies work together on wildfire management in Grant County

    Landowners, state, federal agencies work together on wildfire management in Grant County

    Landowners and federal agencies in rural Oregon don’t always have the best relationships, especially when it comes to fire management. But as first reported in the Blue Mountain Eagle newspaper, landowners and managers in Grant County have been working with state and federal agencies to reduce wildfire risk. The Top Road Fuel Break project would clear vegetation from a stretch of public land that abuts private homes and ranches — both reducing the amount of potential fuel for future wildfires and protecting the surrounding communities.

    James Osborne is the fire management officer for the Bureau of Land Management’s Prineville District. Irene Jerome has long served as the Firewise coordinator for Grant County. And Bill Newman is the manager of Top Ranch, near Monument. They were all involved in the project, and join us to share more details.

    • 17 min
    New community-based refugee resettlement approach successful so far in Bend

    New community-based refugee resettlement approach successful so far in Bend

     Traditionally, refugees from around the world who are accepted into the United States receive aid from one of a handful of refugee resettlement agencies. But a new approach is aimed at helping create more capacity to better support refugees in American communities and to help more of them escape violence and persecution in their countries of origin. Last year, Amy Kasari, a pastor at the Antioch Church in Bend, heard a radio story about how local sponsor groups were needed to welcome families into specific communities for a program called Welcome Corps. She said she immediately went to work putting together a local team of volunteers at her church.

    It took about a year of preparation, but earlier this year, she and other members of the sponsor group welcomed Maria Del Carmen Chaparro, her husband and two of their three adult children, who escaped violence in Colombia. Kasari and Del Carmen Chaparro join us to talk about the process of preparing for and settling into a new community. Una Bilic also joins us to share more about how this new approach is working around the country and what she sees as the impact of Welcome Corps now and in the future.

    • 32 min
    Mental health providers and Vancouver police partner to help people in crisis

    Mental health providers and Vancouver police partner to help people in crisis

    The Clark County Sheriff’s Office recently began partnering with mental health providers from Sea Mar Community Health Centers to respond more effectively to people in crisis, who may otherwise go to jail or the emergency department. The Columbian reported on the new Co-responders program which was modeled on a similar partnership launched in October 2020 between Sea Mar and the Vancouver Police Department. 

    The program typically involves mental health specialists from Sea Mar being notified by Vancouver police or a 911 dispatcher of a person experiencing a mental health crisis who may be a danger to themselves or others. The Sea Mar team will then meet up with the police officer responding to the call and help by de-escalating the crisis or providing support services to the person in need. Joining us to talk about the Co-responders program and the impact it’s having is Blaise Geddry, a lieutenant in the Vancouver Police Department, and Laura Nichols, a mental health therapist and the program manager of behavioral health services at Sea Mar Community Health Centers. 

     

    • 21 min
    What tiny worms found in decades-old cans of salmon reveal about marine ecosystems

    What tiny worms found in decades-old cans of salmon reveal about marine ecosystems

    In the spring of 2021, Natalie Mastick, a graduate student in the University of Washington’s School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, dissected filets from nearly 200 cans of salmon, some of which were more than 40 years old. The cans contained filets from pink, chum, coho and sockeye salmon that were caught in Alaska between 1979 and 2021. Mastick acquired the cans from the archives of the Seafood Products Association, a trade organization based in Seattle that provides quality control testing to seafood processors.

    Mastick and her colleagues opened up the cans to look for the presence of a parasitic roundworm embedded inside the filets. The parasite requires multiple hosts, including salmon, to complete its life cycle. Its abundance can serve as an indicator of the health of the marine food web, and how infections are changing over time for species like salmon and killer whales. Mastick is now a postdoctoral associate of student programs at the Yale Peabody Museum. She joins us to talk about her recently published findings. 

    • 21 min

Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5
243 Ratings

243 Ratings

DrDK2 ,

Vaccine Skeptics

I love your podcast. You ask great probing questions of your guests. I also have a great deal of respect for Dr Hassan, but as an Oregon pediatrician who specializes in caring for children with autism, the thoroughly debunked association between vaccines and autism is still very much alive. As you know, a Democratic Presidential candidate RFK Jr is STILL spreading that disinformation. And a recent survey of dog owners showed 50% believed rabies vaccine causes doggie autism! The anti-vaccine, anti-science, “do your own research and believe your own facts” mentality is VERY much alive in Oregon.

verdedafloresta ,

Dave Miller is the best!

We’re so lucky to have Dave Miller at OPB. His way of speaking to the guests, the choice of topics, the depth, the variety- it’s all top notch. No part of the state is ignored; so many communities are included. Thanks Dave and team!

Jack Richpark ,

Great local coverage of topics that matter

This is a stellar program and I promote it every time I get a chance. Having local Oregon journalism is important and Dave Miller and the “think out load” team do an incredible job. My only complaint is there aren’t more oregon news podcasts.

Top Podcasts In News

The Daily
The New York Times
Serial
Serial Productions & The New York Times
Up First
NPR
The Tucker Carlson Podcast
Tucker Carlson Network
Pod Save America
Crooked Media
Prosecuting Donald Trump
MSNBC

You Might Also Like

OPB Politics Now
Oregon Public Broadcasting
City Cast Portland
City Cast
Timber Wars Season 2: Salmon Wars
Oregon Public Broadcasting
Here & Now Anytime
WBUR
Today, Explained
Vox
The Daily
The New York Times

More by Oregon Public Broadcasting

Timber Wars Season 2: Salmon Wars
Oregon Public Broadcasting
Bundyville: The Remnant
Oregon Public Broadcasting
OPB Politics Now
Oregon Public Broadcasting
Relative Fiction
Oregon Public Broadcasting
OPB's This Land is Our Land
Oregon Public Broadcasting
OPB's State of Wonder
Oregon Public Broadcasting