For the best experienceDownload the Mobile App
App Store Play Store
ODVA Director's Memorial Day Message, May 25
ODVA Director's Memorial Day Message, May 25
ODVA Director's Memorial Day Message, May 25

Published on: 05/25/2026

This news was posted by JC News

Go To Business Place

Description

ODVA release - Memorial Day is among the most solemn days on our national calendar and in the hearts of millions of veterans and military families, this day is also personal.  It is not simply the beginning of summer or a long weekend. It is a national day earmarked for remembrance and a day for us — as a community, as Oregonians, and as Americans — to pause together and reflect on the extraordinary cost of the freedoms we enjoy every day.  Across generations, millions of men and women have answered the call to serve.  Too many never returned home.  Today, we remember and honor every life given in service to this nation.  Memorial Day grew out of the pain and loss of the Civil War — a conflict that deeply scarred our young nation and forever changed countless families.  In the years that followed, families and communities continued to gather in cemeteries to decorate the graves of fallen soldiers with flowers, ribbons, and flags. They came not as part of a national holiday, but as grieving parents, spouses, children, friends, and community determined to ensure those who died for this nation would never be forgotten.  Those humble acts of remembrance became what was first known as Decoration Day - the foundation of what we now observe as Memorial Day.  And nearly 160 years later, we continue that same tradition of honoring and remembering.  We gather to remember those who gave their lives in service to this nation and to honor not only the fallen, but also those still missing in action and the families who continue carrying the enduring weight of that loss.  More than 81,000 Americans remain missing in action from conflicts dating back to World War II. For many families, remembrance carries not only grief, but decades of unanswered questions and enduring hope.  Their absence reminds us that remembrance is not passive.  It requires acts.  And here in Oregon, we continue to demonstrate that commitment in visible and meaningful ways.  In 2015, Oregon law established that the POW/MIA flag be displayed in a place of honor alongside the United States and Oregon state flags at public buildings across our state. Two years later, that commitment was expanded to ensure the POW/MIA flag would continue flying indefinitely at public buildings, including public schools.  The POW/MIA flag serves as a reminder that our nation and our state will never forget those who have died in service to this nation and those who remain missing.  Today, more than 260,000 veterans call Oregon home. Many still carry the visible and invisible burdens of service. Some continue grieving brothers and sisters in arms lost decades ago. And military families across our communities continue carrying the weight of sacrifice every single day.  That is why Memorial Day is still observed today. Not simply as a tradition, but as a civic responsibility. A responsibility to remember the lives behind the names. To preserve their stories. To teach future generations the true cost of freedom.  As communities across Oregon gather this Memorial Day, I hope each of us takes a quiet moment to reflect on those who never returned home and on the families who continue carrying that loss forward.  May we honor them not only with ceremonies and words, but through service to one another, compassion for veterans and military families, and a continued commitment to building a nation worthy of their sacrifice.

Other Related News

05/25/2026

This year an invasive species specialist at the Oregon Department of Forestry found a matu...

Old Oregon fishing nets sent to Ukraine to protect against drones
Old Oregon fishing nets sent to Ukraine to protect against drones

05/25/2026

Kurt Cochran has moored his 85-foot fishing trawler New Life to the docks in NewportHis ne...

Marking the quirky last chapter of Portland’s Lloyd Center
Marking the quirky last chapter of Portland’s Lloyd Center

05/25/2026

Portlands Lloyd Center is scheduled to close Aug 8 after more than 65 years in businessThe...

Lake County DA’s resignation came under pressure from county officials
Lake County DA’s resignation came under pressure from county officials

05/25/2026

When Lake County District Attorney Paul Charas announced his resignation last month he cit...

Visitors will need a new permit to park at Sauvie Island beaches this summer
Visitors will need a new permit to park at Sauvie Island beaches this summer

05/25/2026

People planning to park at three popular Sauvie Island beaches this summer during weekends...

ShoutoutGive Shoutout
500/500