For the best experienceDownload the Mobile App
App Store Play Store
OPB’s First Look: Immigration arrests take a dive
OPB’s First Look: Immigration arrests take a dive
OPB’s First Look: Immigration arrests take a dive

Published on: 04/09/2026

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

Go To Business Place

Description

Subscribe to OPB’s First Look to receive Northwest news in your inbox six days a week.

Good morning, Northwest.

Immigration arrests in the Pacific Northwest have gone down steadily since December.

However, as OPB’s Troy Brynelson reports, federal agents have continued to target people without criminal records at a steady clip. We start today’s newsletter with the latest data.

Also this morning, engineering students at Oregon State University take on the storied challenge of building a canoe from concrete.

Here’s your First Look at Thursday’s news.

—Bradley W. Parks

FILE - The Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma, Wash., in February 2026.

Immigration arrests in the Northwest have dropped significantly, but people without criminal records are still vulnerable

After a historic spike in immigration enforcement in the Pacific Northwest last fall, newly released data corroborates that enforcement fell sharply in late winter.

Between Jan. 1, 2026, and the second week of March, roughly 890 people total have been arrested by immigration enforcement in the region. That’s compared to more than 850 people each in October, November and December.

But one thing has remained static: People with no criminal convictions continue to be apprehended at high rates. (Troy Brynelson)

Learn more

📨 Are you enjoying First Look? Forward this email your friends.

FILE - A man puts out spot fires in a backyard near Gates, Ore., Sept. 9, 2020, during the Santiam Fire.

3 things to know this morning

  • The top executive at the Oregon State University-Cascades campus, Sherman Bloomer, is no longer on the job due to “new information gathered through an investigation” from OSU. (Tiffany Camhi)
  • PacifiCorp has won a notable victory in a lawsuit tying it to four major wildfires that burned in Oregon over the 2020 Labor Day weekend. Yesterday’s Oregon Court of Appeals decision could pause more than 160 damages trials that are scheduled through 2027. (April Ehrlich)
  • Today, the Clackamas County Board of Commissioners is set to approve a new contract with Taser and body camera manufacturer Axon to incorporate artificial intelligence into the process for evidence analysis at the district attorney’s office. (Holly Bartholomew)
At the Museum of Flight in Tukwila, Jennifer Domanowski of L3Harris points to one of many parts on the Artemis II mission that came from her company.

Headlines from around the Northwest

Listen in on OPB’s daily conversation

“Think Out Loud” airs at noon and 8 p.m. weekdays on OPB Radio, opb.org and the OPB News app. Today’s planned topics (subject to change):

Universities from across the Northwest line up to compete in the a2025 ASCE Concrete Canoe regional conference, a chance for engineering students to take on this extracurricular challenge, and have fun.

OSU’s Concrete Canoe Team takes on the unlikely challenge of building a boat that shouldn’t float

A “concrete canoe” sounds like a contradiction. Canoes, by their nature, float; and concrete, as we all know, sinks like a stone.

It is this seeming incongruity of elements that compels university engineering students across the country each year to take on the challenge of designing, constructing — and then racing — concrete canoes.

“It seems crazy, but it’s true,” said Alec Hankins, one of the engineering undergraduate students on the Concrete Canoe Team of Oregon State University.

The extracurricular collegiate club is a local chapter of the national American Society of Civil Engineers. It’s a tradition that reaches back to the 1960s. (Ian McCluskey)

Learn more

Subscribe to OPB’s First Look to receive Northwest news in your inbox six days a week.

News Source : https://www.opb.org/article/2026/04/09/immigration-arrest-data-oregon-washington-first-look/

Other Related News

04/09/2026

Four new health findings cover everything from Americas declining birth rate to whats quie...

OREGON DEPT. OF FISH & WILDLIFE: First spring Chinook season in the Lower Deschutes since 2018 to open May 5-20
OREGON DEPT. OF FISH & WILDLIFE: First spring Chinook season in the Lower Deschutes since 2018 to open May 5-20

04/09/2026

The Dalles OR The lower Deschutes River will be open for spring Chinook salmon from May 5...

JOB ANNOUNCEMENT  
  
Code Inspector I or II  
  
The City of Coos Bay is soliciting applications for the position of Code Inspector I or II.  To apply for the position, interested parties should submit a city application, resume, and letter of interest to the HR Office or by email to jspencer@coosbayor.gov. All application materials submitted via email must be in word or pdf format.  To qualify for Code Inspector II position applicant must have all required certifications at the time of appointment.  City applications are available from the City Manager’s Office, City Hall, 500 Central Avenue, Coos Bay, Oregon 97420, by email at jspencer@coosbayor.gov or on the City’s website at https://www.coosbayor.gov/government/job-openings  
  
Type: Full Time, Non-Exempt  
  
Salary/Pay Rate:   Inspector I $5289-6595/month DOQ  
  
                             Inspector II $5785-7212/month DOQ  
  
Posted Date: April 9, 2026  
  
Deadline to Apply: Friday, May 1, 2026, at 5:00 p.m.  
  
GENERAL STATEMENT OF DUTIES  
  
Reviews plans for, and conducts inspections of, residential and commercial structures for conformance to the local ordinances, Oregon Specialty Codes, and other regulations. Meets with building contractors and the general public to discuss code compliance.  Codes Inspector I is an entry level/in training position in which the inspector does not have all required certifications.  
  
View the full job posting: https://www.coosbayor.gov/Home/Components/JobPosts/Job/189/107
JOB ANNOUNCEMENT  
  
Code Inspector I or II  
  
The City of Coos Bay is soliciting applications for the position of Code Inspector I or II.  To apply for the position, interested parties should submit a city application, resume, and letter of interest to the HR Office or by email to jspencer@coosbayor.gov. All application materials submitted via email must be in word or pdf format.  To qualify for Code Inspector II position applicant must have all required certifications at the time of appointment.  City applications are available from the City Manager’s Office, City Hall, 500 Central Avenue, Coos Bay, Oregon 97420, by email at jspencer@coosbayor.gov or on the City’s website at https://www.coosbayor.gov/government/job-openings  
  
Type: Full Time, Non-Exempt  
  
Salary/Pay Rate:   Inspector I $5289-6595/month DOQ  
  
                             Inspector II $5785-7212/month DOQ  
  
Posted Date: April 9, 2026  
  
Deadline to Apply: Friday, May 1, 2026, at 5:00 p.m.  
  
GENERAL STATEMENT OF DUTIES  
  
Reviews plans for, and conducts inspections of, residential and commercial structures for conformance to the local ordinances, Oregon Specialty Codes, and other regulations. Meets with building contractors and the general public to discuss code compliance.  Codes Inspector I is an entry level/in training position in which the inspector does not have all required certifications.  
  
View the full job posting: https://www.coosbayor.gov/Home/Components/JobPosts/Job/189/107

04/09/2026

JOB ANNOUNCEMENT Code Inspector I or II The City of Coos Bay is soliciting applications ...

ShoutoutGive Shoutout
500/500