For the best experienceDownload the Mobile App
App Store Play Store
OPB’s First Look: Newport chopper update, plus a pipeline problem
OPB’s First Look: Newport chopper update, plus a pipeline problem
OPB’s First Look: Newport chopper update, plus a pipeline problem

Published on: 11/25/2025

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.

A federal judge ruled late last night that the U.S. Coast Guard must return a rescue helicopter to Newport.

The chopper was abruptly relocated as rumors swirled about federal immigration authorities setting up a detention center on the Oregon Coast.

OPB’s Dirk VanderHart starts this morning’s newsletter with what comes next in the case.

Also this morning, a major pipeline providing fuel to the Pacific Northwest is still shut down ahead of Thanksgiving travel.

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

—Bradley W. Parks

In this photo provided by the Oregon State Police from 2017, a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter searches a beach about two miles north of Cape Blanco, Ore., searching for a pair of men swept out to sea.

US Coast Guard must return rescue helicopter to Newport, judge rules

The U.S. Coast Guard must immediately return a rescue helicopter to the city of Newport as a court case challenging the aircraft’s removal gets underway, a federal judge has ruled.

In an opinion issued yesterday evening, U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken found that the sudden relocation of the helicopter last month could imperil lives as crabbing season gets underway.

She also found the Coast Guard had not provided the legally required notice before moving the aircraft nearly 100 miles south to North Bend.

The order remains in effect for 14 days, though Aiken will also consider a permanent injunction barring the removal of the helicopter. (Dirk VanderHart)

Learn more

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

Gladstone Food Pantry staff and volunteers organize food for distribution at the pantry's reopening at Kraxberger Middle School on Oct. 8, 2025, in Gladstone, Ore.

3 things to know this morning

  • Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek has declared a state of emergency to ensure sufficient fuel gets to the state while the region’s main pipeline remains shut down due to a leak. (Jesse Bedayn)
  • The Gladstone School District is working to provide free breakfast and lunch to all of its students. The small district near Oregon City is also feeding a growing number of local residents through the food pantry on school grounds. (Natalie Pate)
  • Oregonians have a little over a month to secure home energy tax credits, which expire after this year. They can be applied to home upgrades like heat pumps or solar panels. (Alex Baumhardt)
A file photo of White Bird Clinic on E 12th Ave. in downtown Eugene, November 2024.

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):

The state ferries Klahowya (center right) and Hyak (left center) are taking up valuable space at the Eagle Harbor maintenance yard of Washington State Ferries. Both retired ferries have been for sale for more than four years.

2 retired Washington state ferries are still for sale. Dreamers need not apply

If you have ever wanted to own an iconic Washington state ferry, now may be your last chance to buy one until the 2030s.

The decommissioned 144-car Hyak and the 87-car Klahowya ferries remain available with no minimum bid, but potential buyers could face intense scrutiny.

Washington terminated a prior sales contract with an Ecuadorian businessman, and the incident shows just how difficult it can be to sell an old ship. (Tom Banse)

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/2025/11/25/newport-coast-guard-helicopter-first-look/

Other Related News

Regulatory costs a significant burden for Oregon tree fruit growers
Regulatory costs a significant burden for Oregon tree fruit growers

11/25/2025

Four Oregon tree fruit farmers spent between 250 to 700 per acre each year to comply with ...

Remains found in Mt. Hood Forest confirmed to be missing hunter Devon Dobek
Remains found in Mt. Hood Forest confirmed to be missing hunter Devon Dobek

11/25/2025

The Clackamas County Medical Examiner has confirmed the remains recovered from the Mt Hood...

McMinnville High School student released after detained by ICE
McMinnville High School student released after detained by ICE

11/25/2025

A McMinnville High School student taken into custody by Immigration and Customs Enforcemen...

Dear Abby: Large age gap keeps co-worker from following their heart
Dear Abby: Large age gap keeps co-worker from following their heart

11/25/2025

DEAR ABBY My best friend and co-worker is 57 Im 32 Her husband died two years ago leaving ...

Walmart’s top-selling 3-in-1 chair bed is back on sale while they last
Walmart’s top-selling 3-in-1 chair bed is back on sale while they last

11/25/2025

The ultra-popular best-selling Walmart furniture staple is back on sale for Black Friday T...

ShoutoutGive Shoutout
500/500