Published on: 04/29/2026
This news was posted by JC News
Description
SALEM, Oregon – Oregon Heritage is pleased to announce that internationally recognized cultural heritage leader Monica Rhodes will deliver a keynote address on April 29th at the upcoming Oregon Heritage Conference, inviting attendees to explore how preservation must evolve to meet the challenges of the future. Rhodes, Founder of Rhodes Heritage Group, is widely known for advancing new approaches to cultural preservation at the intersection of people, place, and capital. Her work has influenced national policy, expanded access to preservation practice, and engaged millions in reimagining how history shapes the future. Her keynote, “The Next Assignment: Why the Future Will Ask More of Us,” will challenge attendees to reconsider traditional approaches to preservation in an era shaped by artificial intelligence, climate instability, and growing public demand for complete storytelling. “We are entering unfamiliar futurescapes where the past is unstable, contested, and uncertain,” Rhodes notes. A Rome Prize Fellow and Harvard Loeb Fellow, Rhodes has advised the White House on cultural heritage policy and serves on the board of the International Council on Monuments and Sites. Her work has been featured in national media outlets including The Washington Post, PBS NewsHour, This Old House, and Architectural Digest. Attendees will have the opportunity to hear directly from Rhodes and engage with forward-looking ideas that connect historic preservation to civic innovation, community voice, and long-term resilience. Registration for the conference is now open. Registration is available to see Monica Rhodes only or to attend other conference sessions as well. To learn more and register to attend, visit Oregon Heritage Conference 2026.
Historic Cemeteries Commission
Historic Cemeteries will meet in person and online during the 2026 Oregon Heritage Conference in Woodburn. Both meetings are open to the public and include an opportunity for public comment: Oregon Heritage Commission will meet on May 1, 9:30am, at the Woodburn Public Library, 280 Garfield Street in Woodburn and online. Business includes review and adoption of the 2026-2033 Oregon Heritage Plan, review and action on two applications for the Heritage Tradition designation (the Prefontaine Classic in Eugene and the Bandon Cranberry Festival), and a presentation from the OSU Special Collection and Archives Research Center on work related to addressing harmful content in their collections. The full agenda and meeting information can be found on the OHC website. Oregon Historic Cemeteries Commission will meet on April 29, 1pm, at the Woodburn Public Library, 280 Garfield Street in Woodburn and online. Business includes a presentation on the compliance program within the State Historic Preservation Office and how cemeteries are involved in state and federal level projects and a presentation on the Shroeder Family Tomb Preservation Project. The full agenda and meeting information can be found on the agency's website. Special accommodations for the meeting – including translation services – may be made by calling (503) 986‐0690 at least 72 hours prior to the start of the meeting. For more information about the commissions, visit www.oregonheritage.org. About the Oregon Heritage Commission (OHC): The Heritage Commission’s nine Governor appointed members represent a diversity of cultural, geographic, and institutional interests. The Commission’s nine advisory members include representatives from the Oregon State Library, Oregon State Archives, State Historical Records Advisory Board, Higher Education Coordinating Committee, Travel Oregon, Oregon Historical Society, Department of Education, State Historic Preservation Office, and the Department of Land Conservation and Development. The Commission is the primary agency for coordination of heritage activities in the state. This includes carrying out the Oregon Heritage Plan, increasing efficiency and avoiding duplication among interest groups, developing plans for coordination among agencies and organizations, identifying and addressing collective challenges, encouraging tourism related to heritage resources, and coordinating statewide anniversary commemorations. More information about the Oregon Heritage Commission is available online at www.oregonheritage.org and from Commission coordinator Katie Henry at 503-877-8834 or [email protected].
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