KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. Kingsley Field in Klamath Falls will again have jets taking off and landing starting tomorrow (Monday) night.
The 173rd fighter wing will conduct night flying operations again as part of its training through Thursday night.
Night flying is one part of the course curriculum for F-15-C student pilots at Kingsley Field.
The majority of the training will happen east of Lakeview where the pilots can fly without lights.
Flights will take place between approximately 6 and 11 p.m.
Community members may contact the wing’s public affairs office at 541-885-6677 to express any concerns.
NBC5 News reporter/weather forecaster Aaron Nilsson is a Southern California native, but most recently lived in Seattle. He’s also lived in Sweden and Utah. He graduated from Brigham Young University with a Bachelor’s Degree in Broadcast Journalism and a minor in Scandinavian Studies. While at BYU, he covered sports for BYUtv.
PAISLEY, Ore. A couple living in Paisley are only about 15 miles away from the Bootleg Fire and tell us the situation right now is pretty nerve-wracking.
Clark Heglar and his wife tell us they are packed and ready to go in case they need to evacuate.
Clark retired from the forest service in Paisley just a couple of years ago.
He said he has always lived in areas where forest fires were annual threats, but the Bootleg Fire is unlike anything he’s ever seen.
The fact that the fire is creating its own weather like clouds, lightning and thunder is a rare phenomenon.
GOLD HILL, Ore. Highway 234 in Gold Hill was closed much of the day after a crash with one man under arrest.
Oregon State Police told us a commercial truck heading west towards Gold Hill collided with a van and Jeep heading in the opposite direction.
It happened late Sunday morning and there were several major and minor injuries.
The driver of the Jeep was taken away by helicopter with life-threatening injuries.
O.S.P. said the driver of the truck was taken into custody.
“He’s going to be charged with a DUI and there will likely be some additional charges,” State Trooper, Michael Benson, said. “The two ladies you saw show up on scene are from the district attorney’s office so they’re here to oversee the investigation and make sure the appropriate charges are placed on that driver,” he added.
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JACKSONVILLE, Ore., You can now search and find more than 7,000 pages of Jacksonville’s historic newspapers online!
The newspapers were digitized under the support of Jacksonville Boosters Foundation to underline the importance of heritage to Jacksonville’s tourism and sense of place.
You can see the details of people, places and beliefs in an era long before the birth of the internet.
There is no cost to access the digital collections.
More of Jacksonville’s early newspapers will be digitized in 2022 with funding from the Friends of Jacksonville’s Historic Cemetery.
Jacksonville’s early newspapers and other Oregon historic newspapers can be searched here, where the Oregon digital newspaper program is hosted at the University of Oregon.