Revisiting Pacific Northwest headlines that lifted our spirits in 2023

By Meagan Cuthill (OPB) and OPB Staff
Dec. 30, 2023 2 p.m.

It’s almost time to close the book on 2023. Before we do, let’s flip back to some positive headlines.

The news can be hard-hitting and serious — but that’s not the full story. There are moments of joy to highlight. In 2023, here were some of the stories from the Pacific Northwest that made us smile.

A teacher sits at a table in a classroom in front of three young students as she teaches a reading lesson.

Reading intervention specialist Francine O'Connell teaches a reading lesson at Brooklyn Primary School in Baker City, Ore. on March 22, 2023.

Antonio Sierra / OPB

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How an Eastern Oregon school district gave teachers ‘life changing’ raises

The Baker School District crunched the numbers and made an announcement for the 2023-24 school year: a new teacher salary scale — with a huge pay bump. It raised the salary floor for certified teachers from $38,000 to $60,000.

The move made Baker among the best paying districts in a state, according to the Oregon Education Association.

Read the full story by Antonio Sierra.

Nick Maier measures a wood panel for the interior of the miniature house that a giant troll sculpture will be peeking into in Southwest Portland on Aug. 8, 2023. Maier works in his own woodshop and jumped at the opportunity to help with an art installation from artist Thomas Dambo.

Nick Maier measures a wood panel for the interior of the miniature house that a giant troll sculpture will be peeking into in Southwest Portland on Aug. 8, 2023. Maier works in his own woodshop and jumped at the opportunity to help with an art installation from artist Thomas Dambo.

Caden Perry / OPB

This year, giant wooden trolls came to the Pacific Northwest

Danish artist Thomas Dambo brings whimsy with his wooden creations. He uses reclaimed materials like scrap wood, old pallets and twigs to build giant trolls.

Over the summer, one of his trolls found a home in Oregon, and five more in Washington state.

Read the full story by Elizabeth Castillo.

Randal Wyatt, left, and Annie Moss at Wyatt’s Albina neighborhood home in Portland, May 9, 2023. Wyatt purchased the three-bedroom home in 2020, from Moss, in an off-market sale.

Randal Wyatt, left, and Annie Moss at Wyatt’s Albina neighborhood home in Portland, May 9, 2023. Wyatt purchased the three-bedroom home in 2020, from Moss, in an off-market sale.

Kristyna Wentz-Graff / OPB

A grassroots effort to change how to afford a home in Portland

Oregon faces an extreme housing shortage. The issue is one of Gov. Tina Kotek’s main goals to address during her term. While state lawmakers discuss ways to affordably house more Oregonians, a group of volunteers is running an experiment in Portland.

They call themselves PDX Housing Solidarity Project, and their mission is to help connect people with ample resources to Black and Indigenous homebuyers in Portland.

So far, the project has about 10 mutual aid home sales under its belt. The group has also supported participants in meetings with realtors and mortgage brokers during the homebuying process. Other project participants have received cash gifts or a no-interest loan to cover things like a down payment.

Read the full story by Tiffany Camhi.

Lled Smith of Loot the Deschutes surfaces at the Bend Whitewater Park with two pairs of sunglasses on Aug. 9, 2023.  Not all his finds are benign: he was once shocked by an electrified underwater cable. He's also found guns, knives and lots and lots of fish hooks.

Lled Smith of Loot the Deschutes surfaces at the Bend Whitewater Park with two pairs of sunglasses on Aug. 9, 2023. Not all his finds are benign: he was once shocked by an electrified underwater cable. He's also found guns, knives and lots and lots of fish hooks.

Emily Cureton Cook / OPB

Along this Central Oregon river, these people are on patrol — for things that sink or stink

The Deschutes River is a beloved site for recreation in Oregon. All that human activity can mean a few things for the river: possibly losing items to its depths or needing to relieve oneself along its banks.

For both, these Oregonians step in.

At one of the busier points of the river, roughly 250,000 people float along it through Bend each summer. Many lose belongings along the way — including wedding rings.

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Thanks to local divers who go by “Loot the Deschutes,” some sunk items are finding their way home.

Read the full story by Emily Cureton Cook.

Jerry Christensen has a job that truly stinks. Each of the summer seasons, he maintains 13 remote outhouses along Oregon's Deschutes River.

Jerry Christensen has a job that truly stinks. Each of the summer seasons, he maintains 13 remote outhouses along Oregon's Deschutes River.

Ian McCluskey / OPB

Meanwhile, Jerry Christensen has a job that stinks, and he wouldn’t have it any other way. During the summer, he goes out weekly to clean the outhouses along a stretch of the lower Deschutes River that are only accessible by boat.

“Any other river it’s pack it in, pack it out,” Christensen said. “It’s the only river in the state that regularly maintains bathrooms along the way.”

Read the full story by Ian McCluskey.

Portland artist Craig Winslow uses projected light to temporarily resurrect dozens of “ghost signs,” the faded ads painted on the sides of historic buildings. Thumbnail used for Oregon Art Beat bio on Craig Winslow. Producer Eric Slade.

Portland artist Craig Winslow by his light capsules in Astoria, Ore.

Andy Adkins / OPB

A ghost story with cheer, not fears, at the Oregon Coast

To view Craig Winslow’s art, it’s best in the dark. That’s because his medium is light.

He crafts what he calls “light capsules,” intricately mapped projections that resurrect “ghost signs” — those faded historic advertisements once painted on the sides of buildings. Winslow’s first permanent U.S. light capsule in Astoria restores some of that city’s hand-painted signs with colorful beams of light.

Read the full story by Eric Slade.

Wilderton spirits on display at their distillery and tasting room in Hood River, Ore., on Aug. 2, 2023.

Wilderton spirits on display at their distillery and tasting room in Hood River, Ore., on Aug. 2, 2023.

Crystal Ligori / OPB

Oregon leads the booze-free party

Oregon is known for its alcoholic industries — wine, beer, cider, you name it. It’s probably no surprise then that the state is at the forefront of another beverage business: the burgeoning zero-proof movement.

Here’s how some Oregonians are packing a punch in drinks, without the punch of alcohol.

Read the full story by Crystal Ligori.

In a Portland warehouse March 28, 2023, Stephanie Brown admires one of the Jantzen Beach carousel horses that have been in storage for 11 years.

In a Portland warehouse March 28, 2023, Stephanie Brown admires one of the Jantzen Beach carousel horses that have been in storage for 11 years.

Kristian Foden-Vencil / OPB

The end of a merry-go-round search

After more than a decade in storage and a callout by Restore Oregon to relocate it, the historic Jantzen Beach Carousel has found a new home in The Dalles.

While Oregonians and visitors to the Columbia River Gorge likely won’t be able to ride the carousel for at least a few years, the 95-year-old carousel will make the move from a storage warehouse to the National Neon Sign Museum.

Read the story by Kristian Foden-Vencil.

In this file photo, an American pika is nestled in mossy scree in the Columbia River Gorge.

In this file photo, an American pika is nestled in mossy scree in the Columbia River Gorge.

Courtesy of Johanna Varner

Finally, these animal stories made us meep instead of weep

A list of upbeat news wouldn’t be complete without animals, right? Here’s a handful of warm and fuzzy stories about critters — some of whom are also warm and fuzzy.

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