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This profile was automatically generated using 13 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 13 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 13 references Web References
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1. News-Register.com
www.newsregister.com/news/stor - [Cached]Published on: 5/13/2006 Last Visited: 5/14/2006
"We did get a complaint about potential illegal disposal, and so we are investigating it," said Jennifer Boudin, a spokeswoman in DEQ's Eugene office. -
2. Oregon Daily Emerald - University of Oregon news and sports - Air study gives Lane County an F in pollution rates
www.dailyemerald.com/vnews/dis - [Cached]Published on: 5/18/2004 Last Visited: 5/19/2004
Jennifer Boudin, spokeswoman for the Eugene office of the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, said Lane Regional Air Pollution Authority is the expert about air pollution and air quality in Eugene.
"They would know best," she said. "They gather the data for this area."
While Eugene is the second largest city in Oregon, it does not require emissions testing for automobiles or vehicles with internal combustion engines, a result of the city's good air, Boudin said.
"The reason they have those emission testing programs in Medford and Portland is because those cities have had air quality issues," she said. -
3. TIDEPOOL | News for Salmon Nation
www.tidepool.org/textonly.cfm - [Cached]Published on: 12/16/2002 Last Visited: 12/16/2002
"As far as we can tell, nothing is going to get down there," said Jennifer Boudin, a spokeswoman for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. (12/16/02) Oregonian
Stellar years for sturgeon may be over A bunch of us youngsters in our 50s sat at a pre-duck dawn breakfast at Ichabod's restaurant in Scappoose on Wednesday, talking about how good the fishing has been the past couple of years. It dawned on me that we're about to become the geezers in the gulch. In 20, 30 or 40 years, if we tell the stories right, our grandchildren and great-grandchildren might wish they could have been there "back when." . . . Back at the turn of the century, when salmon came in every year early, late and strong. . . . (12/16/02) Oregonian

