From Oregon OSHA:
“For those who struggle to remember division distinctions, we offer:
An Ode to the Code (link and then scroll to the bottom of the OSHA web page 🙂
From Oregon OSHA:
“For those who struggle to remember division distinctions, we offer:
An Ode to the Code (link and then scroll to the bottom of the OSHA web page 🙂
The Oregon Channel will launch on January 8th, 2007, when the 74th Legislative Assembly convenes. Their web page says:
The Oregon Channel provides gavel-to-gavel, unedited television coverage of state government and public affairs including:
Floor Sessions/Committees
State Supreme Court hearings
State agency hearings
Boards/Commission hearings
Capitol news conferences and special events
Other public affairs, civic and cultural programming, provided by partner organizations
A fresh look at the Oregon Court of Appeals, from Shelley MacTyre, an Oregon lawyer, who has another blog, her legal one, here. (By the way, I’m not sure why but a lot of people fall down in and outside the Supreme Court building in Salem. Or, maybe I just know a lot of people who have. It’s a mystery. Maybe there is a heavy gravity canopy around the building.)
I could swear I posted this information before, but as the question keeps arising, there is no harm to posting it again. It’s also a chance to plug both the University of Washington Law Library and the King County Law Library web pages. Some of the links are naturally Washington State-based, but not all. Between them they have some of the best, most practical, and sometimes even fun legal research information web pages. Thanks for sharing!
Here’s the UW Low-Cost Legal Research Services on the Web guide.