…should use YOUR OWN WORDS! They mean, “Use OUR words—English words, real words, words we’re all familiar with—in your own combinations, to tell us what happened.” What in . ….
Search Results for: label/Land use laws
Oregon Law Libraries: Hours and Types of Service
…IMPORTANT: To avoid disappointment or travel time: PLEASE TELEPHONE AHEAD or check websites on the day you need to use the law library. Library hours and services change. 1)…
Be Prepared: Things to Know Before You Head to the Law Library
…can use, and that law library personnel can help them fill it out. Oregon does not have many fill-in-the-blank forms and law library employees cannot help patrons fill out forms….
Foreign Language Services for non-English Speakers at Oregon Public Libraries
…response: “Thank you for contacting Multnomah County Library about the “Language Line” service. We do still use telephone interpretation services to help us assist patrons who may not be fluent…
Free Online Space Planning Tools for Libraries (and other spaces)
Blog posts on the topic: iLibrarian post: Create Library Floor Plans Alternatives to Visio (but it was noted that some of these were difficult to use and more…
One Reason Oregon Lawyer Bills are Higher Than They Should Be: Superseded ORSs and Wonky Websites
…want to Find Your Legislator, use the Find Your Legislator link on the Oregon Legislature’s homepage, not the Citizen Engagement webpage. (It might show up there eventually, but for now,…
How to Find Oregon Base Fines (Traffic)
…also use Google (or other search engine of choice) to search for Oregon Base Fines, but make sure the result you get is the current schedule, not 2006 or 1999….
Government (dot gov) Websites
There are many new federal government websites (and some that appear to be official government websites but are not, though they can be very useful too –…
Free 30-day Password to Fastcase (Oregonians only)
…part of the trial. Among other things, I want to know how easy it was for you to use this database.) This database trial was originally a 6-month trial, now…
Oregon Legal Research Blog

