

I think only Portland abolished it. It wasn't abolished in the entire state.Oregon abolished civil defense in the early 1960's
Actually, you are correct. The organization's name was changed from the Department of Civil Defense to the Department of Emergency Services in 1967, with the intention of stressing natural disaster response over military conflict. After two more name changes and having been twice reassigned to different state agencies, it was placed under the Oregon Military Department in 2007 and renamed the Office of Emergency Management. The siren programs, however, were abandoned a long time ago. Today, county and city agencies operate the existing siren systems for tsunami warning and dam break (Ashland and Heppner). The rest of the state relies on reverse 911, small-town fire sirens which may or may not be operational, and good luck.CDV777-1 wrote:I think only Portland abolished it. It wasn't abolished in the entire state.Oregon abolished civil defense in the early 1960's
I have a Lane County Community Fallout Shelter Plan that's dated 1968.
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