Interstate Highway 84 was closed at the Three Mile Valley, about 7 miles west of Boardman, and a multicar accident occurred on a road east bound for Thursday afternoon.
About 12:04 PM, Moro County Sheriff's office received 911 calls for the accident. There are at least one semi tractor, pickup truck, and car in the crash. According to the report, the vehicle carrying the patient is giving off a fire. Extinguish with a fire extinguisher.
We need a rescue device for multiple people in the vehicle. The Life Flight helicopter landed at the scene at around 12:50 pm and was transported by air ambulance. Several other people were carried on the ground ambulance
The Oregon State Transportation Bureau closed the lane to the east at Milestone 147 at the exit of Highway 74.
The police said at around 1:20 pm. The lane to the east may be closed for a while. Emergency workers are moving east bound cars to the west lane so that a single lane can be opened in both directions
ODOT will be informed about spilled fuel and car liquid on the road and will respond with sand track. From Moro County Sheriff office there are Bodman and Oregon police, Bodman, Oligon and Arlington ambulances, Hermiston medical staff and Bodman fire department law enforcement locomotives on the scene.
This is the latest news story. East Oregon State will be updated as renewal becomes available
The Boardman RCS series is located in the western remote area of Boardman, Oregon owned and operated by Boeing. This facility has a radar array at the west end and a tower for attaching test items at the eastern end. The tower can be covered with a large mobile hangar to protect sensitive test objects from observation. When the RCS test is in progress, the hangar slips out of the field of view of the radar sensor on a series of tracks. The concept of sliding shelter is similar to the concept used in the previous Grete Butte RCS test range
Samuel Bodman is the state's first state-wide state park's nominee, named after Samuel Boardman of the Columbia River in the northeastern state of Oregon. In 1903, Bodman lived in this land and planted trees along the highway. Ultimately, this approach became the policy of the Oregon Highway Commission and helped lay the foundation of the Oregon Park system. In 1964, Boeing set up a rocket test site for Boardman by the work of Senator Mark O. Hatfield who was working to make Boardman a NASA control center. Boeing supported the development of the president and invested in irrigation projects to support local farms. Agriculture is still an important industry for Bodman
Samuel Bodman, the civil engineer at Lowell, Massachusetts, was first built in 1903, and after 15 years thereafter, the Bodman region began to prosper after the western extension irrigation canal was supplied to the community from the Ututila River It was. During this 15-year wait period, Boardman planted 5,000 trees along the original Columbia River Highway, creating a beautiful recreation area. He also established the first Oregon roadside rest stop during this period. Around this time, people started living in this area quickly, especially on the south coast of the Columbia River. Officers became a city in 1927