News

Dutch Bros, the renowned coffee company originally founded in Grants Pass, Oregon, is moving its corporate headquarters to Phoenix, Arizona.
GRANTS PASS, Ore. – A historic building in Grants Pass is receiving a $400,000 grant that will help get it back up and running after decades. Main Street Grants Pass, an organization focused on ...
GRANTS PASS, Ore. — An Oregon man is facing federal drug trafficking and gun charges after investigators accused him of moving fentanyl through Josephine County. Christopher Smith, 38, of Grants ...
GRANTS PASS, Ore. — The Grants Pass Police Department is partnering with local agencies to combat retail theft. On Saturday, May 10, Grants Pass PD partnered with the Josephine County Sheriff’s Office ...
Grants Pass Cavemen football / Larry Stauth Jr. Grants Pass recently announced that longtime assistant Matt Kennedy will take over its football program, replacing Brad Page. Kennedy has served in ...
By Ben Botkin, Oregon Capital Chronicle GRANTS PASS, Ore. (KTVZ) -- A Josephine County judge on Monday issued a 14-day temporary restraining order that blocks the city of Grants Pass from ...
Summary The City of Grants Pass, Oregon passed ordinances barring people from sleeping outside in public using a blanket, pillow, or even a cardboard sheet to lie on.
Grants Pass. The U.S. Supreme Court issued a long-awaited ruling Friday morning on a case out of little Grants Pass, Oregon that could upend how cities can respond to homelessness nationwide.
U.S. Supreme Court Overturns Grants Pass Decision, Allows Camping Bans Mayor Ted Wheeler and mayoral hopeful Rene Gonzalez differ on where the high court’s decision might take Stumptown.
Grants Pass appealed to the Supreme Court, asking them to overturn that decision. On April 22, the Supreme Court heard arguments and justices appeared to be leaning toward a narrow ruling in the case.
In the biggest community of picturesque Josephine County in southern Oregon, nearly everyone is waiting and watching on a decision set to come 2,800 miles away in Washington D.C.
Unaffordable housing and lack of safe shelter for homeless people pushed Grants Pass, Oregon, into lawsuit. Supreme Court ruling is expected in June.