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Oregon Department of Transportation

Department of the state government of Oregon, United States

Oregon Department of Transportation

Department of the state government of Oregon, United States

FieldValue
agency_nameOregon Department of Transportation
logoOregon Department of Transportation logo.svg
logo_width220px
formed1969
preceding1Oregon State Highway Commission
preceding2Oregon State Highway Department
jurisdictionOregon
headquarters355 Capitol Street NE, Salem, Oregon 97301-3871
chief1_nameKris Strickler
chief1_positionDirector
parent_agencyOregon Transportation Commission
website

The Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) is a department of the state government of the U.S. state of Oregon responsible for systems of transportation. It was first established in 1969. It had been preceded by the Oregon State Highway Department which, along with the Oregon State Highway Commission, was created by an act of the Oregon Legislative Assembly in 1913. It works closely with the five-member Oregon Transportation Commission (the modern name of the Highway Commission) in managing the state's transportation systems.

The Oregon Transportation Commission, formerly the Oregon State Highway Commission, is a five-member governor-appointed government agency that manages the state highways and other transportation in the U.S. state of Oregon, in conjunction with the Oregon Department of Transportation.

Inception

ODOT headquarters in Salem
Incident response truck in Salem

The first State Highway Commission was created on August 12, 1913, and was composed of Governor Oswald West, Secretary of State Ben W. Olcott and Treasurer Thomas B. Kay. On January 12, 1915, James Withycombe became Governor and replaced Oswald West on the commission. The 1917 Oregon Legislative Assembly redesigned the State Highway Commission, with citizens appointed to replace the elected officials.

The new commissioners held their first meeting on March 6, and the commission was then known as the Oregon Highway Division. As Oregon's transportation needs started to grow, the division expanded and, in 1919, it employed their first State Bridge Engineer, Conde McCullough.

Events

By 1920, Oregon had 620 mi of paved roads and 297.2 mi of plank roads for a population of 783,389 and, by 1932, the work that had been started on the Oregon Coast Highway (also known as U.S. Route 101) in 1914 was completed, except for five bridges, which meant greater responsibility for the division. This work was complete when the construction of the bridges over the Yaquina, Alsea, Siuslaw, and Umpqua rivers and Coos Bay were completed, closing the last gaps in the highway. By 1940, the highway division was managing more than 7000 mi of state, market and country roads in Oregon, with nearly 5000 mi being hard-surfaced.

ODOT Highway Division Regions

In 2018, the city government of Portland, Oregon and ODOT entered into an intergovernmental agreement in which the Portland city government takes over the cleanups of transient camps on ODOT right-of-way in select locations in Portland in exchange for payments from ODOT.

In 2019, ODOT installed boulders at five locations in Portland to deter transient camps around the freeways. The installations have received support from neighbors while criticized by homeless advocacy groups.

Exploding whale incident

On November 12, 1970, the department was tasked with disposing of a dead sperm whale that washed ashore on the beach near Florence. The department exploded the dead whale using half a ton of dynamite to blast it off the beach. Pieces of dead whale went everywhere including the beach, bystanders, a parking lot and a park, severely damaging at least one car. Willamette Week reported, "The decision to publicly dynamite an enormous mammal has become one of Oregon's all-time most bizarre moments."

This became known as the "exploding whale incident".

Notable people

  • William Tebeau (1925–2013) was an engineer who worked for ODOT for 36 years.

References

References

  1. [http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/About/Pages/History.aspx History of ODOT]
  2. [http://records.sos.state.or.us/ORSOSWebDrawer/RecordView/7589689 Department of Transportation: Agency History], Oregon Blue Book.
  3. "Background Brief on Roads and Highways".
  4. (2019). "Building the Oregon Coast Highway: An Oral History of the 1931–1932 Work Camp at the Cape Creek Bridge, Lane County, Oregon". Oregon Historical Quarterly.
  5. Sparling, Zane. (22 December 2018). "ODOT to pay Portland for homeless camp clean-ups".
  6. Harbarger, Molly. (2018-12-20). "Portland taking over homeless camp cleanups for ODOT".
  7. Kruzman, Kruzman. (2019-07-04). "Portland's homeless campers face new obstacle: piles of boulders".
  8. June, Sophia. (October 3, 2016). "There Is Now Better Footage of That Time Oregon Blew Up a Whale With Dynamite".
  9. "Exploding Whale Memorial Park to Honour Blubber That Was Blown to Bits in US 50 Years Ago".
  10. "William Tebeau Obituary (1925 - 2013) - Salem, OR - The Statesman Journal".
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