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The Eugene Water & Electric Board (EWEB) is Oregon's largest customer-owned utility. Founded in 1911, it provides electricity and water to more than 86,000 customers in or around Eugene, Oregon . Chartered by the City of Eugene , a five-member Board of Commissioners is elected by the citizens of Eugene and governs the utility. [1]
The Eugene Water and Electric Board's (EWEB) line-up of commissioners will see a shift this election cycle as Matt McRae, commissioner for Wards 1 and 8 and current board president, steps away ...
Eugene Water & Electric Board commissioners are scheduled to hear a report on their 2023 emissions. Springfield City Council. To watch: Springfield's system requires registration to watch and to ...
The Eugene Water and Electric Board has committed to rebuilding 10 electrical substations in the next decade to update the city’s electrical grid and better serve the growing area.
Eugene is the home of Oregon's largest publicly owned water and power utility, the Eugene Water & Electric Board (EWEB). EWEB got its start in the first decade of the 20th century, after an epidemic of typhoid found in the groundwater supply.
The river is the sole tap water source for the cities of Eugene and Springfield, fulfilling the water needs of about 200,000 people. The Eugene Water & Electric Board (EWEB) utility draws the water at river mile (RM) 11 or river kilometer (RK) 18 in Springfield.
Eugene residents should brace for higher prices on power and water next year, with rates set to rise in step with rising costs for utilities. Rates for power, water in Eugene set to rise as EWEB ...
The Dave and Lynn Frohnmayer Pedestrian and Bicycle Bridge, formerly and still informally known as the Autzen Footbridge, [2] is a bicycle and pedestrian bridge across the Willamette River, located in Eugene, Oregon, in the United States. Named after former University of Oregon president David B. Frohnmayer, the bridge connects Alton Baker Park ...