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County resources

Oregon personal injury guidance by county

Local context can shape the first steps after a crash or injury, including reports, records, providers, insurance handling, and venue questions.

Start with where it happened

County pages help organize local facts without losing sight of the broader Oregon personal injury strategy: liability, treatment, insurance coverage, damages, and deadlines.

Organize local facts

County-level reports, road conditions, medical providers, employers, and court venue can all shape the early strategy.

Gather the right records

Crash and incident reports, provider records, wage information, and insurer messages often matter from the very start.

Sort what is urgent

An early conversation can separate what needs attention now from what can wait, before details fade.

Oregon county pages

  • Baker County sits along Interstate 84 in Oregon's northeast corner, with Baker City as its county seat. This page covers where crash reports and court records typically sit here, and how mountain recreation and ranch work can shape an injury claim.

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  • If you were hurt in Corvallis, near the Oregon State campus, or out toward Philomath, this page explains where records in Benton County tend to live, how local rhythms shape a claim, and what measured first steps look like.

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  • Clackamas County runs from Oregon City, its historic county seat, to year-round recreation around Mount Hood. This guide covers where injury reports and court matters typically sit in the county, and how local recreation and working land can shape a claim.

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  • Clatsop County runs along Oregon's North Coast, from Astoria to Cannon Beach, where tourism, fishing, and timber shape daily life. This page explains where injury records tend to live here and what sensible first steps look like.

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  • Practical guidance for people injured in Columbia County, Oregon: where reports and court records sit in St. Helens, how timber work and river life shape claims, and calm first steps.

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  • If you were hurt in Coos County (on the roads between Coquille, Coos Bay, and Bandon, at work on the water, or while visiting the coast), here is where records typically live and what practical steps may help.

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  • An injury in Crook County can happen on a drive through Prineville, on a trail near the Ochoco National Forest, or on a farm or timber job. Whatever the setting, practical questions follow about reports, records, and insurance. Here is how the county's geography and daily life shape those next steps.

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  • Curry County sits at Oregon's southwestern corner, with Gold Beach as its county seat and coastal towns from Langlois to Brookings. Here is how injury reports, records, medical care, and insurance questions tend to work on the south coast.

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  • An injury in Deschutes County rarely waits for a convenient moment. Here is how reports, records, and treatment fit together across Bend, Redmond, Sisters, and La Pine, and how to begin without feeling rushed.

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  • Douglas County injuries happen along Route 99, on North Umpqua trails, and across the Umpqua Valley's wine and farm country. Here is how reports, records, and insurance questions tend to work from Roseburg outward, and what early steps may help.

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  • Gilliam County is wheat and cattle country, with Condon as its seat and Interstate 84 and Route 19 carrying much of its traffic. This guide covers where reports and court records typically sit and how to take steady first steps after an injury here.

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  • If you were hurt in Grant County (on a ranch, in the Malheur National Forest, or on the road between Canyon City and John Day), this page explains where records and reports typically live, how local life shapes a claim, and what early steps tend to help.

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  • Injuries in Harney County can happen far from town: on rural roads, on hunting or camping trips, or on ranch and timber jobs. Here is how records in Burns, distance to care, and local work life can shape an Oregon injury claim.

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  • Hood River County sits between Mount Hood and the Columbia River Gorge, where recreation, agriculture, and timber shape daily life. Here is calm, practical guidance on reports, records, and first steps after an injury in the county.

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  • If you were hurt anywhere in Jackson County, from Medford to its other incorporated cities and the communities between them, this guide explains where reports and court records typically live and how Rogue Valley work and recreation can shape an injury claim.

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  • Hurt in Jefferson County, Oregon? A practical look at where Madras keeps reports and court functions, how the Deschutes and 60,000 irrigated acres shape local claims, and the quiet first steps that keep your options open.

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  • If you were injured in Josephine County (in Grants Pass, on a rural road, or out on the Rogue River), this page explains where records typically live, how local life shapes a claim, and early steps that protect your options.

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  • Practical guidance for people injured in Klamath County: on the roads around Klamath Falls, at the area's lakes and trails, or on working land. Covers reports, medical records, and insurance next steps.

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  • Lake County spans Oregon's high desert, with Lakeview as its county seat and Routes 31 and 140 as its main highways. This page covers where injury records tend to live locally and practical steps after a crash, a recreation accident, or an injury at work.

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  • Lane County reaches from the Oregon Coast to the Cascades, with Eugene and Springfield anchoring the southern Willamette Valley. This page explains where reports and records typically live after an injury here, and how to take steady first steps.

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  • If you were hurt in Lincoln County, in a crash on Route 101, at a business in Newport or Lincoln City, or working around the county's fishing docks, this page explains where records tend to live and which early steps may help.

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  • Linn County claims often begin with a report from Albany city police or the county sheriff, then take shape from valley life: timber work, farm country, and forest recreation. Here is how to keep the early details straight.

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  • Malheur County covers a vast stretch of Oregon on Mountain Time, with its courthouse town in Vale and its largest city in Ontario. This page explains where crash reports and records tend to live here and the early steps that can steady an injury claim.

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  • Marion County injury claims often stretch between Salem (the county seat and state capital) and the farms, campuses, and workplaces of the Mid-Willamette Valley. Here is how local records, work, and travel patterns can shape your next steps.

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  • Practical guidance for people injured in Morrow County, from Heppner to the Port of Morrow near Boardman: where crash reports and court records typically live, and how to take steady first steps while a claim comes together.

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  • Multnomah County is Oregon's smallest and most populous county, and injury claims here often run through Portland, where crash reports are filed and the Central Courthouse sits. This page walks through practical next steps.

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  • If you were injured in Polk County (in Dallas, Rickreall, or on rural mid-Willamette Valley roads), this guide covers where reports and records typically live, how local work and wine country shape claims, and calm first steps.

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  • After an injury in Sherman County, the practical questions come quickly: which agency took the report, where records live around Moro and Wasco, and how farm work or the visitor season may shape a claim. These are steady notes on sorting that out.

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  • Tillamook County stretches along Oregon's north coast, where Highway 101, working dairy farms, and busy recreation areas shape daily life. This guide explains where records tend to live and what early steps can help after an injury here.

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  • If you were injured anywhere in Umatilla County, from Pendleton to Hermiston or the roads between them, this page explains where reports and records typically live and the steady steps that can help protect a claim.

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  • If you were hurt in Union County, whether in La Grande, on a working farm or ranch, or while camping or fishing in the surrounding mountains, this page explains where reports and records tend to live locally and the early steps that can help protect a claim.

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  • Practical guidance for people hurt in Wallowa County, from crashes near Wallowa Lake to work injuries in a county built on agriculture, ranching, lumber, and tourism, with notes on where reports and records in Enterprise typically live.

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  • If you were injured in Wasco County (in The Dalles, along the Columbia River corridor, or during recreation near the Gorge), this page explains where reports and records tend to live and what steady first steps look like.

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  • Practical guidance for people injured in Washington County, Oregon, whether on the Sunset Highway or Route 217, at work in the valley's farms and food processors, or out on Tualatin Valley trails. Plain answers about reports, records, and next steps.

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  • Wheeler County injuries often happen far from where treatment and records end up, whether on US 26 or OR 19, along the John Day River, or during fair week in Fossil. Here is how to keep a claim organized in Oregon's canyon country.

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  • Yamhill County pairs Oregon's largest concentration of vineyards with farm work and four college campuses. Here is where injury reports and court records typically sit around McMinnville and Newberg, and which early steps tend to help.

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