Jackson County, OR

Drought

RVEM
/ Categories: Know Your Hazards
Drought 3200

A drought is a period of drier than normal conditions that results in water-related problems. Drought occurs in virtually all climatic zones, but its characteristics vary significantly from one region to another.  Drought is a temporary condition; it differs from aridity, which is restricted to low rainfall regions and is a permanent feature of climate.

The National Drought Mitigation Center and the National Center for Atmospheric Research define drought by categorizing it according the “type of drought.” These types include the following:

Meteorological or Climatological Droughts
Meteorological droughts are defined in terms of the departure from a normal precipitation pattern and the duration of the event. These droughts are a slow-onset phenomenon that can take at least three months to develop and may last for several seasons or years.

Agricultural Droughts
Agricultural droughts link the various characteristics of meteorological drought to agricultural impacts. The focus is on precipitation shortages and soil-water deficits. Agricultural drought is largely the result of a deficit of soil moisture.  A plant's demand for water is dependent on prevailing weather conditions, biological characteristics of the specific plant, its stage of growth, and the physical and biological properties of the soil.

Hydrological Droughts
Hydrological droughts refer to deficiencies in surface water and sub-surface water supplies. It is measured as stream flow, and as lake, reservoir, and ground water levels. Hydrological measurements are not the earliest indicators of drought.  When precipitation is reduced or deficient over an extended period of time, the shortage will be reflected in declining surface and sub-surface water levels.

Socioeconomic Droughts
Socioeconomic droughts occur when physical water shortage begins to affect people, individually and collectively. Most socioeconomic definitions of drought associate it with supply, demand, and economic good. One could argue that a physical water shortage with no socio-economic impacts is a policy success.

Drought is typically measured in terms of water availability in a defined geographical area. It is common to express drought with a numerical index that ranks severity. The Oregon Drought Severity Index is the most commonly used drought measurement in the state because it incorporates both local conditions and mountain snow pack. The Oregon Drought Severity Index categorizes droughts as mild, moderate, severe, and extreme.

Benefits to local, state and federal drought declarations include:

  • Local, state and federal drought declarations help manage threats to agriculture, recreation, and natural resources.
  • County drought declarations allow for increased flexibility when managing limited supplies and provide jurisdictions with the ability to prioritize a wide variety of water usage needs.
  • County drought declarations usually precede state drought emergency requests that enact emergency provisions for counties.
  • State drought declarations enable counties to benefit from emergency streamlined water rights programs, ground water usage programs and other programs that can help citizens. 
  • Counties in a drought D3 (Extreme Drought) or higher at any time during the growing season, can be designated by the USDA as a federal drought disaster area.
  • Counties that are contiguous to federally declared counties are also granted federal drought benefits such as assistance and emergency loans from the Farm Service Agency.

More Information About Drought

The United States Drought Monitor website contains both specific and summary information about drought for the entire United States.

Local teacup diagrams:

US Army Corps of Engineers

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📣 📨Jackson Alerts Email Today 📨📣 We will be sending a second round of emails to Jackson County residents who were previously signed up for a Citizen Alert account TODAY. This email will be sent to folks who have not set up a NEW username, and have not logged in to review that their contact information is still current. ▪️ The email will be from "Jackson Alerts" noreply@everbridge.net, we cannot change how this sender information appears. ▪️ The email will contain a link that will take you to a website where you will need to set up a new username and password in order to review your contact information. The username for Jackson Alerts cannot be the same as the username used for Citizen Alert. In the off chance you receive a second email and you have already updated your information either over the phone or by following this process in the first email, please disregard. Your information has been verified. Here are some FAQs that we have received: ❓Why can’t I use my email address or old username & password for Jackson Alerts? ☑️ The new username and password for Jackson Alerts cannot be the same as what you used for Citizen Alert. If the system doesn’t like your email address, you may have used it for your Citizen Alert account and will need to choose a new one. ❓Why am I receiving an error message when I click on the link in the email? ☑️If you had another person registered on your account, and you share an email address, they may have already clicked on the link to update the account. Feel free to call us if you encounter a rare situation like this. ❓What if I signed up at a community outreach event or over the phone? ☑️Jackson Alerts contains your contact information that was used when you originally signed up. If you do not want to set up a log in to review your information on the website, give us a call so we can review your information with you and make sure everything is up to date. ❓My mom is elderly, does not have an email and signed up for Citizen Alert over the phone. Does she need to set up on online account? ☑️No, since she does not have an email, she does not need to create an online account. Her name and contact information that was in Citizen Alert was moved into the Jackson Alerts system. Give call us at 541-774-6790 & we are more than happy to make sure mom’s contact information is still up to date. For more information, check out our website at jacksoncountyor.gov/alerts
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Jackson County Emergency Management
5/1/2025
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⚠️Please use caution this weekend if you plan on debris burning!⚠️
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Jackson County Emergency Management
4/25/2025
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📣Bear Creek Greenway users! Check this out!
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Jackson County Emergency Management
4/1/2025
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🚨 𝗣𝗿𝗶𝘃𝗮𝘁𝗲 𝗪𝗲𝗹𝗹𝘀 & 𝗙𝗹𝗼𝗼𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴: 𝗦𝗮𝗳𝗲𝘁𝘆 𝗦𝘁𝗲𝗽𝘀 🚨 Flooding can contaminate private wells with bacteria or other harmful substances, making the water unsafe to drink. If your well has been flooded: ✔️ Boil your water for at least one minute after it reaches a rolling boil, or use an alternative water source. ✔️ Look for signs of contamination—cloudy or muddy water may indicate your well has been impacted. ✔️ Get your water tested for coliform bacteria by an approved drinking water lab before using it for drinking or cooking. 𝗛𝗼𝘄 𝘁𝗼 𝗗𝗶𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗳𝗲𝗰𝘁 𝗬𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗪𝗲𝗹𝗹 𝗔𝗳𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗙𝗹𝗼𝗼𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴: 🔹 Run an outside spigot until the water runs clear. 🔹 For many private wells, mixing 4 cups of bleach with 5 gallons of water will be enough to treat 200 gallons of water which yields approximately 50 ppm or 50mg/L 🔹 Circulate the bleach by running an outside hose into the well casing until you smell chlorine from the hose. 🔹 Turn on all cold water faucets inside until you smell chlorine, then turn them off. 🔹 Wait at least 8 hours before using the water. 🔹 Flush the system until no chlorine smell remains. 🔹 Test your water at least 5 days after disinfection—only use it for drinking or cooking once results confirm it’s safe. For more detailed guidance, visit
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Jackson County Emergency Management
3/17/2025
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⚠️ Flooding Update & Resources⚠️ We are currently tracking several roadways impacted by water across the County. Please be cautious of high water, washed out roads, mudslides, and debris in roadways today! If your property has been impacted by flooding, please check out these resources: ✔️ After the Flood - State of Oregon: https://apps.oregon.gov/oregon-newsroom/OR/OEM/Posts/Post/after-the-water-retreat ✔️ https://www.floodsmart.gov ✔️ https://www.floodsmart.gov/flood Current Weather & Sandbag Information: ▪️ Sandbag FAQ: https://www.rvem.org/News/sandbags-faq ▪️ Weather Forecast: https://www.weather.gov/mfr/
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Jackson County Emergency Management
3/17/2025
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📢 Livestock Owners📢 At The Expo, Jackson County Fairgrounds, Oregon has 30 stalls available for rent should you need a place to shelter your animals. Details below 👇
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Jackson County Emergency Management
3/16/2025
14 1
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