Trade counts from the shard
- Electricians: 1
- Fence Contractors: 1
- HVAC Technicians: 1
0 records carry the 24/7 emergency flag.
Clackamas County, Oregon. Population 38,026.
Updated what's new3 gold-tier pros (confidence score 80+ — full NAP, license, and multi-source coverage). Ranked by ProFix data-confidence: complete licensed contact details and multi-source public-record coverage; ProFix verifies state licenses where available; never by payment.
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Get matched with verified Oregon pros →Data-derived local notes
Oregon is a midsize-city page in the top-2,000 launched-state city set, ranked #1,158 by the population value in all-cities.json. The city record places it in Clackamas County; the pro counts below are exact city-name matches from the OR gold shard.
0 records carry the 24/7 emergency flag.
Oregon is in Clackamas County. This seed does not name a city-specific permit office, so use the authority having jurisdiction for the job address and cross-check state licensing through Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB).
Phone: +1-503-378-4621
Permit pointer
State code context for Oregon comes from the Oregon NEC / IRC / IECC seed. Current adoption values in the seed: NEC: NEC 2023; IRC: IRC 2021; IECC: State-developed 2023 Oregon Residential Specialty Code energy chapter. The permit date and local amendments still control the job.
Oregon's seasonal seed describes the climate zone as "Pacific wet west, Cascade snow, dry east, and summer wildfire smoke". For Oregon, the highlighted windows below are selected from hvac service / install, roofing, and exterior paint / siding because those projects match either the city's top trade counts or the highest-urgency state calendar entries.
Oregon uses the Oregon state resilience seed. The scenarios linked to this city page are flooding, wildfire and smoke, and straight-line wind storms; they are state-level hazards, not city incident claims.
Oregon flood risk comes from atmospheric rivers, coastal storms, landslide-prone slopes, and rivers rising from Cascades rainfall.
Oregon faces Cascades and southern Oregon fire risk, east-side grass and timber fire, and smoke events that can stretch for days.
Oregon windstorms from Pacific lows can push trees into roofs and power lines, especially when soils are saturated by atmospheric rivers.
Emergency links for Oregon are selected from Oregon's state emergency scenarios and climate-relevant playbooks. They are planning links; call 911 or the serving utility first when life safety, gas, fire, downed lines, or shock risk is present.
Generated from all-cities, all-counties, state pro shards, state code updates, seasonal/climate seeds, emergency seeds, and licensing/permit-contact seeds.