2B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 2021 BUSINESS & AG LIFE Biden signs $15 minimum wage for federal contract workers By JOSH BOAK The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden signed an executive order Tuesday, April 27, to increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour for federal contrac- tors, providing a pay bump to hundreds of thousands of workers. Biden administration offi cials said the higher wages would lead to greater worker productivity, off set- ting any additional costs to taxpayers. “This executive order will promote economy and effi ciency in federal con- tracting, providing value for taxpayers by enhancing worker productivity and generating higher-quality work by boosting workers’ health, morale, and eff ort,” the White House said in a statement. The liberal Economic Policy Institute estimates Evan Vucci/Associated Press, File In this Feb. 24, 2021, fi le photo, President Joe Biden pauses after signing an executive order relating to U.S. supply chains, in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington. Biden is preparing to sign an executive order to increase the minimum wage to $15 an hour for federal contractors. Administration offi cials say it will provide a pay bump to hundreds of thousands. as many as 390,000 low- wage federal contractors Keeping the history State honors Salem woman for preserving work of trailblazing landscape architects By SAPHARA HARRELL Salem Reporter via AP StoryShare SALEM — For Bobbie Dolp, the gardens at Gaiety Hollow are a laid out in a complex, extraordinary way that’s hard to convey. She said they’re built around the concept of rooms, much like a house. “It feels much bigger than it really is. People are always amazed,” Dolp said. The gardens were designed by Elizabeth Lord and Edith Schryver, the pair behind the fi rst wom- en-owned landscape archi- tecture fi rm in the Pacifi c Northwest. The women’s infl uence can be seen in various gardens around Salem. For nearly two decades, Dolp has made it her mis- sion to preserve their legacy. Now, her work is being rec- ognized with a state historic preservation award. After Dolp retired from teaching chemistry and physics at Central High School in Independence, she had quite an extensive garden. Over time, Dolp said she shifted from vegetable gar- dening to planting more fl owers. “I’ve always loved being outdoors and being active and working with my hands,” she said. She was drawn to the uniqueness of Lord and Schryver’s story, two women from diff erent backgrounds and educa- tion levels who met in 1927 while abroad in Europe studying gardens. They had both gone to a school in Massachusetts for women in landscape archi- tecture, but attended years apart. They moved west to establish their business in 1929, in Lord’s family home in Salem. “They certainly blazed a trail and left a signifi cant legacy,” Dolp said. She said their skills blended well, with Schryver doing the engineering, design and layout while Lord excelled at plant combinations. “It’s interesting to see how they developed their business sense as well as incredible aesthetic sense” Dolp said. She and another gar- dening friend began to envi- sion a group that would explore the story of Lord and Schryver, who designed more than 200 landscapes and gardens in the region from 1929 to 1969. They brought garden preservation specialist Bill Noble to see Gaiety Hollow, Lord and Schryver’s per- sonal home, garden and studio located at 545 Mis- sion St. At the time, the garden was privately owned. Dolp said Noble told them there was no garden like it on the West Coast. “Well, we better get organized,” Dolp recalled thinking. She helped establish the Lord & Schryver Conser- vancy in 2005, with an eye on one day purchasing the garden where the women did their work and opening it to the public. Dolp said she had no idea when that opportunity would come about. Pam Wasson, execu- tive director of the Lord & Schryver Conservancy, said Dolp is “a real go-getter” who worked hard to get Gaiety Hollow listed on the National Register of His- toric Places. “She really had the pas- sion and drive to go through all these steps and pro- cesses,” Wasson said. She said accomplishing what Dolp has for the his- toric property took a lot of work. In the intervening years, the nonprofi t raised money to hire a fi rm to document what the garden was like in its “period of signifi - cance.” It also rehabilitated and maintains the historic gardens at the Deepwood Estate, also designed by Lord and Schryver. Dolp said Lord and Schryver did all the work themselves in a studio above the garage. There’s no record of an intern or secre- tary helping them. In 2015, the conser- vancy purchased Gaiety Hollow after 18 months of fundraising. Through the decade-long process, Dolp said, “It’s just one foot in front of the other.” On April 29, Dolp will be recognized for her work establishing the Lord and Schryver Conservancy during the Oregon Heritage Excellence Awards. Awards are for those who “have made outstanding contributions to preserving Oregon heritage.” Dolp said she’s spent “a lot” of hours in the garden, and many more getting the conservancy off its feet through grant writing and communicating its impor- tance to people. “I haven’t regretted any minute,” Dolp said. would receive a raise, with roughly half of the benefi - ciaries being Black or His- panic workers. There are an estimated 5 million con- tract workers in the federal government, according to a posting last year for the Brookings Institution by Paul Light, a public policy professor at New York University. The increase could be dramatic for workers who earn the current minimum of $10.95 an hour. Those workers would receive a 37% pay hike, though the increase would be rolled out gradually, according to the terms of the order. The White House said the workers would include cleaning and maintenance workers, nursing assistants who care for veterans, cafe- teria workers providing for the military and laborers who build and repair federal infrastructure. All federal agencies would need to include the higher wage in new contract off erings by Jan. 30 of next TRADE Continued from Page 1B one year when wheat from Canada and Australia had an advantage through the Comprehensive and Pro- gressive Agreement for Trans-Pacifi c Partnership, U.S. Wheat Associates Japan country director Kazunori Nakano said. The U.S. pulled out of the original TPP agreement, opting instead to negotiate a separate agreement with Japan. “Flour millers remained conservative and did not change their blending ratio of raw material despite some increased cost disadvan- tage of U.S. wheat during 2019,” Nakano said. Japan’s Ministry of Finance year-over-year import statistics do show an advantage for U.S. beef. Whereas overall imports of chilled beef were down 5% from over 274,893 tons in 2019 to just over 261,510 tons last year, U.S. product imports decreased only 1.4%, from almost 126,908 tons to 125,157 tons. Conversely, while overall frozen beef imports decreased 0.5% from almost 340,516 to just under 338,898 tons, imports of U.S. meat jumped 14%, from almost 114,162 tons to almost 129,904 tons. However, Yamashoji cautioned against making an assessment based on statistics only. “The COVID-19 pan- demic is a dramatic event Port of Portland/Contributed Photo Wheat bound for overseas pours into the hold of a ship at the Port of Portland. U.S. wheat exports to Japan increased 4.4% last year. and the impact is ongoing, so simply looking at year- over-year volumes is not a thorough way to eval- uate the U.S.-Japan Trade Agreement,” he said. U.S. beef is heavily uti- lized by Japan’s foodser- vice sector, which was hit hard by COVID-related restrictions and still is not operating under normal conditions, Yamashoji said. The growth in imports of frozen U.S. beef was partly due to consumer demand for staples such as beef short plate, of which the U.S. is the dominant supplier in Japan, he said. “U.S. beef short plate is heavily utilized by the gyudon beef bowl restau- rants and also sold thin- sliced at retail, for conve- nient and aff ordable home cooking,” Yamashoji said. Unless the overall demand for imported beef increases, imports of U.S. beef will not increase sig- nifi cantly, said Shiroh Ohashi, executive director of the Japan Meat Traders Association, a grouping of 30 meat-importing and year. By March 30, agen- cies would need to imple- ment the higher wage into new contracts. The increase would also be in existing contracts that are extended. The wage would be indexed to infl ation, so it would automatically increase with each year to refl ect changes in prices. The tipped minimum wage of $7.65 an hour for fed- eral contractors would be replaced by the standard minimum by 2024. Biden has pushed to establish a $15 hourly min- imum wage nationwide for all workers, making it a part of his corona- virus relief package. But the Senate parliamentarian said the wage hike did not follow the budgetary rules that allowed the $1.9 tril- lion plan to pass with a simple majority, so it was not included in the bill that became law in March. -exporting companies. “I just hope the COVID-19 problem will be resolved soon,” Ohashi said. For their part, whereas overall wheat imports increased only 0.8% year- over-year in 2020 from over 5,331 tons to almost 5,374 tons, U.S. product rose 4.4% from over 2,521 tons to almost 2,632 tons. Since the U.S.-Japan trade agreement went into eff ect, the markup on wheat from the U.S., Australia and Canada has been the same, 21-member Japan Flour Millers Asso- ciation Yasuo Sasaki said. “I don’t think there will be any action to uncondi- tionally increase or decrease the import quantity of wheat from any of those coun- tries,” Sasaki said. 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