Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon July 28, 2021 Tribes, PGE extend of purchase agreement ‘Large enough to serve you... Small enough to care’ 866-299-0644 2020 Buick Encore - 9,821 miles - 2019 Chevrolet Cruz - 47,699 miles - $26,995 $19,995 #39331A #20418B 2019 Chevrolet Malibu - 7,972 miles - 2017 Chevrolet Malibu - 120,175 miles - $25,995 $13,995 #56012A #60686D 2017 Buick Encore - 17,730 miles - 2015 Chevrolet Equinox - 133,374 miles - $22,995 $12,995 #79134A #46039A 2015 Dodge Durango - 136,440 miles - $19,995 #32933A 2014 Chevrolet Suburban - 137,207 miles - 2012 Chevrolet Silverado - 164,766 miles - 2006 Buick Lucerne - 101,393 miles - $20,995 $7,995 #64331B #24176B 2006 Chevrolet Trailblazer - 116,431 miles - 2004 GMC Sierra - 74,829 miles - $8,995 - $25,995 #06170B #80826W $27,995 #81502A The Confederated Tribes and Portland General Electric entered a new agreement ex- tending their long-standing partnership at the Pelton- Round Butte hydro project. Under the new agreement, PGE will continue to pur- chase power generated from the tribes’ share of the project through 2040. The long-term power pur- chase agreement is forecasted to fulfill 224 megawatts, or 40 percent of PGE’s out- standing 2025 capacity needs with the clean, reliable elec- tricity. As a flexible resource, Pelton-Round Butte is ca- pable of increasing and de- creasing output to maximize market demand. The Pelton-Round Butte project was completed in 1964 and includes the three dams—Pelton, Round Butte and the tribes’ Re-Reg— along a 20-mile stretch in the Deschutes River Canyon. In total, the project produces approximately 500 mega- watts of emissions-free elec- tricity—enough to power about 150,000 homes, or a city the size of Salem. In addition to entering into this new power purchase agreement, the Confederated Tribes—through Tribal Coun- cil and Power and Water En- terprises—earlier announced the intention to increase the tribes’ ownership share in Pelton-Round Butte from 33 percent to 49 percent. The Confederated Tribes became co-owners of the Pelton and Round Butte fa- cilities in 2001, through an agreement that provided the tribes with an additional op- portunity to purchase a greater share of the project this year. Job growth continues to rebound in region The unemployment rate in Jefferson County, including the Warm Springs area, con- tinued to improve in June. Unemployment in the county in June was 6.8 per- cent, down from 7 percent in May. The rate is still higher than before the pandemic, when it was 4.1 percent in June of 2020. Nonfarm employment in Jefferson County rose by 80 jobs in June. Monthly job gains were concentrated in tribal government (plus 30 jobs); leisure and hospitality (plus 30 jobs); and retail trade ( plus 20 jobs), according to the Oregon Department of Employment. The job gains in leisure and hospitality have largely matched seasonal expecta- tions the past several months with the industry struggling to recover from the pandemic. The drop in unemploy- ment rates is reinforced by the decline in the number of workers claiming unemploy- ment benefits. The number of residents claiming benefits in Central Oregon dropped each month this year and was down by 60 percent in June from levels in January. Deschutes County in- cluding Bend: The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate ticked down to 5.9 percent in June from 6.1 percent in May. The unemployment rate re- mains higher than before the first impacts from Covid-19 in February 2020 when it was 3.3 percent. Crook County: The sea- sonally adjusted unemploy- ment rate was 7.4 percent in June, down slightly from 7.6 percent in May. The un- employment rate remains higher than before the first impacts from Covid-19 in February 2020 when it was 4.4 percnet.