A7 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 2021 p DOW 30,603.36 +300.19 p NASDAQ 13,337.16 +66.56 bendbulletin.com/business p p S&P 500 3,787.38 +36.61 The J.R. Simplot Co. is building a liquid fertilizer storage and distribution facility in Baker City’s in- dustrial park that is slated to open in early spring. The Simplot Grower Solutions operation will employ seven people initially, with the poten- tial to increase to about a dozen workers, Josh Jordan, senior manager for communications and public relations for the J.R. Simplot, wrote in an email to the Herald. Based in Boise, Idaho, Simplot is a major sup- plier of frozen french fries. The company paid $235,620 for a 14.28-acre parcel from Baker City in the city’s 64-acre Elkhorn View Industrial Park. The facility is “part of a longer-term plan to build a permanent facility to meet the needs of area farmers, many of whom grow potatoes that we use at our processing fa- cilities,” Jordan wrote. The Baker City facility will not produce fertilizer. Simplot has two main production plants, one in Pocatello, Idaho, and one in Rock Springs, Wy- oming, that supply the company’s more than 200 Grower Solutions stores, Jordan wrote in his email. CRUDE OIL $52.34 -.51 q GOLD $1,837.90 -7.00 p SILVER $25.91 +.53 p EURO $1.2132 +.0033 COVID-19 rescue plan BRIEFING J.R. Simplot builds in Baker City q 30-YR T-BOND 1.82% +.04 Dems push forward on $1.9T aid BY LISA MASCARO AND JOSH BOAK The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Dem- ocrats in Congress and the White House rejected a Repub- lican pitch to split President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 rescue plan into smaller chunks on Thursday, with law- makers appearing primed to muscle the sweeping economic and virus aid forward without GOP help. Despite Biden’s calls for unity, Democrats said the stub- bornly high unemployment numbers and battered U.S. economy leave them unwilling to waste time courting Repub- lican support that might not materialize. They also don’t want to curb the size and scope of a package that they say will Mittened memes generate over a million for charity Sen. Bernie Sanders’ presidential inauguration look benefits home state of Vermont — Bulletin wire reports Billy Calzada/The San Antonio Express-News via AP Tobey King speaks to her crochet Bernie Sanders doll as the bidding continues on eBay on Tuesday in Corpus Christi, Texas. The doll sold for $20,300, and all of the proceeds are being donated to Meals on Wheels. BY LISA RATHKE • The Associated Press A bout those wooly mittens that U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders wore to the presidential inauguration, sparking endless quirky memes across social media? They’ve helped to raise $1.8 million in the last five days for charitable organizations in Sanders’ home state of Vermont, the independent senator announced Wednesday. The sum comes from the sale of merchandise with the Jan. 20 image of him sitting with his arms and legs crossed, clad in his brown parka and wool mittens. Sanders put the first of the so-called “Chairman Sanders” merchandise, including T-shirts, sweatshirts and stickers, on his campaign website Thursday night and the first run sold out in less than 30 minutes, he said. More merchandise was added over the weekend and sold out by Monday morning, he said. “Jane and I were amazed by all the creativity shown by so many people over the last week, and we’re glad we can use my internet fame to help Vermont- ers in need,” Sanders said in a written statement. “But even this “Jane and I were amazed by all the creativity shown by so many people over the last week, and we’re glad we can use my internet fame to help Vermonters in need.” — Sen. Bernie Sanders amount of money is no substi- tute for action by Congress, and I will be doing everything I can in Washington to make sure working people in Vermont and across the country get the relief they need in the middle of the worst crisis we’ve faced since the Great Depression.” Sen . Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., attends Presi- dent-elect Joe Biden’s inaugura- tion cere- mony Jan. 20 in Washing- ton. Jonathan Ernst/ AP See Memes / A8 University of California , Davis releases new walnut variety BY SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press FOLSOM, Calif. — The University of California , Davis, in partnership with the California Walnut Board, released a new walnut variety this month. Researchers say the new variety, named UC Wolfskill, will enable grow- ers to harvest earlier, lengthen the har- vest season and improve efficiency. The trees produce walnuts of the color most desired by consumers, and early tests show the trees perform better than some other varieties when facing the disease walnut blight. “She’s a good variety. Give her a try,” See Aid / A8 GAMESTOP Brokerages limit trading, sparking outcry BY ALEX VEIGA The Associated Press Another top Oregon engineer returns to Intel Former Intel Vice Pres- ident Sunil Shenoy is re- turning to the company as head of its design engineering group, join- ing newly hired CEO Pat Gelsinger who is himself coming back to Intel after a dozen years away. Intel has endured a se- ries of manufacturing set- backs over the past sev- eral years, with repeated delays to new genera- tions of microprocessor technology. Those troubles corre- sponded with upheaval in the company’s exec- utive and engineering ranks, especially under former Intel CEO Brian Krzanich, who ran the business from 2013 until 2018. Shenoy left Intel in 2014 after 33 years with the company. At the time, he was vice president of Intel’s platform engineering group in Hillsboro. He starts his new position in Oregon on Monday. “His experience inside and outside of Intel will enable him to combine the best of Intel culture with an entrepreneur- ial spirit and fresh per- spective as we work to strengthen the compa- ny’s technical leadership team and to coach and develop a new genera- tion of technical talent,” said Bob Swan, Intel’s out- going CEO. provide desperately needed money to distribute the vac- cine, reopen schools and send cash to American households and businesses. UC-Davis/capitalpress.com UC Wolfskill, the new walnut variety. said Charles Leslie, a UC Davis re- searcher. He grinned. UC Wolfskill — named after the Wolfskill family, who donated exper- imental orchards to the university in 1934 — has been in development for 18 years. In 2003, researcher Gale McGrana- han crossed a Chandler, the most pop- ular walnut variety, with a Solano wal- nut, which is harvested earlier in the year. S]ince then, UC Davis researchers have experimented with the seedlings, grafted and propagated the trees and worked with dozens of growers who were willing to act as “guinea pigs.” The research was funded by the Cal- ifornia Walnut Board. Now, nearly two decades later, re- searchers say they’re excited to release the new variety. Joe Grant, research director of the walnut board, told the Capital Press having an earlier-harvesting walnut will allow growers to spread out their harvest season as evenly as possible. “This enables growers and hullers/ dryers to have a steady flow of product to handle, rather than being sporadic,” he said. Pat Brown, an associate professor and nut crops breeder at UC Davis, said consumers likely won’t notice a significant difference in texture or fla- vor; the researchers mainly designed the variety to meet growers’ needs. Robinhood and other retail brokerages took steps to tamp down the speculative frenzy surrounding companies such as GameStop, but the actions only sparked more volatility in the market and an outcry from users of the platforms and some members of Congress who say small investors are be- ing treated unfairly. GameStop stock has rock- eted from below $20 earlier this month to close around $350 Wednesday as a volunteer army of investors on social me- dia challenged big institutions who had placed market bets that the stock would fall. The action was even wilder Thursday: The stock swung between $112 and $483 before closing down 43.2% at $197.44. Robinhood said Thursday that investors would only be able to sell their positions and not open new ones in some cases. Robinhood also required investors to put up more of their own money for certain trades instead of using bor- rowed funds. Besides GameStop, Rob- inhood said trading in stocks such as AMC Entertainment, Bed Bath & Beyond, Black- berry, Nokia, Express Inc., Koss Corp., American Airlines, Tootsie Roll, Trivago and Na- ked Brand Group would be af- fected by the new restrictions. After the market closed, Robinhood said it would allow limited buying of those securi- ties starting Friday. The frenzy surrounding shares of GameStop, AMC and others has drawn in an influx of investors with little or no ex- perience trading stocks. That poses a challenge for broker- ages that cater to small inves- tors, said Andy Nybo, manag- ing director at Burton-Taylor International Consulting. “The brokers were forced to take action because they would be in the firing line if an unsophisticated investor loses money,” he said. The surge in the use of stock options fueled by individual investors has some broker- ages nervous and explains why some have taken steps to re- strict trading. The potential issue centers on the possibil- ity that a brokerage that isn’t capitalized well enough could run into trouble if a large num- ber of investors suddenly lose money on options trades that don’t go their way. Brokerages often lend inves- tors money to make their trades, and could be exposed to huge losses if many investors are sud- denly wiped out and can’t pay back the borrowed funds. Robinhood’s stated goal is to “democratize” investing and to bring more regular people into investing. See GameStop / A8