THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2021 A11 A11 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2021 p DOW 30,723.60 +36.12 q BRIEFING Two Western U.S. livestock auctions permanently close Livestock auctions Northern California and Oregon have both an- nounced they will per- manently close their live- stock auction yards. The Shasta Livestock Auction Yard, in Cotton- wood, California, an- nounced Tuesday it will shut down its weekly Fri- day sale for good after a final sale Feb. 12. General Manager Brad Peek said the Shasta Live- stock business plans to continue and even ex- pand its video sales and direct farm-to-farm coun- try cattle trade. Located south of Port- land, the Woodburn Live- stock Exchange also plans to close its animal auc- tions this month. Business managers have decided to shut down the livestock por- tion of their business due to the continual declining head counts and rising costs of doing business. It will hold its last sheep, goat and hog auc- tion Feb. 15 and its final cattle and poultry auction Feb. 23. bendbulletin.com/business NASDAQ 13,610.54 -2.23 p p S&P 500 3,830.17 +3.86 30-YR T-BOND 1.91% +.03 p p CRUDE OIL $55.69 +.93 GOLD $1,832.20 +1.70 — Bulletin wire reports SILVER $26.88 +.50 p EURO $1.2025 +.0005 Daimler to spin off trucks, change name Daimler Trucks North America headquartered in Portland, has test track at Madras Airport BY DAVID MCHUGH The Associated Press FRANKFURT, Germany — German automaker Daimler will split itself into two inde- pendent companies by spin- ning off its truck and bus divi- sion, a move the company said would give both the freedom to operate more nimbly in a fast-changing environment fo- cused on zero-emission vehi- cles and software. The Stuttgart-headquartered company said Wednesday that a significant majority stake in the truck business would be distributed to current share- holders, and that Daimler would “at the appropriate time” be renamed Mercedes-Benz, the brand name under which it sells luxury cars. CEO Ola Kallenius said the decision was made because the businesses of making lux- ury cars and heavy trucks and buses “have very different structures.” He said that two companies each focused on their core business would be more flexible and make deci- sions faster as they cope with technological change. “We are in a very dynamic entrepreneurial environment,” Kallenius said in a conference call with journalists. “Speed Matthias Schrader/AP file An employee attaches an emblem in April as he works on a Mer- cedes-Benz S-class car at the Mercedes plant in Sindelfingen, Germany. of decision making... is some- thing that can be enhanced in a pure play structure.” The truck and bus division has more than 100,000 em- ployees and makes Freightliner trucks and Thomas Built buses. It has manufacturing locations CHEMEKETA COMMUNITY COLLEGE DIESEL TECHNOLOGY TRAINING CENTER OPENS Kevin Ruby, right, chair- man and in- structor at Chemeketa Community College’s Die- sel Technol- ogy Program, helps students Daniel Wilske and Luigy Arellano reas- semble a small engine. Suit settled over unemployment benefits The Oregon Employ- ment Department prom- ises to be more timely and more transparent about jobless benefits payments, and to be accessible in more lan- guages, under terms of a pending settlement of a class-action lawsuit. The Oregon Law Center filed the suit last summer on behalf of 13 jobless Oregonians, amid extraordinary delays in paying jobless bene- fits. The suit didn’t seek monetary damages, but aimed to compel the de- partment to speed up claims processing and to do more to communicate with workers who don’t speak English. “After I lost my job, I applied for unemploy- ment. I waited months for benefits to begin without knowing what was hap- pening — I couldn’t pay rent, and I really worried about how it would af- fect my daughter and I,” said Lisa Exterovich, one of the lawsuit’s plaintiffs, in a written statement Wednesday. She said the Wednes- day’s settlement com- mits the department to “paying people benefits more quickly, working to improve communica- tions with those seeking benefits, and providing assistance to people who don’t speak English.” p George Plaven/ Capital Press BY GEORGE PLAVEN • Capital Press BROOKS — D aniel Wilske has always been interested in cars and trucks. It was during high school that Wilske, 21, really began tinkering under the hood. That led him to enroll in Chemeketa Community College’s new Diesel Technology Program, where he plans to jumpstart his career as a mechanic. “I just like working on motors,” Wilske said. “I would like to travel around and fix machines for contractors.” On Feb. 1, Wilske and his lab partner, Luigy Arellano, worked together to re- assemble a small Kubota engine, using a penlight and rubber mallet to align the crankshaft. The pieces fit like a 3D puzzle, while bolts and sockets clinked gently on the metal table. Wilske and Arellano are part of the first group of students in the diesel program at Chemeketa. The college spent five years developing the curriculum at its campus in Brooks, about 10 miles north of Salem, before classes began in January. Kevin Ruby, program chairman and instructor, said the two-year degree com- bines classroom and hands-on training to prepare students for an entry-level po- sition as a diesel mechanic. Each student will also work a summer internship with companies like Daimler Trucks North America and Papé Machinery, learning to service and repair heavy equipment. See Diesel / A12 all over the world, including in Ohio, Germany, Brazil, and Portland, where the headquar- ters of Daimler Trucks North America is . The company has a test track at Madras Airport. Engines are made at the De- troit Diesel facility in Redford, Michigan. The division had revenue last year of $48.1 bil- lion for trucks and about $5.6 billion for buses. One reason for the spinoff is that the auto business and the truck business are pursu- ing different technologies as they seek to reduce vehicle emissions. The luxury car busi- ness is bringing out new bat- tery-powered models, while the truck business is investing in hydrogen fuel cell technol- ogy. OREGON | POPULATION GROWTH IN 2020 For the first time, deaths outnumber births MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian Oregon’s population growth has been slowing for several years, but in 2020 the state hit a remarkable milestone – deaths appear to have outnumbered births for the first time on re- cord. That’s according to Josh Leh- ner, with the Oregon Office of Economic Analysis. Falling birth rates and an aging popu- lation had Oregon on track to have births outnumber deaths at some point — Lehner had been projecting 2025 — but COVID-19 upended things. There were about 200 more Oregon deaths than births in 2020, according to preliminary state numbers. That’s close enough that Lehner cautions a final tally may ultimately re- verse the finding. And if the coronavirus pan- demic recedes in 2021, births will again outnumber deaths — at least for some period of time. But Oregon’s birthrate is at a 30-year ebb, among na- tion’s lowest. By the Oregon Health Au- thority’s official tally, 1,649 Oregonians died for reasons directly related to COVID-19 from March through Decem- ber last year. That’s 4.1% of the nearly 40,000 deaths Oregon recorded overall in 2020, but COVID-19 accounts for a significant share of the 7% increase in the total number of Oregon deaths for the whole year. The number of Oregon deaths in 2020 increased twice as fast as in 2019, and was the sharpest increase in at least 21 years. COVID-19 in Oregon Select pharmacies will receive vaccines starting next week JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian Select Oregon pharmacies will begin offering COVID-19 vaccines to eligible Oregonians next week under a new distri- bution program. The federal government will ship about 1 million vaccine doses directly to 6,500 phar- macies across the country as it launches the first phase of the Federal Retail Pharmacy Pro- gram, White House officials announced Tuesday. Pharma- cies can begin vaccinations at no cost as soon as Feb. 11. The White House is work- ing with 21 national pharmacy partners and networks of in- dependent pharmacies repre- senting over 40,000 pharmacy Oregon’s share of doses will go to Costco, Health Mart Pharmacies and Albertsons Companies, which includes Albertsons and Safeway stores. Until now, most vaccines have been administered at hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and special vaccination sites such as the Oregon Convention Center. locations nationwide, although not all partner pharmacies will receive doses during the pro- gram’s first phase. Oregon’s share of doses will go to Costco, Health Mart Pharmacies and Albertsons Companies, which includes Albertsons and Safeway stores. Until now, most vaccines have been administered at hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and spe- cial vaccination sites such as the Oregon Convention Center. Jill McGinnis, a spokesman for Albertsons, said the com- pany anticipates approximately 11,500 doses will be shipped to 115 Albertsons and Safe- way pharmacies across Oregon next week, with roughly 100 doses going to each location. See Vaccines / A12