A12 The BulleTin • Thursday, FeBruary 4, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY FRIDAY TONIGHT HIGH 47° LOW 32° Cloudy and milder ALMANAC SUNDAY 48° 30° 46° 36° Partly sunny with a passing shower Mostly cloudy MONDAY 44° 28° A morning shower; otherwise, mostly sunny TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 41° 43° 67° in 1976 32° 24° -17° in 1950 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Record 0.53" in 1925 Month to date (normal) Trace (0.12") Year to date (normal) 0.66" (1.65") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.16" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Fri. Sun 7:19am/5:20pm 7:18am/5:21pm Moon 12:33am/11:08am 1:48am/11:40am Mercury 7:24am/6:07pm 7:17am/5:59pm Venus 6:49am/4:12pm 6:50am/4:15pm Mars 10:39am/1:07am 10:36am/1:06am Jupiter 7:08am/4:49pm 7:05am/4:46pm Saturn 6:53am/4:22pm 6:49am/4:19pm Uranus 10:30am/12:23am 10:26am/12:19am Last New First Full Feb 4 Feb 11 Feb 19 Feb 27 Tonight's sky: Last quarter moon (9:37 a.m.). Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 1 1 1 0 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Cloudy today with a passing shower in the afternoon. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Mostly cloudy today and tonight. Snow Friday afternoon. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Mostly cloudy today into tonight with light snow showers. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Mostly cloudy today, then fair and chilly tonight. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Mostly cloudy today into tonight, then a few snow showers are likely Friday. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Mostly cloudy today into tonight. Snow showers late Friday. SKI REPORT 41° 21° Partly sunny More clouds than sun EAST: A mix of clouds and sun Thursday, then mostly cloudy at night with a few rain and snow showers. Astoria 48/45 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s Base 0-44 0-57 30-52 80-88 85-129 28-53 0-97 42-80 28-42 95-135 0-120 40-43 86-103 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 80/53/0.00 Akron 29/26/0.00 Albany 30/23/0.02 Albuquerque 62/41/0.00 Anchorage 16/8/0.04 Atlanta 51/29/0.00 Atlantic City 36/31/0.13 Austin 77/34/0.00 Baltimore 41/30/Tr Billings 40/33/0.03 Birmingham 53/26/0.00 Bismarck 32/26/0.02 Boise 40/32/0.13 Boston 34/28/Tr Bridgeport, CT 36/29/Tr Buffalo 34/22/0.01 Burlington, VT 31/24/0.09 Caribou, ME 33/28/0.26 Charleston, SC 54/31/0.00 Charlotte 52/27/0.00 Chattanooga 49/30/0.00 Cheyenne 55/27/0.00 Chicago 36/17/0.00 Cincinnati 36/20/0.00 Cleveland 28/26/0.00 Colorado Springs 64/33/0.00 Columbia, MO 54/26/0.00 Columbia, SC 52/28/0.00 Columbus, GA 55/30/0.00 Columbus, OH 32/18/0.00 Concord, NH 34/28/0.00 Corpus Christi 76/50/0.00 Dallas 72/39/0.00 Dayton 31/17/0.00 Denver 67/33/0.01 Des Moines 40/18/0.00 Detroit 39/17/0.00 Duluth 29/12/Tr El Paso 77/46/0.00 Fairbanks -7/-8/0.04 Fargo 28/21/0.00 Flagstaff 49/28/0.00 Grand Rapids 36/16/0.00 Green Bay 30/6/0.00 Greensboro 49/28/Tr Harrisburg 40/29/Tr Hartford, CT 36/28/Tr Helena 41/27/0.05 Honolulu 76/69/1.18 Houston 70/41/0.00 Huntsville 49/24/0.00 Indianapolis 36/19/0.00 Jackson, MS 62/26/0.00 Jacksonville 55/30/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 65/35/c 36/28/pc 32/17/s 51/28/pc 15/6/s 54/47/c 39/31/s 82/47/pc 44/30/s 40/27/c 59/39/c 15/6/pc 44/32/c 38/25/s 39/27/s 35/29/pc 32/19/pc 29/14/c 57/46/pc 52/42/c 51/39/c 34/21/pc 36/11/r 41/23/r 38/26/pc 39/21/sf 44/24/r 55/45/c 60/52/pc 38/25/c 37/13/s 81/57/s 65/39/c 38/22/r 40/23/pc 34/12/sn 35/21/c 28/0/sn 71/39/c -16/-28/sn 14/2/sn 41/16/pc 36/20/sn 35/9/i 50/39/pc 42/28/pc 37/16/s 39/30/c 75/61/pc 78/50/c 54/35/c 38/19/r 66/39/c 63/45/pc Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 48/41/pc 66/50/s 79/62/s 71/55/c 91/71/s 44/17/s 69/59/sh 36/30/c 66/49/c 55/35/s 81/63/s 84/65/pc 68/58/sh 32/9/sn 78/69/pc 48/37/r 40/38/r 53/42/c 78/63/t 73/63/s 57/46/pc 57/45/t 72/62/t 75/67/c 57/50/r 49/43/sh 58/46/sh 87/77/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 62/40/s 32/15/sn 36/19/sn 51/29/s 17/7/pc 52/32/c 46/33/r 63/39/pc 49/27/r 36/5/sn 51/30/c 11/-10/c 49/35/sh 42/30/c 42/28/r 38/19/sn 36/20/sn 31/27/c 60/41/sh 56/29/r 51/30/c 37/20/c 16/4/pc 32/22/c 28/14/sn 41/22/pc 41/21/s 57/33/r 56/36/r 28/18/pc 36/21/c 63/53/c 59/39/s 28/17/pc 42/23/pc 23/4/pc 24/12/sf 7/-12/c 65/40/s -10/-24/s 6/-9/pc 47/20/s 22/15/sf 13/0/pc 52/28/r 45/24/c 38/22/c 39/17/sn 75/65/pc 60/45/pc 50/29/c 30/15/pc 52/34/c 67/47/sh City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 28/14/0.14 59/28/0.00 36/13/0.00 72/56/0.00 39/22/0.00 46/12/0.00 52/25/0.00 67/50/0.00 43/28/0.00 29/-1/0.00 52/25/0.00 67/50/0.00 35/18/0.00 34/16/0.00 46/27/Tr 62/40/0.00 37/29/0.01 37/29/0.02 44/35/Tr 64/33/0.00 44/23/0.00 59/39/0.00 85/55/0.00 34/17/0.00 37/30/0.01 82/64/0.00 33/25/Tr 37/30/0.00 36/30/Tr 50/31/0.00 59/27/0.00 46/33/Tr 49/32/Tr 33/24/0.12 58/36/0.00 46/24/0.00 43/32/0.16 76/42/0.00 62/55/0.00 59/43/0.00 59/41/0.00 62/34/0.00 57/31/0.00 50/40/0.12 42/22/0.00 39/28/0.00 57/29/0.00 61/44/0.00 81/55/0.00 63/35/0.00 43/32/Tr 59/32/0.00 50/32/Tr 81/59/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 34/21/sn 41/26/r 34/19/sn 59/40/s 43/24/r 32/19/sn 60/32/sh 68/49/s 44/26/r 34/7/i 57/31/sh 72/60/s 37/11/i 30/5/sn 54/32/sh 72/55/pc 40/32/s 40/28/s 49/39/s 52/31/pc 31/16/sn 68/45/pc 73/50/s 37/16/r 40/29/pc 72/46/pc 38/33/pc 39/18/pc 38/24/s 52/41/pc 36/24/pc 43/26/s 51/38/pc 37/26/pc 59/33/s 45/25/r 38/28/pc 80/49/s 65/48/s 58/43/s 59/38/s 48/21/pc 60/47/pc 47/45/r 22/10/sn 38/33/c 47/24/r 66/52/s 71/41/pc 57/31/c 46/37/s 46/27/pc 49/36/c 73/48/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 29/21/c 43/23/s 21/13/sf 63/43/s 35/25/c 34/14/pc 54/34/s 71/50/s 39/27/c 13/-2/pc 51/35/pc 79/68/s 17/4/c 12/-3/pc 48/32/pc 56/49/r 42/30/r 43/26/r 54/36/r 55/35/s 29/12/pc 77/58/s 79/53/s 24/10/pc 44/27/r 70/46/s 36/20/sf 39/27/pc 43/28/r 53/31/r 34/5/sn 55/28/s 54/29/r 37/18/sn 62/36/s 41/22/s 39/32/sn 63/44/pc 66/48/s 60/45/s 65/41/s 47/24/s 63/43/sh 52/44/r 19/4/c 46/31/pc 47/27/s 73/62/s 69/41/s 56/35/s 52/31/r 53/29/s 57/34/pc 74/49/s 91/64/0.00 77/40/0.00 36/27/0.37 25/12/0.32 84/62/0.00 68/60/0.00 77/55/0.00 46/36/0.00 16/8/0.00 34/25/0.15 55/52/0.38 86/75/0.00 61/45/0.00 90/54/0.00 89/70/0.15 19/12/0.08 34/11/0.13 57/35/0.00 86/77/0.00 25/18/0.32 73/63/0.00 77/61/0.00 79/57/0.02 51/35/0.00 32/21/0.00 45/36/0.14 47/34/0.13 40/34/0.48 92/68/s 77/49/s 31/17/s 31/10/sn 84/58/s 70/63/pc 69/52/t 51/32/pc 16/4/s 31/15/s 51/44/pc 91/80/pc 62/48/pc 87/59/s 88/68/t 22/16/sf 32/23/s 55/44/s 87/76/c 22/11/sf 80/72/pc 75/61/s 68/54/sh 57/36/s 36/29/pc 44/42/r 54/36/pc 39/20/sn 73/58/pc 79/49/s 34/20/sn 17/6/c 85/60/s 77/69/pc 67/50/pc 51/39/s 19/6/s 34/16/sn 51/45/sh 85/74/t 65/52/pc 83/59/s 77/66/t 29/22/sn 44/36/c 55/44/r 87/77/sh 22/14/sf 81/72/pc 81/57/s 69/53/pc 51/42/s 35/15/sf 46/39/c 47/40/c 30/18/s INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 88° at El Centro, CA National low: -8° at Land O' Lakes, WI Precipitation: 1.25" at Sexton Summit, OR T-storms Showers of rain and snow; snow at night NATIONAL Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 47/33/0.74 48/45/c 49/42/r La Grande 39/29/0.04 41/38/c 44/38/sn Portland 48/39/0.50 47/43/c 51/44/r Baker City 39/30/Tr 41/31/c 46/33/sn La Pine 36/27/0.17 43/25/c 41/30/sh Prineville 41/32/0.00 49/30/c 41/37/pc Brookings 49/40/0.34 55/40/s 55/42/pc Medford 50/36/0.34 47/29/c 49/38/pc Redmond 43/33/Tr 47/28/c 49/34/pc Newport 48/36/0.34 48/42/c 49/44/r Roseburg 49/39/1.21 50/35/c 48/42/r Burns 40/22/0.03 39/27/c 42/33/pc Eugene 49/34/0.77 50/39/c 49/44/r North Bend 51/40/0.33 52/39/c 52/45/r Salem 49/36/0.62 48/41/c 50/43/r Klamath Falls 36/29/0.03 40/19/c 46/27/pc Ontario 45/28/Tr 46/33/c 51/36/pc Sisters 40/30/0.04 48/33/c 46/38/sf Lakeview 35/17/0.10 33/13/c 41/22/pc Pendleton 46/30/0.01 48/44/c 52/45/pc The Dalles 50/34/0.00 49/43/c 54/42/pc Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday -10s Periods of clouds and sunshine 40° 20° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 52/46 Rufus Hermiston 45/43 52/47 48/44 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 50/43 47/42 47/43 39/37 Wasco 39/36 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Partly Tillamook 38/34 46/41 48/44 Sandy 49/43 McMinnville 48/43 sunny Thursday, then Joseph Heppner La Grande 44/43 Maupin Government 49/44 fair and chilly at night. 41/38 36/34 Camp 47/39 Condon 47/42 Union Lincoln City Mostly cloudy Friday; 43/35 35/35 41/37 Salem 48/46 Spray afternoon rain and Granite Warm Springs 48/41 Madras 47/35 Albany 37/36 snow showers. Newport Baker City 50/35 50/35 Mitchell 48/42 48/40 41/31 WEST: Partly to mostly Camp Sherman 44/32 Redmond Corvallis John Unity cloudy Thursday, then Yachats 45/34 47/28 50/39 Day Prineville 41/38 cloudy Thursday night 47/43 Ontario Sisters 49/30 Paulina 41/33 46/33 and Friday with a few Florence Eugene 48/33 Bend Brothers 40/28 Vale periods of rain. 49/41 50/39 47/32 40/27 Sunriver 47/35 Nyssa 46/30 Hampton Cottage La Pine 48/35 Juntura Oakridge Grove 43/25 41/27 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 41/28 47/31 51/37 Fort Rock 52/39 39/27 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 44/27 39/30 High: 51° 43/26 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at North Bend Beaver Frenchglen Silver 52/40 50/35 44/28 37/28 Low: 17° Marsh Lake 40/27 Port Orford 40/19 44/27 at Lakeview Grants Burns Junction Paisley 52/42 Pass 43/32 Chiloquin 42/23 49/29 Rome Medford 44/23 Gold Beach 47/29 44/33 54/42 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 39/26 48/31 40/19 35/22 55/40 33/13 Seaside 47/45 Cannon Beach 47/45 WEDNESDAY 40° 18° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 Hoodoo Ski Area 0 Mt. Ashland 0 Mt. Bachelor 4 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 6 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Squaw Valley, CA 16 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Sun Valley, ID 3 TUESDAY OREGON WEATHER Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SATURDAY Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com 47/45/1.19 66/46/0.00 74/63/0.00 70/46/0.00 93/75/0.00 44/14/0.00 72/69/0.00 48/33/0.35 72/43/0.00 48/32/0.21 77/69/0.26 86/56/0.00 81/58/0.00 9/3/0.21 77/54/0.00 47/45/0.32 37/35/0.68 55/46/0.46 77/64/0.09 75/62/0.00 59/50/0.00 67/51/0.00 69/55/0.08 75/66/0.00 61/56/0.42 50/46/0.09 54/45/0.01 90/75/0.00 47/38/c 66/49/pc 75/62/sh 69/52/r 92/74/s 53/19/pc 67/58/pc 34/26/c 67/48/t 44/39/pc 79/66/s 85/57/pc 72/56/pc 13/-11/sn 83/74/pc 42/37/sh 42/37/r 54/42/c 80/64/pc 73/63/s 57/45/pc 56/45/r 72/61/t 76/67/c 56/50/r 50/40/pc 60/45/pc 87/76/c Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw OREGON Law enforcement could boost hemp inspections BY MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Law enforcement agencies could assist Oregon farm reg- ulators with inspections of hemp crops under a bill that’s intended to thwart illegal mari- juana operations. Sheriffs from Jackson and Josephine counties in Southern Oregon are urging lawmakers to pass House Bill 2296, which would allow their agencies to cooperate with the Oregon Department of Agriculture on hemp inspections. “Our illegal marijuana en- forcement team has found that the ODA licensing has cre- ated a shield for those that are growing marijuana,” said Sher- iff Nathan Sickler of Jackson County during a recent legisla- tive hearing. Diesel Continued from A11 Ruby, a Salem native, was hired in August after teach- ing automotive and agricul- tural mechanics for five years at Montana State Universi- ty-Northern. “My job was to basically find everything to make a program, and set it up in here,” he said. “It’s designed around my expe- rience with this industry, and what I’ve taught in the past.” The program is divided into six courses, covering ev- ery system students would see Vaccines Continued from A11 But she said the number of vaccine doses that the corpora- tion receives could change. Oregonians currently eligi- ble to receive vaccines under state guidelines will be able to sign up for appointments online through the company once it has the vaccines, McGinnis said. Hemp contains less than 0.3% of the psychoactive com- pound THC, but it’s indistin- guishable in appearance from mind-altering marijuana, a re- lated cannabis plant. Industrial hemp is regulated by the state agriculture de- partment while marijuana is overseen by the state’s Liquor Control Commission for recre- ational purposes and the state’s Health Authority for medical uses. Marijuana was legalized in Oregon but remains illegal un- der federal law, while hemp can be lawfully produced na- tionally. Rep. Lily Morgan, R-Grants Pass, the bill’s sponsor, said there’s too little verification that cannabis plants grown un- der industrial hemp licenses Capital Press file A field of hemp grows in Oregon, where lawmakers are considering a bill to allow law enforcement officers to assist farm regulators with in- specting the crop. are not actually black market marijuana. “The result of this lack of en- forcement has been mass mi- gration of licensed cannabis producers to the hemp system,” Morgan said, adding that mar- ijuana growers with hemp li- censes can harvest and ship their crops with little accountability. Inspectors from the agricul- ture department are “drinking from a fire hose,” unable to keep up with the workload of overseeing hemp operations, said Sheriff Dave Daniel of Jo- sephine County. Local deputies can easily check whether a cannabis crop is hemp or marijuana with a one-hour test, but often can- not obtain probable cause for search warrants to analyze sus- pect crops, he said. “What was once a clandes- tine industry is now being conducted in plain sight,” Dan- iel said. “The hemp industry overseen by ODA is being ma- nipulated and is free from law enforcement intervention even when we believe hemp is actu- ally marijuana.” Half of the eight homi- cides committed in Josephine County in 2020 were directly related to black market mari- juana cultivation, Daniel said. Of the 41 illegal marijuana op- erations raided by law enforce- ment in the county last year, three were operating under the guise of hemp farms. Morgan acknowledged the proposal has raised legal ques- tions and she has agreed to participate in a work group to refine HB 2296. However, she said that Southern Oregon can’t wait years for ODA regu- lators to ramp up enforcement on their own. “We can’t allow that in our area for community safety,” she said. “We need something now.” dents to earn factory certifica- tions from Daimler and John Deere. The first group of nine stu- dents will graduate in spring 2022. Ruby said the college is now accepting applications for a second group of 24 students. Chemeketa anticipates hiring additional full-time staff for the program. For Wilske, his dream job would be to travel and fix equipment for farms and com- panies around the country. “I just want to get started as quickly as I can, and lead me wherever it leads me,” he said. from COVID-19. Jeff Zients, the White House’s COVID-19 response coordinator, told reporters Tuesday that the federal gov- ernment viewed the first few weeks of the retail pharmacy program as a trial run. He said it could be scaled up over time, with doses eventually be- ing shipped to roughly 40,000 pharmacies nationwide. on a truck, tractor or com- bine, Ruby said — including engines, hydraulics, electrical wiring, clutches, brakes, wheels and onboard computers. “This program is heavy on the hands-on side,” Ruby said. “(Employers) wanted them to be able to start wrenching, and doing things that a mechanic would see on a normal day.” Skilled diesel technicians are in high demand, according to figures from the Oregon Em- ployment Department, with 127 total annual job openings. The average annual salary is $47,784, with wages typically “The largest hurdle in making this project a reality was finding a suitable location and building. But we have a beautiful location now that is situated right next to our Brooks Center. I couldn’t be more excited for the college, the community and our students.” starting at $16 to $18 per hour. Chemeketa has leased and retrofitted a 10,000-square- foot building for the program at the south end of the Brooks campus. Marion County also contributed $100,000 toward equipment and infrastructure, and the governor’s Regional Solutions team committed $200,000. “The largest hurdle in mak- ing this project a reality was finding a suitable location and building,” said Executive Dean Holly Nelson. “But we have a beautiful location now that is situated right next to our Brooks Center. I couldn’t be more excited for the college, the community and our stu- dents.” Daimler Trucks donated two trucks to the program, along with a fire truck and ambulance from Chemeketa’s Emergency Medical Services Program, for students to learn about different diesel systems. While the operating systems of diesel rigs are similar, Ruby said more advanced courses will focus on specific industry standards and even allow stu- Health care workers, peo- ple living in nursing homes and other congregate care set- tings, childcare providers and teachers are currently eligible to receive vaccines in Oregon. Elderly Oregonians will begin to become eligible to receive vaccines next week, with those over 80 eligible as of Monday, according to guidance from the Oregon Health Authority. Albertsons and Safeway posted information on vaccine availability and signups on- line at www.albertsons.com/ COVID-19 and www.safeway. com/COVID-19. Appoint- ment slots are not yet available because the company doesn’t have its vaccine allocation yet. “Demand is high, and ap- pointments are often claimed very quickly, and we ask the public to remain patient,” Mc- Ginnis said. “As dose alloca- tions increase, so too will the opportunity to secure an ap- pointment. The company is kindly asking the public to please check the website first for the most up-to-date infor- mation, before calling your lo- cal store or pharmacy.” Costco and Health Mart Pharmacies did not immedi- ately respond to a request for comment on their plans. There are 13 Costco stores across Oregon. Health Mart’s two lo- cations are in Eugene and Cre- swell. The White House said it chose pharmacies to receive the initial doses based on sev- eral factors, including their ability to reach populations most at risk for severe illness — Holly Nelson, Chemeketa Community College executive dean