C8 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2021 Restaurants “Once we get to the point of herd immunity, the indus- try will look different,” said Jason Brandt, Oregon Restau- rant and Lodging Associ- ation director. “My hope is that it looks like it did before (the pandemic). For sure, the model will be more diversified. “Restaurant owners have to meet customers where they’re comfortable.” The trade association has been urging the state to con- sider easing dining-in restric- tions, Brandt said. Oregon’s foodservice industry accounts for less than 1% of all work- place outbreaks and 4.7% of all Oregon outbreaks, Brandt said. The leisure and hospital- ity industry lost 25,500 jobs in December statewide, and De- schutes County nearly 30% of those jobs in December, com- pared to 2019, according to state jobless data. “Businesses are simply try- ing to combine limited sales from takeout and delivery with Paycheck Protection Pro- gram dollars with the hope that indoor dining will be- come available,” Brandt said. “The industry continues to be challenged by disproportion- ate sacrifices in terms of help- ing stop the virus spread.” At El Sancho Taco Shop, Joel Cordez, said he’ll con- tinue the option for online or- dering, except during summer tourist season. The restaurant learned last summer that add- ing online to dining-in and takeout was too many orders and people had to wait for their food. Cordez said he didn’t want the quality of the food to suffer. “We’ve done fine this year, but we’ve been lucky,” Cordez said. “We had a strong take- out business, but that’s not what we specialize in. We like our atmosphere where people can hang out, and that’s what our business is about: atmo- sphere and food.” Not only has Bethlyn’s Global Fusion opened up a so-called ghost kitchen and called it Bombay Bend, but they’ve also instituted online ordering, said co-owner Beth- lyn Rider. The loss of revenue from the governor’s restrictions on dining-in prompted the restaurant to look at its ex- penses and ways to grow the business. After brainstorming and reaching out via social media to Bend foodies, Rider said, she and her partner opted for this single cuisine that is not on their normal menu. “It’s really helped us a lot,” Rider said. “We launched it Jan. 5 and it’s been really good. Better than we thought. It’s bringing in extra revenue.” The most difficult task, Rider said, was building a website for the new cuisine and for the online ordering. “Right now, we’re living in a virtual world,” she said. “The tech part is the hardest.” Going forward some com- bination of online, ghost kitchen and theme meals will Preston signed chips. Continued from C1 Regional conflicts The largest chip manufac- turer in the world is Taiwan Semiconductor Manufac- turing Company, Limited (TSMC) with most of its pro- duction in Taiwan and several factories in China. If you’ve been following the latest news (outside of COVID-19 and US politics), China’s threats to invade Taiwan have escalated over the last few weeks due to its perception that Taiwan may proclaim independence, even though it’s already a rec- ognized country in its own right. The United States re- sponded to the threats by increasing fleet operations around the island of Taiwan, moving a U.S. carrier battle group into the disputed South China Sea. This potential conflict threatens the worldwide sup- ply of chips and could de- stroy major sectors of the US economy. With Intel’s recent struggles, the US is vulnerable to any disruption to our “ball bearing” supply of chips. Continued from C1 Mobile phones feel the bite Now cell phone companies may be cutting back produc- tion due to critical chip short- ages. Samsung anticipates production disruption as the demand for memory chips needed for mobile phones, laptops and tablets exceeds the current chip foundries’ ca- pacities. As the shortage continues, some companies are add- ing their own chip fabrica- tion foundries. Apple has felt the impact, especially with chips that manage power in their iPhones. Apple is mak- ing moves to secure its chip demands. It will start selling Mac Pros in 2021 using their own chips manufactured in Taiwan and announced last December that it’s replacing Qualcomm chips in its iP- hones with new Apple-de- Computer chips are a strategic resource Similar to Iran’s threat to the flow of oil from the Middle East through the Persian Gulf, China’s bully- ing threatens chip deliveries from China, South Korea, Ja- pan and Taiwan. The United States needs to secure chip production on our soil and provide incentives and tax breaks to build more North- ern American chip found- ries, including in Canada and Mexico. These should be considered National Strate- gic supplies, just like natural gas, freshwater, oil and energy production. First step: buy only U.S.-made chips The government can take the first step, to insist all chips and other digital discrete components in any federally be part of the repertoire. They created an Inauguration Day dinner, a Valentine’s Day din- ner and family-style meals. They’ve all been popular, Rider said, because they give value to the customer. With 15 years of business in their belt, the owners of Sparrow Bakery are making a plea to customers to buy twice as much takeout to help struggling restaurants, said Whitney Keatman, one of the owners of the bakery. They are calling the campaign “Twice More,” to tap into a program established in 2007 during the economic downturn, called “Make Local Habit.” “We’re prevailing upon our customers to help save us,” Keatman said. “We’re en- couraging the public to take out more. Everyone is barely hanging in there. If we can get 10,000 or 20,000 people in Bend to buy twice as much, we’ll have the ability to turn that into dollar signs.” e e SOLUTION TO TODAY’S SUDOKU SOLUTION TO TODAY’S JUMBLE NYT CROSSWORD SOLUTION Reporter: 541-633-2117, sroig@bendbulletin.com purchased device be com- pletely manufactured, assem- bled and tested in the U.S. within five years. Secondly, create a “chip in- frastructure” funding initia- tive to create public/private chip manufacturing facilities and U.S.-only subcontracting. Third, to fund Canadian and Mexican chip fabrication facilities near our borders and re-initiate free-trade agree- ments. Bottom-line: achieve chip foundry independence With these initiatives, the threat to the free-flow of com- puter chips by hostile nations will be neutralized. Our eco- nomic security and the secu- rity of our armed forces de- pends on it. e e Solve these puzzles on C4 Preston Callicott is the CEO of Five Talent Software and is a self-described tech humanist who wants to embed the best of human traits in AI systems and robotics … before they rule the world. His wife, Chelsea, and twins remind him how great life is and that work isn’t everything. LAT CROSSWORD SOLUTION