A7 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 2021 q DOW 30,924.14 -345.95 q bendbulletin.com/business q NASDAQ 12,723.47 -274.28 S&P 500 3,768.47 -51.25 p 30-YR T-BOND 2.31% +.06 p q CRUDE OIL $63.83 +2.55 GOLD $1,700.20 -15.10 q SILVER $25.43 -.93 q EURO $1.1966 -.0100 BRIEFING COVID-19 | Oregon Worker Relief Fund US jobless claims tick up to 745,000 $10M set for immigrant-owned businesses The number of Amer- icans applying for un- employment benefits edged higher last week to 745,000, a sign that many employers continue to cut jobs despite a drop in confirmed viral infections and evidence that the overall economy is im- proving. Thursday’s report from the Labor Depart- ment showed that job- less claims rose by 9,000 from the previous week. Though the pace of lay- offs has eased since the year began, they remain high by historical stan- dards. Before the virus flattened the U.S. econ- omy a year ago, applica- tions for unemployment aid had never topped 700,000 in any week, even during the Great Re- cession. All told, 4.3 million Americans are receiv- ing traditional state un- employment benefits. Counting supplemental federal unemployment programs that were es- tablished to soften the economic damage from the virus, an estimated 18 million people are col- lecting some form of job- less aid. Copyright 2021 The As- sociated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or re- distributed without per- mission. JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian A state fund set up last year to help workers from immigrant communities will distribute $10 million to immi- grant-owned small businesses across Oregon. Organizers of the Oregon Worker Relief Fund announced Thursday that they had established a new program, the Oregon Small Enterprise Fund, to support small-business owners who have been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic but have been unable to se- cure aid through federal programs. The Oregon Legislature’s Emergency Board allocated $46 million in January to set up the fund and provide support to the Oregon Worker Relief Fund. Qualifying small-business owners can receive grants between $7,000 and $25,000 through the new program. Qualifying small-business owners can receive grants between $7,000 and $25,000 through the new program. To be eligible, businesses must have experienced a decline in revenue due to the pandemic, be actively operating in Oregon and be at least partially owned by someone who uses an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number or equivalent to file their taxes. The Inter- nal Revenue Service issues those num- bers to people who don’t have Social Se- curity numbers. Businesses that received funds from the federal government’s Paycheck Pro- tection Program will not be eligible for the state-backed grants. OREGON | WILDFIRE PRICE-GOUGING RAISING RADICCHIO Photos: Shawn Linehan/Culinary Breeding Network/capitalpress.com Radicchio is the focus of a new effort to spark interest in the vegetable from farmers, chefs and consumers. Pacific Northwest Radicchio Association hopes to increase vegetable’s popularity BY MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Siri Erickson-Brown first fell in love with ra- dicchio while she and her husband were work- ing on farms in Europe in the early 2000s. They ate a lot of the red winter vegetable while in Italy, where it is commonly grown. Erickson-Brown was intrigued. “What is this weird vegetable that every- body says is so hard to grow?” she recalled wondering. Radicchio is a leafy chicory, often used to add color to salads. And, by all accounts, radicchio is an acquired taste. It’s bitter, which means customers need some education and recipe examples from chefs, said Laura Lewis, who runs Washington State University’s Food Systems Program. “You may not necessarily want to have a straight-up radicchio salad,” Lewis said. “But there are some beautiful radicchio salads that you mix with things like citrus.” Erickson-Brown compares radicchio to a hoppy beer, dark chocolate or coffee — the taste is hated by kids but loved by adults. See Radicchio / A8 — Bulletin wire reports Four Oregon hotels will pay $105,600 in penalties and re- imburse at least 100 custom- ers to settle allegations of price gouging during September’s wildfires. The fires burned more than 1 million acres and forced thousands of Oregonians from their homes, many of whom fled to hotels that had been nearly empty because of the pandemic. Some people re- ported sharply higher hotel prices, though, and Gov. Kate Brown issued a directive to crack down on price gouging. Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum said Thursday that four hotels have agreed to set- tle price-gouging allegations by paying financial penalties: • Capital Inn & Suites (Sa- lem): The Department of Jus- tice says this hotel typically charged $60 to $80 a night for rooms but was charging as much as $146 during the wild- fires. Capital Inn has already re- funded $1,342 to customers during the wildfire and has agreed to reimburse anyone else who paid more than $92 a night during the wildfires. The hotel will also pay a $38,000 penalty to the state. • Le Chateau Inn (Florence): The hotel typically charged $89 to $125 nightly, according to the department, but raised rates more than 15% for at least 18 rooms during the wildfires. See Hotels / A8 US mortgage rates steady to higher U.S. long-term mort- gage rates were steady to higher this week, as the benchmark 30-year loan breached the 3% mark for the first time since July 2020. Rates remain near historic lows as the economy strains toward recovery in the pandem- ic’s wake. Mortgage buyer Fred- die Mac reported Thurs- day that the average rate on the 30-year fixed-rate home loan rose to 3.02% from 2.97% last week. By contrast, the benchmark rate stood at 3.29% a year ago. While economists ex- pect modest increases in home-loan rates this year, they likely will remain low while the Federal Reserve keeps interest rates near zero until the economy recovers. 4 hotels will pay $105,600 to settle claims MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian US productivity down 4.2%s U.S. productivity fell at an annual rate of 4.2% in the fourth quarter, the largest quarterly decline in nearly four decades. The revised figure re- leased Thursday by the Labor Department was slightly smaller than the 4.7% decline estimated a month ago. But it was still the biggest drop since the second quarter of 1981, when productivity fell at a rate of 5.1%. Labor costs rose at a 6% rate in the fourth quarter, slightly lower than the 6.8% first esti- mated. Productivity is the amount of output per hour of work. The revi- sions reflected the fact that the government made changes to its es- timate of gross domestic product, the country’s total output of goods and services, to show an increase of 4.1% at an annual rate in the fourth quarter, slightly higher than its initial estimate of 4% growth. See Immigrants / A8 Company behind Jordan Cove downgrades project VICKIE ALDOUS Mail Tribune (Medford) The Canadian company pro- posing a natural gas pipeline and export facility in Southern Oregon has downgraded the fi- nancial value of the project af- ter announcing it can’t predict when it might be built. Pembina reported a $1.6 bil- lion downgrade for the South- ern Oregon project, known as Jordan Cove, plus two other energy projects. “We believe the time for these projects may come; how- ever, we can sadly no longer predict with certainty when that time will be and hence were compelled to reflect their impairments in our 2020 fi- nancial statements through a non-cash charge,” Pembina said recently in a press release OPB file photo A view of Coos Bay from a spot where the Jordan Cove LNG terminal would be be excavated, if approved by regulators. about its fourth quarter and 2020 financial results. The company reported a $1.2 billion loss for the quar- ter and a $316 million loss for 2020. Pembina said it made the ac- counting change about Jordan Cove’s value in light of “current regulatory and political uncer- tainty.” The company wants to build a 229-mile underground pipe- line through Klamath, Jackson, Douglas and Coos counties to a proposed export terminal near Coos Bay. Canadian and American natural gas would ship overseas to Asian markets. Pembina has faced a series of regulatory setbacks, including the Oregon Department of En- vironmental Quality’s denial of a Clean Water Act permit for the project. Allie Rosenbluth of Rogue Climate said there is no viable path forward for the project, and Pembina should throw in the towel on a proposal that has faced years of opposition. She said opponents were excited to see Pembina’s an- nouncement that the project’s future is uncertain. “It’s the result of so many wins we’ve seen in the last year,” Rosenbluth said of regu- latory setbacks for the project. “The community will continue to challenge it until it is truly canceled.” Opponents say the proj- ect would damage rivers and streams, cause pollution, con- tribute to climate change by promoting the burning of fossil fuels, and intrude on the rights of landowners along the pro- posed pipeline route. Pembina has argued the $10 billion project would pump money into Oregon’s economy, and says that shipping more natural gas to Asia would re- duce reliance on coal, which produces more greenhouse gas emissions than natural gas. The company says it has se- cured agreements to use land from most property owners along the majority of the route.