A11 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 2021 q DOW 32,825.95 -127.51 BRIEFING Home foreclosures rare amid COVID-19 Lender moratoriums are keeping home fore- closures at unheard-of low levels. In February, only 11,281 nationwide home foreclosure notices were recorded — down 77% from a year earlier, ac- cording to the latest re- port from Attom Data Solutions. “Extensions to the federal government’s foreclosure moratorium and CARES Act mortgage forbearance program con- tinue to keep foreclosure activity historically low,” Rick Sharga, executive vice president of RealtyTrac, an Attom Data Solutions company, said in the re- port. “These government actions, and the efforts of lenders and mortgage servicing companies, have helped millions of home- owners avoid foreclosure during a year-long global pandemic and a recession that resulted in 22 million lost jobs.” About 2.6 million U.S. homeowners are still re- ceiving payment forbear- ance from lenders be- cause of the pandemic. p NASDAQ 13,471.57 +11.86 bendbulletin.com/business q S&P 500 3,962.71 -6.23 p 30-YR T-BOND 2.39% +.02 q CRUDE OIL $64.80 -.59 p GOLD $1,730.60 +1.70 q SILVER $25.97 -.28 q EURO $1.1904 -.0022 More infusion for Bend pot platform Dutchie gets $200M, called the largest venture capital investment for a local software company ‘by far’ BY SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin Dutchie, an online cannabis sales platform created in Bend, has received yet another round of venture capital, this time it’s $200 million . The latest funding, which typically is used to prepare a company to be ac- quired, go public or undergo serious expansion, is led by Tiger Global, an in- vestment firm that focuses on internet companies. Other investors include San Francisco-based Dragoneer and Cali- fornia-based DFJ Growth. “These are all tier 1 investors,” said Ross Lipson, co-founder of Dutchie. “These are world-renowned investors that have continually invested in dis- ruptive tech leaders.” This recent round of funding brings the total investment to $253 million over the past four years, Lipson said. In- vestors for previous rounds were Snoop Dogg’s Casa Verde Capital, Thrive Cap- ital, Gron Ventures, former Starbucks Chairman and CEO Howard Schultz, the Brooklyn Nets basketball star Kevin Durant and tech companies like Shut- terstock and DoorDash. Securing this kind of venture capital is big news for Central Oregon, said Roger Lee, Economic Development for Central Oregon CEO. As the region’s business development nonprofit, it signifies to others that Central Oregon can support a growing firm with this kind of market valuation and investor capital, Lee said. See Dutchie / A12 Submitted photo Ross Lipson, left, and Zach Lipson are the co-founders of Dutchie, a Bend cannabis sales software firm. Opioid bankruptcy plan gets pushback Some state attorneys general and opioid addic- tion activists pushed back Tuesday against a settle- ment offer from OxyCon- tin maker Purdue Pharma, saying it didn’t include enough money and goes too far in protecting the company and family members who own it from future liability. A group of nearly half the state attorneys general said it was disappointed in the plan Purdue filed late Monday night in fed- eral bankruptcy court and some said they would seek changes. The $10 billion plan calls for turning the phar- maceutical giant into a new company, with its profits going toward ef- forts to combat the opi- oid crisis. Members of the family who own Purdue would contribute about $4.3 billion. A new arm of the transformed company would produce addiction treatment and overdose antidote drugs . Most of the money would go to trusts that would distribute it to state and local govern- ments. They would be allowed to use it only on initiatives that address the opioid crisis, which has contributed to more than 470,000 deaths in the U.S. since 2000. Retail sales drop 3% after soaring Americans spent less last month, partly due to bad weather in parts of the country that kept shoppers away from stores. Retail sales fell a sea- sonally adjusted 3% in February from the month before, the U.S. Commerce Department said Tuesday. The decline comes after retail sales soared in Janu- ary as people spent $600 stimulus checks sent at the end of last year. In fact, the Commerce Depart- ment revised its January number upwards to 7.6% from its previously re- ported rise of 5.3%. Retail sales are ex- pected to rise again in March as many Amer- icans get $1,400 direct payments, part of a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package that was signed into law last week. — Bulletin wire reports AP photos LEFT: San Bars owner Chris Marshall prepares an alcohol-free cocktail in Austin, Texas, earlier this month. RIGHT: A customer drinks a cocktail, also sans booze, at San Francisco’s zero-proof bar Ocean Beach Cafe. According to IWSR Drinks Market Analysis, global consumption of zero-proof beer, wine and spirits is growing two to three times faster than overall alcohol consumption. BUZZ WITHOUT THE BOOZE Alcohol-free bars are opening around the world as more people go sober operating officer for the Americas at here’s something missing from IWSR Drinks Market Analysis. a new wave of bars opening Last year, alcohol consumption in around the world: Alcohol. 10 key markets — including the U.S., Aimed at the growing Germany, Japan and Brazil — fell 5%, number of people exploring IWSR said. Consumption of low- and sobriety, the bars pour adult drinks like no-alcohol drinks rose 1% in that same craft cocktails without the booze. At 0% time period. Non-Alcohol Experience, a futuristic Alcohol still far outsells low- and bar in Tokyo, patrons can sip a mix of no-alcohol drinks. Drinkers in those nonalcoholic white wine, sake and cran- key markets consumed 9.7 billion 9-liter berries from a sugar-rimmed glass. On cases of alcohol in 2020, compared to 292 a recent evening at Sans Bar in Austin, million 9-liter cases of low- and no-al- Texas, customers gathered at outdoor cohol beverages. But Rand notes that tables, enjoying live music, bottles of al- global consumption of low- and no-alco- cohol-free IPA and drinks like the water- hol beer, wine and spirits is growing two melon mockarita, which is made with a to three times faster than overall alcohol tequila alternative. consumption. Sober bars aren’t a new phenomenon. An explosion of new products is also They first appeared in the 19th century fueling sales. There are drinks from as part of the temperance movement. But smaller makers like Chicago’s Ritual while previous iterations were geared to- These alcohol-free spirits are for sale at Spirited Away, New York’s first “booze-free bottle shop.” Zero Proof — which opened in 2019 ward nondrinkers or people in recovery, and makes no-alcohol whiskey, gin and “It’s just easier,” said Sondra Prineaux, a regular cus- tequila — and big companies like Anheuser-Busch, the newer venues welcome the sober as well as the curious. “A lot of people just want to drink less,” said Chris tomer at Sans Bar. “I don’t have to worry about leaving which introduced alcohol-free Budweiser Zero last year. Marshall, Sans Bar’s founder. my car here and getting an Uber home. I’ll wake up “I have the wonderful problem of too many great op- Marshall, who has been sober for 14 years, opened without a headache.” tions,” said Douglas Watters, who opened Spirited Away, the bar after serving as an addiction counselor. But he Abstinence challenges like Dry January — which a New York shop that sells nonalcoholic beer, wine and estimates 75% of his customers also drink alcohol out- began in 2013 — and a growing interest in health and spirits, in November. side of his bar. wellness are behind the trend, said Brandy Rand, chief See Booze / A12 BY DEE-ANN DURBIN • Associated Press T Unemployment Oregon rate still high: 6.1% BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian Oregon added 13,900 jobs last month, nearly twice as many as it gained in January, but the jobless rate remains stubbornly high. Unemployment was 6.1% in February, according to new data out Tuesday from the Oregon Employment Depart- ment. That’s on par with the national rate and down just a tenth of a percentage point from January. While the jobless rate has fallen for 10 straight months, the rate of decline has slowed to a crawl. Oregon remains down more than 150,000 jobs from February 2020. Oregon has re- gained a little less than half of the jobs it lost in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic. Last month’s job gains were almost entirely in the leisure and hospitality sector. Restau- rants and bars began reopen- ing to indoor service last month in many of Oregon’s largest counties after a three- month shutdown triggered by a steep rise in coronavirus in- fections and deaths. Oregon relaxed those rules in February as the outbreak faded. The reopenings in Oregon’s largest county didn’t get under- way until midway through the month, though, and their re- bound may have been hindered somewhat by a snow and ice storm that hit the Portland area around Valentine’s Day. See Jobless / A12 Wyden: Make benefits created during COVID-19 permanent BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden wants to see some of the pro- grams created to help jobless Americans during the pan- demic made permanent, and wants to see national stan- dards put in place that set a minimum threshold for un- employment benefits and a nationwide technology plat- form to pay them out. “Senators are going to have a problem going back to yes- teryear,” the Oregon Demo- crat said in a call with report- ers Friday. In March 2020, Congress extended the duration of jobless benefits that usu- ally expire after as few as 26 weeks. It also made millions of self-employed workers el- igible for benefits through a new program, Pandemic Un- employment Assistance. See Wyden / A12