A11 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 2021 BRIEFING IRS delays tax filing due date Americans will be get- ting extra time to prepare their taxes. The Internal Revenue Service says it’s delaying the traditional tax filing deadline from April 15 until May 17. The IRS announced the decision Wednesday and said it would provide further guidance in the coming days. The move provides more breathing room for taxpayers and the IRS alike to cope with changes brought on by the pandemic. The decision post- pones when individual taxpayers must file their return and when their payment is due. The IRS said taxpayers who owe money would not face any further penalties or interest if they pay by May 17. The new deadline also applies to individuals who pay self-employment tax. bendbulletin.com/business Oregon says it will pay expanded jobless benefits ‘without delay’ BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian The Oregon Employment Department said Wednesday that most people receiving ex- panded benefits through the new coronavirus relief pack- age won’t experience any de- lay in payments as those pro- grams kick in. Payments will continue “without delay for most peo- ple,” said David Gerstenfeld, the department’s acting direc- tor. That includes most con- tract workers receiving ben- efits through the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program and extended ben- efits through the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation program. However, Gerstenfeld warned that some people who had used up all their benefits under those programs be- fore Congress extended them last week may have payments interrupted while the em- ployment department adapts its computers to the federal changes. “It will take some additional time there,” Gerstenfeld said Wednesday on his weekly me- dia call. Oregon has paid $8.1 bil- lion in jobless benefits since the coronavirus pandemic be- gan a year ago, though many unemployed people have had to wait weeks or months for their money. See Jobless / A12 PROGRESS SET IN MOTION Pacific Power tries lower-rate option Pacific Power is launch- ing a pilot program to the first 25,000 customers to lower their bills by shift- ing use to off-peak times for residential, commer- cial and irrigation cus- tomers in Oregon. Serving Bend, Red- mond, Madras and Prineville, Pacific Power’s Time of Use plan gives customers control over the price for energy de- pending on the time of use. Peak times of power use, according to the company, are from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. The program allows the power company to manage the power grid more efficiently and make better use of low- cost renewable power. Customers have to sign up for the program and can access online us- age tracking tools at pacificpower.net/insights to see energy use. For more information go to pacificpower.net/ tou or call 888-221-7070. For the first year of enroll- ment, Pacific Power will guarantee that customers don’t pay more than 10% above what their bills would have been under standard rates. Pacific Power provides electric service to 90,000 customers in Central Ore- gon and 770,000 custom- ers in Oregon, Washing- ton and California. Home construction tumbled 10.3% Severe winter weather in much of the country pushed home construc- tion down a sharp 10.3% in February while appli- cations for new construc- tion fell by 10.8%. The decline pushed home and apartment construction down to a seasonally adjusted an- nual rate of 1.42 million units last month, com- pared to a rate of 1.58 million units in January when housing starts had fallen 5.1%, the Com- merce Department re- ported Wednesday. Economists are opti- mistic that housing will bounce back in coming months, helped by ultra- low mortgage rates and rising demand by Amer- icans who have been cooped up for the past year as the coronavirus pandemic rages. However, even with the expected rebound, the growth in housing will likely slow from last year’s sizzling pace given a series of restraints from a lack of building lots to surging lumber prices. — Bulletin wire reports Business owners ask for more time to pay late rent BY JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian The TeaScape Massage and Teahouse in southeast Port- land had been open just two months last year when Oregon ordered it and other massage therapists to close in the early days of the coronavirus out- break. Those restrictions eased a couple months later, but only about a third of TeaScape Mas- sage’s clientele has returned. That left the business with far more in expenses than reve- nue. Owner Miho Hatanaka told Oregon lawmakers Tues- day that her business is now $25,000 behind on rent. Oregon lawmakers allowed the state’s moratorium on com- mercial evictions to expire in September but gave business owners until the end of March to repay their outstanding rent, potentially preventing an on- slaught of commercial evic- tions over the last six months. With that March 31 deadline now looming, business owners say they need more time. See Rent / A12 Robots walk across the floor of the University of Michigan’s Ford Motor Co. Robotics Building on Friday in Ann Arbor. Carlos Osorio/AP photos Ford partners with University of Michigan on robotics research BY COREY WILLIAMS The Associated Press ANN ARBOR, Mich. — igit marches on two legs across the floor of the University of Michigan’s Ford Motor Co. Robotics Building, while Mini-Chee- tah — staccato-like — does the same on four and the yel- low-legged Cassie steps delib- erately side-to-side. A grand opening was held this week for the four-story, $75 million, 134,000-square- foot complex. Three floors house classrooms and re- search labs for robots that fly, walk, roll and augment the human body. On the top floor are Ford researchers and engineers and the automaker’s first robotics and mobility research lab on a university campus. Together, they will work to develop robots and roboticists that help make lives better, keep people safer and build a more equitable society, the school and automaker an- D The four-story, $75 million, 134,000-square-foot complex has three floors that house classrooms and research labs for robots that fly, walk, roll and augment the human body. nounced Tuesday. “As we all drive and use our vehicles and go about our day-to-day lives, I’m sure all of us have moments in our day where we could use a little help or a little assistance,” said Ken Washington, Ford’s chief technology officer. “We are going to be work- ing on drone technology, walking robots, roving robots, all types of robots in this facil- ity and the ways in which they can make people’s lives better,” Washington added. “And we’ll do it in a way that addresses questions and fears around safety and security. The more people see how these robots can interact with society and interact with humans, the more comfortable they’ll get with them.” The building on the uni- versity’s Ann Arbor campus brings together researchers from 23 buildings and 10 pro- grams into one space. Those working on two-legged disas- ter response robots can test them on a 30-mph treadmill studded with obstacles or on a stair-stepped “robot play- ground” designed with the help of artificial intelligence. Biomedical engineers are looking at developing lighter, more stable prosthetic legs. Ford engineers are exploring how upright Digit robots can work in human spaces. “We want them to be able to operate in realistic situa- tions. … You get out in the real world where there’s roll- ing, twigs,” said Jessy Grizzle, the Robotics Institute director. “There’s rocks. There’s boul- ders. There’s holes that you can’t see because the grass is cut flat, and then you want your robots to respond well and stay upright just like a hu- man would.” See Robotics / A12 Melinda Gates says government, philanthropy need unity BY GLENN GAMBOA The Associated Press NEW YORK — Philan- thropy is in a unique position to speed global change, but government action is necessary to implement it, said Melinda Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. “Philanthropy can often take risks,” said Gates, speak- ing at the Bloomberg Equality Summit. “They can try inno- vations that sometimes work and sometimes fail. They can look for new solutions. They can help us collect the data. But ultimately, it’s always up to gov- ernment to scale up these in- novations to create a change.” Gates, whose foundation has donated more than $2 billion to fight the spread of COVID-19, said the devel- opment of the coronavirus vaccines is a prime example of how philanthropy and gov- ernment policies can work to- gether. See Gates / A12 Oregon FFA officers reflect on year of chaotic tenure BY GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press Under normal circum- stances, the 2020-21 Oregon FFA state officer team would have traveled thousands of miles around the state last fall, leading workshops and meet- ing with fellow “blue jackets” at more than 100 local chapters. Of course, 2020 was far from a normal year. The coronavirus pandemic forced high schools to adopt remote learning, thwarting in-person gatherings. For FFA officers like Grace Adams and Jenna Wallace, that meant finding new ways to connect with their peers. “I think it was hard at first,” Adams said. “We came to the realization that our team was going to have a unique expe- rience that nobody else could relate to.” Adams, of Dayton, was elected Oregon FFA president during last year’s virtual state convention in March, and Wal- lace, of Hermiston, was elected vice president. Nobody could have predicted then just how long the crisis would last, or how disruptive it would be. As the first day of the 2021 convention began Tuesday — which was also streamed on- Adams Wallace line — Adams and Wallace reflected on their team’s un- precedented tenure, how they were able to adapt and ulti- mately prevail through difficult times. “Instead, we thought more of how can we make this bet- ter? What can we do to move onward?” Adams said. “I think we’ve grown the most, because we faced a lot of struggles.” Rather than hitting the road for their regular leadership tour, the six-member Ore- gon FFA state officer team was forced to hunker down for three months, living in the dorms at Oregon State Uni- versity in Corvallis. Every day, they would arrive at Strand Agriculture Hall on campus to facilitate workshops with stu- dents online via Zoom. The challenge, Adams said, was figuring out how to make the presentations engaging and interactive over a computer screen. They made use of video clips, chat features and break- out rooms, encouraging mem- bers who might already feel burned out with online classes to participate. “Traditionally, in order to get them engaged, you’d do something hands-on or turn to a partner. We couldn’t really do that,” Adams said. Adams joked the team has now perfected the art of the “awkward Zoom conversation.” In addition to daily workshops, the team also held four virtual leadership camps for chapter officers, with several hundred students registered for each. See FFA / A12