A7 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 2021 q DOW 32,862.30 -153.07 BRIEFING Summit Medical changes its name Summit Medical Group has changed its name to Summit Health. The name change is part of a rebranding effort that comes at a time when health care attempts to be more streamlined and more patient-centric, accord- ing to the company. As a group, Summit Health in Central Oregon is a multispecialty physi- cian group with 130 pro- viders in primary care, urgent care and more than 30 medical special- ties and services. Summit Medical Group was formed through a partnership between Bend Memo- rial Clinic and Summit Health Management in 2018. q bendbulletin.com/business NASDAQ 13,116.17 -409.03 q S&P 500 3,915.46 -58.66 p 30-YR T-BOND 2.48% +.04 q CRUDE OIL $60.00 -4.60 p GOLD $1,732.20 +5.40 p SILVER $26.32 +.29 q EURO $1.1914 -.0065 Precision Castparts loses labor ruling Warren Buffet firm has a plant in Redmond BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian Precision Castparts welders won a victory before a federal appeals court this week, poten- tially clearing the way for them to organize — more than three years after the Oregon workers voted to unionize. The Portland company re- fused to bargain with the 100 welders and challenged their or- ganizing effort, arguing that their work was too closely integrated with the rest of the company to constitute a distinct union. The National Labor Rela- tions Board disagreed, finding that Precision Castparts had committed an unfair labor practice. Precision Castparts challenged that decision in court, losing its case Tuesday before the U.S. Court of Ap- peals in Washington, D.C. The union, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, said Thursday that with the appeals court’s ruling in hand it will send a demand letter to the company and hopes to begin negotiating a contract. “It’s been a long battle for these guys,” said Billy Ander- son, an organizer for the na- tional union. “Hopefully, we can move forward and they can respect the wishes of the welders out there.” See Castparts / A8 New pho restaurant opens in Pendleton Portland firm raises $20 million Act-On Software said Thursday it has raised $20 million, the Portland marketing technology company’s first new cap- ital since 2014. Act-On’s technology helps online marketers tailor their messages and efforts to specific market segments. The company employs 155, 125 of them in Portland. Thursday’s funding, a mix of debt and new investment, comes from prior investors, com- pany founder Raghu Raghavan and a new investor, Beedie Capital. Act-On says it will use the money to improve its products and expand its own marketing. Founded in 2008, Act-On has now raised $82 million. Its last round seven years ago brought $42 million amid an upswing in Or- egon software entre- preneurship. It was the largest investment of its kind the state had seen in a decade. U.S. jobless claims rise to 770,000 The number of Ameri- cans seeking unemploy- ment benefits rose last week to 770,000, a sign that layoffs remain high even as much of the U.S. economy is steadily re- covering from the coro- navirus recession. Thursday’s report from the Labor Depart- ment showed that job- less claims climbed from 725,000 the week be- fore. The numbers have dropped sharply since the depths of the reces- sion last spring but still show that employers in some industries con- tinue to lay off workers. Before the pandemic struck, applications for unemployment aid had never topped 700,000 in any one week. A total of 4.1 million people are continuing to collect traditional state unemployment bene- fits, down 18,000 from the previous week. In- cluding separate federal programs that are in- tended to help workers displaced by the health crisis, 18.2 million Amer- icans were receiving some form of jobless aid in the week of Feb. 27, down by 1.9 million from the week before. — Bulletin staff and wire reports Lam Ha adds broth to a pho dish while pre- paring orders at his restaurant, Haven Pho, in Pendleton on March 4. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian BY BEN LONERGAN East Oregonian P ENDLETON — When a sandwich shop went out of business last year, Lam Ha saw the space as the perfect location for a restaurant dream more than a decade in the making. Ha’s dream came true earlier this month when he opened Haven Pho, a Vietnamese restaurant in Pendleton. “I planned this like 10 years ago,” he said. Ha, who came to the United States from Vietnam roughly 20 years ago, developed a love for restaurants while working at his sister’s Vietnamese restaurant in Arlington, Texas, and set out on a journey to own one of his own. Despite his interest in restaurants, Ha has owned and operated nail salons since he moved to the region more than a decade ago, and ran a nail shop in Walla Walla, Washing- ton, before opening Pendleton Nails across the parking lot from his new restaurant about a decade ago. When a location opened up near his nail salon, Ha said he moved quickly to secure the spot and began renovating the space in Sep- tember . Ha chose to name the new restaurant after his 5-year-old son, Haven. “I looked for a spot, but some were too big or too small,” he said. “Because this place is close to the nail shop, I can go back and forth.” Ha said he has wanted to open a Vietnam- ese restaurant in Pendleton for the better part of the last 10 years because he wanted to bring Vietnamese food and culture to the people of Pendleton. “I want to open up Vietnamese food so the local people can try different things,” he said. Ha said when he first moved to town a lack of Vietnamese food inspired him to want to open a restaurant, and while Pendleton’s din- ing options have diversified some since then, Ha’s desire to run a restaurant never faded. When putting together his menu, Ha said he wanted to stick with what he considers staples of Vietnamese cuisine — pho dishes, steamed rice with pork or chicken, and egg and salad rolls. Since opening his restaurant, Ha said it has stayed busy with dine-in and takeout orders. The dining room was buzzing with people on the evening of March 4, as customers ventured in to try the new place to eat. One customer joked with Ha that she had come by to get her nails done while picking up a to-go order. As customers filed through, Ha and his staff worked diligently to fill orders as steam- ing bowls of pho and egg rolls were carried to tables. “It’s been busy and tiring,” he said. Ha said the restaurant is currently open seven days a week from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. for takeout and dine-in service. While business is steady, Ha said he has had to remain optimistic amid the pandemic and COVID-19 restrictions. With restaurants across the country closing due to the pan- demic, Ha said he keeps focusing on the end of the pandemic to stay motivated. “I think the pandemic is going to go away,” he said. “Hopefully, everything is going to go fine.” Hot housing market fuels a Bill seeks to regulate rise in homeowners’ equity kratom products Mortgage equity gains $26,300 on average BY ALEX VEIGA The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The red-hot U.S. housing market is paying off for many home- owners, even those who aren’t looking to sell their homes. On average, homes with a mortgage gained $26,300 in equity in the last three months of 2020 versus a year earlier, according to real es- tate information company CoreLogic. That average gain is the highest since 2013, the firm said. CoreLogic said homes with a mortgage account for about 62% of all U.S. prop- erties. Taken together, the home equity for those proper- ties surged to more than $1.5 trillion, an increase of 16.2% from a year earlier. The surge in homeowners’ equity can potentially make a positive impact on borrowers’ finances; for one thing, it cre- ates a buffer against potential financial hardship, such as job loss. And homeowners could opt to put some of the gains to use, giving a boost to the economy. See Equity / A8 BY LIZZY ACKER The Oregonian A bill in the Oregon Legisla- ture would create regulations, including labeling and a min- imum age requirement, for products containing kratom. Pronounced in various ways, Kratom is the name of a tree in the coffee family, found in Southeast Asian countries such as Indonesia and Thailand. Traditionally, the leaves were chewed or made into tea to help people stay alert and pro- ductive. Some substances in kratom work on the opioid receptors in the brain. In recent years, extracts from kratom leaves have be- come a popular herbal remedy, which users say can help with pain, fatigue or opioid with- drawals. See Kratom / A8