A11 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 2021 q DOW 32,420.06 -3.09 BRIEFING USDA walks back ear tag mandate The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced on Wednesday it is pull- ing back on mandating the use of radio fre- quency identification ear tags on cattle and bison in interstate commerce. It will instead use the rulemaking process for any future action related to the proposal. The agency’s decision is a win for R-CALF USA, which filed suit against USDA over the agency’s first attempt to mandate the use of RFID ear tags with an April 2019 notice. Represented by the New Civil Liberties Alli- ance, R-CALF alleged the mandate violates current traceability regulations that allow other forms of identification. “Today’s announce- ment is good news for cattle producers, as it means the impend- ing threat of a costly RFID mandate is now removed,” Bill Bullard, R-CALF’s CEO, said in a statement. Until the agency takes further action, cattle and bison producers can con- tinue to use metal or plas- tic ear tags, brands, tattoos, group/lot identification and backtags authorized under current law. q bendbulletin.com/business q NASDAQ 12,961.89 -265.81 S&P 500 3,889.14 -21.38 q p 30-YR T-BOND 2.31% -.04 NTSB seeks tighter safety oversight Federal safety officials are making another push for stricter oversight of air tour operators and hot-air balloon rides after several deadly crashes in recent years. The National Transpor- tation Safety Board on Tuesday asked the Federal Aviation Administration to raise safety requirements for the passenger-carry- ing operations, which fall under less restrictive regu- lations than airlines do for things such as pilot train- ing and maintenance. Some airplane and helicopter tours oper- ate under rules for “gen- eral aviation,” a category that mostly covers pri- vate planes not used to carry paying passengers. Safety board members said some of the opera- tors exploit loopholes in FAA regulations to avoid stricter oversight. — Bulletin wire reports p GOLD $1,732.90 +8.20 n q SILVER $25.20 ... EURO $1.1820 -.0032 Oregon bill would help movie theaters BY KEVIN HARDEN Oregon Capital Bureau Movie theater owners across the state who have spent a tense year watching their rev- enue drop to nearly zero hope new legislation offers financial relief. A bill introduced March 16 by state Rep. Rob Nosse, a Portland Democrat, would fund state grants for movie theaters hard-hit by the COVID-19 pandemic shut- down. House Bill 3376 pro- vides the Oregon Business Development Department $8.7 million to create a grant program for indoor movie the- aters. Grants could be $50,000 per movie theater, plus $10,000 for each screen, if theaters have more than two screens. The House Committee on Economic Recovery and Pros- perity was scheduled to take up the bill during an online pub- lic hearing and work session Thursday morning . The hear- ing begins at 8 a.m. It can be streamed at olis.oregonlegisla- ture.gov/liz/2021R1/Commit- tees/HERP/Overview. Movie theaters in counties with lower COVID-19 risks can reopen with 50% capacity. Most also can sell concessions under updated state guidelines. Members of the Pacific Northwest Theatre Owners Association approached Nosse in the past few months about providing some state financial help. A handful of other states and cities have provided sim- ilar grant programs to theater owners. Nosse’s bill could give grants to all theaters in the state, in- cluding large chains like Cine- mark and Regal. Nosse said the bill could be amended to “just focus on theaters that are small and primarily locally owned.” See Theaters / A12 Intel to build new factories, in wager on manufacturing BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian Manufactured goods see slump Orders to U.S. factories for big-ticket manufac- tured goods slumped 1.1% in February with de- mand in a key sector that tracks business invest- ment also dropping. Orders had been ris- ing for nine consecutive months, including a siz- able 3.5% jump in Jan- uary, according to the Commerce Department. The size of the drop surprised economists, though it is likely that there was significant dis- ruption from severe win- ter storms that hit much of the country last month, on top of ongoing sup- ply-chain problems. The category that cov- ers business investment dropped 0.8% in February . The transportation sector fell 1.6% with de- mand for commercial air- craft, a sector plagued by the huge drop in air travel during the pandemic, shooting up 103%. Con- tributing was belea- guered manufacturer Boeing, which for the first time since Decem- ber 2019 booked positive net orders. But orders for autos and auto parts slumped 8.7% . CRUDE OIL $61.18 +3.42 Caleb Jones/AP file A man sits on a nearly empty Waikiki Beach in Honolulu in October. Tourists are traveling to Hawaii in larger numbers than officials anticipated, and many are wandering around Waikiki without masks, despite a statewide mandate to wear them in public. Hawaii’s dilemma: Tourists bring much-needed money — along with their own rules for masks The Associated Press HONOLULU — Tourists are traveling to Hawaii in larger numbers than officials anticipated, and many are wandering around Waikiki without masks, despite a statewide mandate to wear them in public. Hawaii’s “Safe Travels” program reported that about 28,000 people flew into and throughout the islands on Saturday, the highest number of travelers in a single day since the pandemic began, the Honolulu Star- Advertiser reported Monday. Before the pandemic, Ha- waii had about 30,000 arrivals daily. When quarantine rules were put in place early in the pandemic, arrivals plummeted and the state’s tourism-depen- dent economy tanked. In October, state officials launched a pre-travel testing program that allowed visitors to sidestep quarantine rules. But travel remained slug- gish until the second week in March, when spring break tourists started arriving in the islands. Travel company Pleasant Holidays president and CEO Jack Richards told the Hono- lulu Star-Advertiser that the agency’s bookings increased 30% over the last two weeks. “We haven’t seen travel de- mand for Hawaii this strong for over a year,” Richards said. “I thought we would have a U-shaped recovery; it’s V-shaped. January and Feb- ruary were terrible, but we’ve gone from zero to 150 mph in two weeks.” Hawaii News Now reported that officials are receiving com- plaints about visitors not wear- ing masks. With a few excep- tions, people in Hawaii are still required to wear masks while in public. “I’m a believer that if you’re outdoors, you can remove it,” said Glenn Day, a visitor from Indiana. Visitors said rules in their home states are different than those in place in Hawaii. “We carry our masks around, and if we walk into an establishment we’ll wear one, and if people look like they’re uncomfortable with us around, we’ll put one on. But other- wise, like I said where we come from, people are really not re- quired to wear them,” Wiscon- sin visitor Larry Dopke said. “I’m not wearing one right now. I’m outdoors,” said Todd Hasley who was visiting from Idaho. “Boise city has an in- door mask mandate. The rest of the state has a mask recom- mendation.” Some lawmakers expressed concern about a possible back- lash from residents. “I think we’re all going to have to be prepared for a po- tential surge in tourism,” said Hawaii state Rep. Scott Saiki, a Democrat. “I think we have to be prepared because the public may have a response to a sud- den surge.” Such a reaction could hinder economic recovery. See Hawaii / A12 When new Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger joined the company during the winter, the chipmaker was under growing pressure to give up on its beleaguered manufacturing arm and outsource advanced production to contract manufacturers overseas. A month into the job, though, Gelsinger said Tuesday he is taking Intel in the opposite direction. The chipmaker will spend $20 billion to build two new factories in Arizona and will announce more later this year. Instead of outsourcing advanced production, Gelsinger said Intel wants to become a leading contract manufacturer itself. Even as he outlined a bold — and expensive — new strategy, Gelsinger warned that Intel’s revenue will be down sharply this year. He fore- cast revenue of $72 billion, down 7.5% from 2020, due to shortages of key components. Investors looked past that disappointing near- term outlook in favor of Gelsinger’s long-term ambitions. Shares jumped more than 7%, top- ping $68, while he spoke. “Intel is back,” Gelsinger said. “The old Intel is now the new Intel as we look toward the future.” Gelsinger said that Intel had been too timid in exploiting a new manufacturing technology, ex- treme ultraviolet lithography for its 7nm chips. Intel has now embraced EUV, he said, and is back on track with those new production tools. See Intel / A12 Slower mail and fewer office hours are part of Postal Service plans BY ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE Associated Press Postmaster General Louis DeJoy on Tuesday announced plans to slow mail delivery standards and cut hours at some post offices as part of a 10- year strategy to stabilize the struggling agency. Details of the long-awaited plan come at a time of intense scrutiny on the U.S. Postal Service over persistent delivery delays under DeJoy, a major GOP donor who took over the agency last sum- mer. The plan also includes a proposal to consol- idate underused post offices, hinted at a potential postage rate increase and detailed investments in new delivery vehicles, among other things. Facing an expected $160 billion in losses over the next decade, DeJoy and postal executives stressed the need to cut costs and modernize the agency’s operations as its workload increasingly shifts from handling letters to hauling more and more packages. “This is about the long-term viability of the organization under the two missions that we have that are legislated, that is deliver to every house six days a week and be self-sustaining,” DeJoy said. He announced the plans at a webinar with other postal service officials. DeJoy said the biggest change would be a re- laxing of the current first-class letter delivery standard of one-to-three-days to a one-to-five- day benchmark. Postal leadership said the lon- ger timeframe would apply only to mail going to the farthest reaches of its network and that 70% of first-class mail will still be delivered within a three-day standard. Democrats immediately criticized the plan. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said it would under- mine the mission of the agency. Sen. Gary Peters, chairman of the Homeland Security and Govern- mental Affairs Committee, warned it could harm service for people who get prescription drugs and financial documents through the mail. See Mail / A12