A12 The BulleTin • Thursday, april 1, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY FRIDAY TONIGHT HIGH 69° LOW 38° Mostly sunny and mild Mild with clouds and occasional sunshine ALMANAC MONDAY 61° 34° Cloudy and mild TUESDAY 60° 32° Mostly cloudy, rain possible; cooler Times of sun and clouds Yesterday Normal Record 73° 54° 75° in 1923 21° 29° 14° in 1953 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.45" in 1936 Month to date (normal) 0.09" (0.73") Year to date (normal) 1.18" (3.35") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.17" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Today Fri. 6:46am/7:32pm 6:45am/7:34pm none/9:16am 12:59am/10:00am 6:24am/6:01pm 6:23am/6:06pm 6:57am/7:37pm 6:55am/7:40pm 9:40am/1:15am 9:39am/1:14am 5:02am/3:14pm 4:58am/3:11pm 4:30am/2:12pm 4:26am/2:08pm 7:51am/9:51pm 7:47am/9:47pm New First Full Apr 4 Apr 11 Apr 19 Apr 26 Tonight's sky: Low above the southern horizon around midnight is Hydra, The Sea Serpent. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 3 5 5 3 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly sunny and mild today. Mainly clear tonight. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Mostly sunny today. Fair tonight. Partly sunny Friday. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Sun and a few clouds today. Warm Friday with clouds and sun. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Mostly sunny and mild today. Partly cloudy tonight. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Mostly sunny today. Mainly clear tonight. Partly sunny and mild Friday. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Mostly sunny today. Fair tonight. Partly sunny Friday. SKI REPORT EAST: Sunny to partly cloudy and warm today. Fair and chilly tonight. Partly sunny and still warm Friday. Seaside 50/40 Cannon Beach 50/40 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the T-storms Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com City Halls eager to bump up their cannabis tax include Gresham, Hillsboro, Beaver- ton, Tualatin, Sherwood, St. Helens, Happy Valley, Eugene and Bend, staff for the league said in testimony to a revenue committee hearing of the Leg- islature on March 4. League of Oregon Cities lobbyist Mark Gharst told law- makers the COVID-19 pan- demic prompted a decline in lodging and gas taxes, park and development fees — and the worst crunch for city budgets may be yet to come, if property tax revenues fall due to com- mercial vacancies. “I don’t think that the voters were saying that they wanted local governments to cut ser- vices in order to fund that re- covery,” Gharst said. “We can have our cake and eat it, too.” Marijuana insiders see it differently. They say cannabis retailers can’t just pass the tax increase on to users, many of whom could dial up their old dealer from the years before le- galization. Whitney, the economist, es- timates that most consumers will pay a premium of just 10% to 15% to acquire their weed legally. Go above that, and they might just get their marijuana on the black market. “Consumers are very price conscious,” agreed Casey Hou- lihan, executive director of the Oregon Retailers of Cannabis Association. He calls the pro- posed 10% tax a “disaster” in the making, saying the lure of the illicit market could lead Those that weren’t approved initially will automatically be considered along with new applicants during the second round of funding in April. While the vast majority of applicants were approved, it is still unclear how many busi- ness owners across the state are behind on rent due to the pan- demic. Melanie Marconi, the owner of Vida, a coworking space in Northeast Portland, told law- makers earlier this month that her landlord had not applied for the funds, even though she had fallen significantly behind on rent. Other business own- ers have raised similar con- cerns. While both landlords and tenants must participate in Oregon’s application process, landlords must submit the ini- tial application. Landlords who accept the funding must also sign an agreement forgiving any outstanding penalties or interest and promising not to evict their tenants. Despite the commercial rent relief program, business groups and owners also remain con- cerned about a looming evic- tion crisis. Oregon lawmakers allowed the state’s moratorium on com- mercial evictions to expire last September, but gave business owners until the end of March to repay their outstanding rent. That may have prevented an onslaught of commercial evic- tions over the last six months. Lawmakers are currently considering a proposal to give business owners until the end of September to repay rent bills they accumulated during the worst days of the coronavirus recession last year. However, lawmakers are unlikely to vote on that bill be- fore the current grace period expires at the end of March, potentially opening up busi- ness owners to evictions if their landlords have not applied or been approved for funding through the commercial rent relief program. Portland Tribune Despite big profits as a sector of Oregon’s economy, especially during the pandemic, not all retailers are prospering. Cannabis Continued from A11 In the next two-year bud- get cycle, which begins July 1, cities and counties will have only $18 million in marijuana money to split amongst them- selves, an almost 72% drop compared with the $63.7 mil- lion they expected under the old funding formula, according to the League of Oregon Cities. Rent Continued from A11 The grants are part of the state’s $100 million commer- cial rent relief program, which lawmakers approved in Janu- ary. Business Oregon, which is administering the fund, will reopen applications for an- other $42 million round in mid-April. Nearly 88% of the appli- cants that applied for funding through the program earlier this month were approved, pending final confirmation of their documentation. Applicants in most parts of the state were approved for funding as long as they met the necessary requirements, but Business Oregon only funded 80% of applicants from the Portland area. That’s because the state is working to distrib- ute grants equitably across the state. Business Oregon held a lot- tery to determine which el- igible applicants to approve. Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 66/51/0.00 Akron 55/45/0.29 Albany 57/46/0.12 Albuquerque 61/34/0.00 Anchorage 33/24/0.00 Atlanta 71/63/1.08 Atlantic City 59/49/0.27 Austin 70/58/0.02 Baltimore 68/54/0.69 Billings 53/24/0.00 Birmingham 69/63/1.26 Bismarck 42/11/0.00 Boise 60/30/0.00 Boston 69/44/Tr Bridgeport, CT 58/41/0.16 Buffalo 55/50/0.15 Burlington, VT 63/51/0.13 Caribou, ME 56/34/0.00 Charleston, SC 82/62/0.50 Charlotte 68/64/0.45 Chattanooga 66/61/1.85 Cheyenne 47/19/0.00 Chicago 43/34/Tr Cincinnati 52/45/0.34 Cleveland 50/44/0.03 Colorado Springs 52/20/Tr Columbia, MO 51/36/0.00 Columbia, SC 82/63/0.71 Columbus, GA 82/63/0.98 Columbus, OH 55/45/0.40 Concord, NH 64/40/Tr Corpus Christi 81/70/Tr Dallas 69/56/Tr Dayton 52/45/0.02 Denver 52/24/0.04 Des Moines 43/28/0.00 Detroit 51/42/Tr Duluth 27/12/Tr El Paso 72/47/0.00 Fairbanks 32/20/0.04 Fargo 34/16/Tr Flagstaff 53/28/0.00 Grand Rapids 43/34/0.01 Green Bay 37/29/0.00 Greensboro 65/61/0.86 Harrisburg 65/45/0.13 Hartford, CT 65/42/0.04 Helena 56/30/0.00 Honolulu 83/71/0.02 Houston 78/69/Tr Huntsville 63/57/1.34 Indianapolis 50/37/0.06 Jackson, MS 73/64/0.57 Jacksonville 89/61/0.01 Today Hi/Lo/W 67/45/s 33/25/sf 41/24/sn 67/43/s 28/10/c 52/33/s 51/34/c 69/38/s 49/30/pc 69/41/s 53/30/s 62/30/s 71/44/s 54/30/r 49/31/r 35/23/sf 38/23/r 41/23/r 62/36/s 54/31/s 52/31/s 63/37/s 40/25/s 40/24/pc 33/27/sf 66/40/s 49/29/s 58/33/s 56/35/s 37/23/pc 45/24/r 65/51/sh 67/44/s 38/23/pc 68/39/s 47/31/s 36/23/c 40/27/s 72/52/pc 12/0/sn 53/35/s 67/38/s 39/19/pc 38/22/s 51/28/pc 47/30/c 48/28/r 69/37/s 83/70/pc 70/42/s 51/28/s 39/22/pc 58/33/s 66/39/pc Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 55/39/pc 58/44/pc 70/56/sh 86/60/pc 97/82/pc 66/52/c 64/55/pc 63/34/c 67/52/t 74/51/pc 71/65/pc 82/67/pc 69/53/s 59/28/pc 85/74/pc 50/40/pc 48/30/pc 72/47/pc 79/55/s 84/76/c 52/41/pc 55/44/pc 77/59/pc 75/66/s 65/54/sh 61/39/pc 73/50/pc 97/78/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 68/50/pc 42/25/s 37/24/c 73/48/s 28/18/pc 56/35/s 42/32/pc 69/48/pc 47/28/pc 72/42/s 57/32/s 73/35/pc 74/48/pc 43/30/pc 44/31/pc 40/26/pc 36/24/c 39/19/pc 55/34/s 53/29/s 55/30/s 69/39/s 52/40/s 49/28/s 41/29/s 73/45/s 60/42/s 54/30/s 59/34/s 46/26/s 42/21/pc 70/59/c 69/51/s 46/28/s 72/42/s 63/47/s 47/30/s 52/36/pc 83/56/s 16/15/c 67/33/pc 65/36/pc 47/31/s 49/36/s 50/28/s 46/29/pc 43/27/pc 68/39/s 81/69/pc 68/46/pc 54/29/s 49/32/s 61/35/s 59/38/s City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 38/36/0.35 53/32/0.00 45/35/0.07 73/49/0.00 51/45/0.85 53/26/0.00 62/52/0.12 88/54/0.00 57/47/1.25 40/28/Tr 57/48/0.59 86/77/Tr 41/35/0.00 36/23/0.00 54/49/1.37 85/72/0.02 67/50/0.17 69/49/0.24 82/59/0.56 63/46/Tr 49/27/0.00 89/67/0.21 87/63/0.00 43/33/0.00 68/49/0.94 88/59/0.00 54/52/0.25 57/41/0.01 68/41/0.10 74/62/0.41 49/11/0.00 66/31/0.00 73/58/0.83 59/54/0.08 83/49/0.00 54/39/Tr 54/30/0.00 76/63/Tr 88/53/0.00 78/54/Tr 83/46/0.00 58/18/Tr 86/59/0.05 61/37/0.00 39/18/0.00 57/29/0.00 53/39/0.00 86/73/0.01 88/51/0.00 63/46/0.00 66/56/0.92 58/34/0.00 62/25/0.00 88/60/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 39/27/sn 53/35/s 37/18/pc 78/59/pc 42/21/pc 57/39/s 59/31/s 88/59/pc 46/26/pc 41/22/s 53/31/s 84/62/t 38/25/s 44/31/s 50/27/s 64/46/pc 48/31/r 51/31/r 55/34/pc 64/40/s 54/36/s 75/47/sh 92/67/pc 43/25/s 51/32/c 94/67/s 34/23/sf 50/27/r 54/30/r 54/29/pc 69/37/s 74/41/s 53/29/pc 34/23/sf 86/49/s 49/28/s 66/45/s 70/46/pc 80/55/pc 77/49/s 84/50/s 66/36/s 65/38/pc 57/42/pc 53/36/s 63/37/s 51/30/s 75/47/sh 90/60/s 61/40/s 50/32/pc 61/41/s 70/35/pc 93/57/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 40/25/sf 65/50/s 47/29/s 87/61/pc 47/27/s 72/45/s 59/36/s 81/58/s 52/31/s 52/38/pc 57/36/s 76/62/pc 50/39/s 59/41/s 53/29/s 63/49/s 43/31/pc 44/30/pc 48/39/pc 66/48/pc 70/45/s 65/47/s 97/68/s 53/38/pc 43/30/pc 92/64/s 41/24/s 43/25/c 45/29/s 50/30/s 75/42/s 75/44/pc 48/28/s 38/24/pc 82/46/pc 58/41/s 73/48/s 70/51/pc 71/55/s 66/49/pc 76/46/pc 72/41/pc 59/35/s 55/40/r 67/39/s 60/37/c 61/41/s 69/47/s 89/58/s 68/50/s 48/32/s 68/48/s 67/38/c 94/57/s 95/73/0.00 81/54/0.00 55/48/0.17 43/36/0.15 82/61/0.08 86/75/0.00 93/70/0.00 70/46/0.00 44/39/0.08 55/50/0.25 77/45/0.00 82/73/0.12 69/45/0.00 75/48/0.00 73/64/0.00 58/36/0.00 72/37/0.00 63/57/0.76 91/75/0.00 45/41/0.16 71/59/0.02 77/66/0.00 66/53/0.00 67/56/0.12 50/43/0.00 50/35/0.00 72/45/0.00 68/37/0.00 96/69/pc 67/50/t 35/24/sn 47/35/r 81/61/t 83/69/sh 90/63/pc 74/55/pc 49/34/pc 33/20/sn 78/46/pc 83/72/pc 67/49/s 75/50/s 74/61/pc 51/32/s 75/50/pc 65/59/t 91/78/c 48/33/pc 73/62/s 85/70/pc 66/52/pc 65/56/c 33/22/sf 52/39/c 74/47/pc 66/36/c 94/66/s 72/48/s 36/24/s 43/31/sn 80/61/t 77/63/c 89/61/pc 71/55/c 47/29/pc 38/25/s 61/40/s 81/72/t 66/47/pc 78/51/pc 74/61/t 56/40/pc 71/55/c 74/61/r 91/78/t 46/32/pc 76/62/s 84/69/pc 64/54/sh 67/55/pc 40/26/s 50/38/c 59/42/sh 51/36/pc INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 92° at Camarillo, CA National low: -5° at Daniel, WY Precipitation: 2.44" at Gadsden, AL In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Base Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 80-80 Hoodoo Ski Area 0 0-98 Mt. Ashland 0 63-77 Mt. Bachelor 0 109-117 Mt. Hood Meadows 1 0-223 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 75-102 Timberline Lodge 0 0-191 Willamette Pass 0 0-45 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 2 59-82 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 68-113 Squaw Valley, CA 0 0-119 Park City Mountain, UT 0 54-69 Sun Valley, ID 0 49-74 Partly sunny, a couple of showers possible NATIONAL Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 65/32/0.00 51/39/pc 52/38/pc La Grande 61/25/0.00 67/41/s 69/39/pc Portland 70/35/0.00 66/41/s 62/42/pc Baker City 62/17/Tr 68/33/s 71/34/pc La Pine 68/16/0.00 66/32/s 64/36/pc Prineville 72/18/0.00 73/37/s 64/36/c Brookings 75/50/0.00 57/42/s 58/43/pc Medford 80/34/0.00 77/42/s 71/43/pc Redmond 73/18/0.00 72/33/s 69/33/c Newport 63/36/0.00 51/38/s 52/38/pc Roseburg 77/33/0.00 71/40/s 62/40/c Burns 64/16/0.00 71/32/s 71/34/pc Eugene 65/32/0.00 67/36/s 61/39/pc North Bend 69/38/0.00 54/39/s 54/41/pc Salem 66/31/0.00 64/35/s 61/38/c Klamath Falls 71/20/0.00 69/31/s 69/34/pc Ontario 63/23/0.00 73/38/s 76/43/pc Sisters 68/16/0.00 68/37/s 67/36/pc Lakeview 66/16/0.00 69/34/s 69/33/pc Pendleton 67/27/0.00 73/43/s 65/44/pc The Dalles 68/30/0.00 70/41/s 65/40/pc Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday -0s 54° 28° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 76/42 Rufus Hermiston 67/38 76/42 70/40 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 72/41 64/36 66/41 66/38 Wasco 67/39 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Sunny, Tillamook 65/39 68/38 73/43 Sandy 70/41 McMinnville 54/37 breezy and warmer Joseph Heppner La Grande 64/39 Maupin Government 64/37 today. Fair and cool 67/41 63/40 Camp 72/38 Condon 72/41 Union Lincoln City tonight. Partly sunny 67/37 56/33 66/38 Salem 51/39 Spray and continued warm Granite Warm Springs 64/35 Madras 74/37 Albany 64/35 Friday. Newport Baker City 71/37 73/37 Mitchell 51/38 63/33 68/33 WEST: Mostly sunny Camp Sherman 71/38 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity and mild today. Fair 66/37 72/33 63/35 Day Prineville 70/35 weather tonight, then 51/39 Ontario Sisters 73/37 Paulina 70/38 73/38 clouds and sun and a Florence Eugene 68/37 Bend Brothers 69/33 Vale little cooler Friday. 54/39 67/36 69/38 67/33 Sunriver 75/39 Nyssa 66/36 Hampton Cottage La Pine 77/39 Juntura Oakridge Grove 66/32 68/31 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 73/34 70/39 69/36 Fort Rock 53/37 71/32 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 69/29 71/32 High: 80° 65/32 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Medford Beaver Frenchglen Silver 52/39 71/40 69/31 67/36 Low: 14° Marsh Lake 68/37 Port Orford 63/31 69/33 at Alkali Lake Grants Burns Junction Paisley 56/43 Pass 73/34 Chiloquin 71/38 80/40 Rome Medford 67/29 Gold Beach 77/42 75/35 54/42 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 70/35 74/44 69/31 66/33 57/42 69/34 -10s 55° 28° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Astoria 51/39 WEDNESDAY Chance for rain and snow becoming all rain OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Rise/Set Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Last SUNDAY 68° 40° 67° 37° Clear to partly cloudy Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SATURDAY governments to collect less in the future than they do now. “One only needs to look around on Instagram to see cheap ounces or pounds being sold,” Houlihan said. Bursting bubble? Stata data confirms that cus- tomers haven’t noticed much difference at the cash register so far. Despite the billion-dollar consumer market in 2020, the average retail price for con- sumers has remained at or be- low $5.50 per gram nearly ev- ery month since July 2018, the Oregon Liquor Control Com- mission said in its Feb. 1 sup- ply-and-demand report. The price of wholesale flower, the smokeable part of the cannabis plant, hit $1,499 per pound in December 2020, levels not seen since late 2017. That’s good news for grow- ers, who for years have com- plained that Oregon’s cannabis market is oversupplied. De- mand is now devouring 65% of annual supply, up from just 50% two years ago, per the re- port. 73/43/0.00 53/46/0.34 68/62/0.07 84/58/0.00 99/84/0.00 78/52/0.00 66/59/0.36 73/38/0.00 66/52/0.07 70/43/0.00 72/66/0.00 95/65/0.00 69/55/0.00 54/26/0.00 86/77/0.00 57/41/0.00 49/41/0.12 71/41/0.00 76/55/0.00 84/76/0.05 50/44/0.00 59/46/0.00 75/55/0.00 75/66/0.02 81/55/0.00 68/48/0.00 75/41/0.00 93/79/0.00 49/40/pc 66/53/s 69/60/s 83/56/pc 97/81/pc 63/51/c 60/56/sh 54/37/pc 65/51/t 63/39/sh 72/65/pc 84/66/pc 69/51/pc 50/28/pc 76/72/t 50/37/s 53/34/pc 70/43/sh 79/55/s 83/75/sh 56/49/pc 52/44/pc 78/59/s 75/67/s 66/53/t 55/40/pc 66/45/t 96/78/s Teens Continued from A11 Researchers reported high levels of virus-fighting an- tibodies, somewhat higher than were seen in studies of young adults. Kids had side effects simi- lar to young adults, the com- pany said. The main side ef- fects are pain, fever, chills and fatigue, particularly after the second dose. The study will continue to track participants for two years for more infor- mation about long-term pro- tection and safety. Dr. Philip J. Landrigan of Boston College said the re- sults are encouraging. “It’s hard to get kids to comply with masking and distancing, so something that gives them hard protec- tion and takes them out of the mix of spreading the vi- rus is all for the good,” said Landrigan, who was not in- volved in the study. Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech in the coming weeks plan to ask the U.S. Food and Drug Admin- Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw istration and European regu- lators to allow emergency use of the shots starting at age 12. Pfizer isn’t the only com- pany seeking to lower the age limit for its vaccine. Results also are expected by the mid- dle of this year from a U.S. study of Moderna’s vaccine in 12- to 17-year-olds. But in a sign that the find- ings were promising, the FDA already allowed both companies to begin U.S. studies in children 11 and younger, working their way to as young as 6-month-old. It’s not clear how quickly the FDA would act on Pfizer’s request to allow vaccination starting at age 12. The agency has taken about three weeks to review and authorize each of the vaccines currently available for adults. That process included holding a public meeting of outside ex- perts to review and vote on the safety and effectiveness of each shot. The process for review- ing data in children could be shorter, given FDA’s familiar- ity with each vaccine. SAVE 50% AT LAURIE’S GRILL ONLY AT C ENTRAL O REGON D EALS . COM WH SUPP ILE L LAST IES ! 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