The BulleTin • Monday, april 5, 2021 A3 TODAY Today is Monday, April 5, the 95th day of 2021. There are 270 days left in the year. Today’s Highlights in History: On April 5, 2010, an explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine near Charleston, West Virginia, killed 29 workers. In a televised rescue, 115 Chinese coal miners were freed after spending eight days trapped in a flooded mine, surviving an accident that had killed 38. In 1621, the Mayflower sailed from Plymouth Colony in present-day Massachusetts on a monthlong return trip to England. In 1792, President George Wash- ington cast his first veto, reject- ing a congressional measure for apportioning representatives among the states. In 1887, in Tuscumbia, Alabama, teacher Anne Sullivan achieved a breakthrough as her 6-year- old deaf-blind pupil, Helen Keller, learned the meaning of the word “water” as spelled out in the Manual Alphabet. In 1951, Julius and Ethel Rosen- berg were sentenced to death following their conviction in New York on charges of conspir- ing to commit espionage for the Soviet Union. In 1955, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill resigned his office for health reasons. In 1976, reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes died in Houston at age 70. In 1986, two American service- men and a Turkish woman were killed in the bombing of a West Berlin discotheque, an incident that prompted a U.S. air raid on Libya more than a week later. In 1987, Fox Broadcasting Co. made its prime-time TV debut by airing the situation comedy “Married with Children” fol- lowed by “The Tracey Ullman Show,” then repeating both pre- miere episodes two more times in the same evening. In 2015, Rolling Stone magazine apologized and officially retract- ed its discredited article about an alleged gang rape at the University of Virginia. In 2019, inspecting a refur- bished section of fencing at the Mexican border in California, President Donald Trump de- clared that “our country is full,” and that illegal crossings must be stopped. Ten years ago: Texas A&M won its first national women’s basket- ball championship with a 76-70 victory over Notre Dame. Five years ago: UConn won an unprecedented fourth straight women’s national championship, capping another perfect season by routing Syracuse 82-51. One year ago: Surgeon General Jerome Adams told CNN that the coming week would be “the hardest and saddest week of most Americans’ lives” because of the increasing toll from the coronavirus. Today’s Birthdays: Movie producer Roger Corman is 95. Former U.S. Secretary of State and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell is 84. Country singer Tommy Cash is 81. Actor Michael Moriarty is 80. Pop singer Allan Clarke (The Hollies) is 79. Singer Agnetha Faltskog (ABBA) is 71. Rock musician Mike McCready (Pearl Jam) is 55. Singer Paula Cole is 53. Actor Krista Allen is 50. Rapper-producer Pharrell Williams is 48. Rapper/producer Juicy J is 46. Actor Sterling K. Brown is 45. Actor Lily James is 32. — Associated Press LOCAL, STATE & NATION Governors urge Biden to lift $10K cap on deductions called the deduction limit en- acted by Trump “devastating” to WASHINGTON — Dem- taxpayers in her home state of ocratic governors from seven California. states, including Oregon, New The administration has been York and California, wrote to cool to the idea of including a President Joe Biden urging him SALT-limit repeal in the bill, to remove the cap on state and which would add to the deficit. local tax deductions enacted by “If Democrats want to pro- Donald Trump. pose a way to eliminate SALT The governors said in Fri- — which is not a revenue raiser, day’s letter that the as you know, it $10,000 limitation would cost more on state and local money — and they tax, or SALT, deduc- want to propose a tions “dispropor- way to pay for it, tionately” hit Dem- The cost of eliminating the and they want to ocratic-run states. put that forward, SALT deduction over the “We must go further we’re happy to hear course of 2021, according and undo the cap their ideas,” White to a nonpartisan estimate placed on state and House Press Secre- local tax deductions tary Jen Psaki said by the Trump administration” at a briefing on Thursday. through the 2017 tax law, they Repealing the SALT deduction wrote. cap is an expensive proposition. The letter was signed by New Fully eliminating the cap for one York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New year would cost $88.7 billion in Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, Califor- 2021, according to the nonpar- nia Gov. Gavin Newsom, Con- tisan congressional tax score- necticut Gov. Ned Lamont, Ha- keeper, the Joint Committee on waii Gov. David Ige, Illinois Gov. Taxation. And more than half J.B. Pritzker and Oregon Gov. of those tax savings would go to Kate Brown. households earning $1 million The SALT cap is a prime fo- or more, according to the com- cus for several Democrats in mittee. Congress, who’ve said they won’t Alternatives to full repeal, such support Biden’s tax hikes to fund as raising the amount of the lim- his infrastructure proposal un- itation, have also been floated, less the plan includes a repeal of which would be significantly less the cap. costly and also give fewer benefits Rep. Lee Zeldin, who rep- to the richest Americans. resents a Long Island, New York, The debate about how to ad- district and is a close ally of for- dress SALT is likely to increase mer President Donald Trump, is in the coming weeks, with Biden one of the few Republicans who set to introduce a second eco- also support repealing the SALT nomic agenda proposal focusing cap. on social welfare paid for by tax House Speaker Nancy Pelosi increases on the wealthy. Even if on Thursday signaled support SALT isn’t addressed in Biden’s for a move to put a repeal of the plan, it’s likely to be hotly debated cap in the infrastructure and when the bill is being negotiated social-spending program. She in the House. BY YUEQI YANG Bloomberg News $88.7 billion Zach Urness/(Salem) Statesman Journal file Elowah Falls, in the Columbia River Gorge near Dodson, in an archive photo. The water- fall drops 289 feet. NO ACCESS Rockslide wipes out footbridge at Elowah Falls BY JANET EASTMAN The Oregonian A large rockslide at the base of Elowah Falls in the Columbia River Gorge has added to the inaccessibility of one of the most beau- tiful and secluded waterfalls in the area, which continues to recover from the 2017 Eagle Creek Fire. Steve Kruger, Trailkeepers of Ore- gon‘s executive director, said Saturday the area is closed to the public until further notice and there’s no access to Gorge Trail 400 to Elowah Falls and the Upper McCord Creek Falls Trail. Kruger said that Trailkeepers vol- unteer Drew Stock was scouting for sites for upcoming trail work parties and a weekend training program for new volunteers on Friday when he was stopped by rocks and debris, which wiped out a footbridge that crosses the 213-foot waterfall along McCord Creek. The rocks and debris completely buried a section of trail and was “enough to fill about three dump trucks,” according to Kruger. “Only a part of the bridge handrail could be seen above debris,” he said. The rockslide did not dam McCord Creek, so water won’t affect the His- toric Columbia River Highway State Trail or Interstate 84, he said. Trailkeepers of Oregon will watch how the debris settles and will work with Oregon State Parks to conduct restoration work, realign the trail or find another solution, Kruger said. The debris will have to be moved by hand because of its location, said Clay Courtright of Oregon State Parks. He said the area has not yet been fully as- sessed and is not safe for visitors. The closure adds to a list of road- blocks spring hikers face in the gorge. A landslide has closed part of the Historic Columbia River Highway, for example. And the John B. Yeon parking area, which offers access to the Elowah Falls trailhead, was closed intermittently in March because of frequent landslides that dumped mud, water, rocks and debris onto the highway. Other exits on I-84 were also intermittently closed. Kruger said that although the rock- slide discovered Friday is separate from ongoing landslides, the area, part of the John B. Yeon State Scenic Cor- ridor, is still fragile after being severely burned in the Eagle Creek fire. The scenic corridor had reopened to the public in January for the first time since the 2017 fire. Due to landslides, the scenic corri- dor is now only accessible by taking the Historic Columbia River Highway State Trail west from the Toothrock Trailhead by foot or bike, according to updates on the Oregon State Parks website. ‘Hundreds’ of pounds of marijuana, guns, cash seized in Lane County The Oregonian Sheriff’s deputies seized a mas- sive amount of drugs, more than a dozen guns and tens of thou- sands in cash after they raided a large-scale production facility in Lane County, officials said. The Lane County Sheriff’s Of- fice responded to reports of a sto- len vehicle on Thursday outside of the town of Elmira, about 15 miles west of Eugene. While deputies were investigat- ing the vehicle, they came upon a large butane marijuana hash oil extraction lab, officials said. These types of labs, which are illegal in Oregon unless the operator has a license, can be dangerous because of the potential for explosions as- sociated with butane. Investigators obtained a search warrant for the rest of the prop- erty and another address in nearby Veneta. They discovered a home that was being used en- tirely for the cultivation of sus- pected psilocybin mushrooms. Between the two properties, deputies seized 16 firearms, one of which was stolen; a “large amount of cash, packaged in $10,000 bundles; more than 450 bags of psilocybin mushrooms; more than 20 pounds of finished hash oil extract; “hundreds” of pounds of dried marijuana; and a stolen truck. “Several people were contacted on the property and identified,” the sheriff’s office said, but no ar- rests were made.