A12 The BulleTin • Thursday, april 8, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY FRIDAY TONIGHT HIGH 51° LOW 26° Cooler with sunshine and some clouds Partly sunny, pleasant and warmer ALMANAC MONDAY 57° 24° Cooler with some sun TUESDAY 59° 27° Mostly sunny and milder Mostly sunny Yesterday Normal Record 66° 55° 77° in 1996 34° 30° 13° in 1908 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.45" in 1960 Month to date (normal) 0.00" (0.17") Year to date (normal) 1.18" (3.52") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29.99" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Today Fri. 6:34am/7:41pm 6:32am/7:42pm 5:38am/4:22pm 6:01am/5:26pm 6:21am/6:40pm 6:21am/6:47pm 6:48am/7:55pm 6:46am/7:58pm 9:29am/1:07am 9:28am/1:06am 4:37am/2:53pm 4:34am/2:50pm 4:04am/1:47pm 4:00am/1:43pm 7:24am/9:25pm 7:20am/9:21pm First Full Last Apr 11 Apr 19 Apr 26 May 3 Tonight's sky: Above the eastern horizon before sunrise are the stars Vega, Deneb and Altair of the Summer Triangle. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 2 5 6 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: Rain and drizzle in the morning, then turning partly sunny. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Clouds and a morn- ing snow shower then some afternoon sun. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Clouds and a morning fl urry, then some afternoon sunshine. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Clouds and sun today. Fair and cold tonight. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: A rain or snow shower in the morning, then partly sunny in the afternoon. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Clouds and a morning fl urry, then some afternoon sunshine. SKI REPORT EAST: Clouds and sun, breezy and cooler Thursday; a few showers in the north. Fair and cold at night. Seaside 51/34 Cannon Beach 50/34 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the Base 80-80 0-95 53-70 97-112 0-222 66-91 0-189 0-45 48-69 55-90 0-105 45-58 42-71 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 Cruises Continued from A11 American Queen is back in business with two boats-the American Countess and the smaller, 166-passenger Amer- ican Duchess-both operating since mid-March with reduced capacity to allow for social dis- tancing and comply with the 250-person limit. Its competi- tor American Cruise Lines also returned to the Mississippi on March 21, and plans to have three boats on the river in April. These include a new, modern, 190-passenger riverboat and two small paddle-wheelers. All will sail at limited capacity, with a vaccine required for depar- tures through April 30. After that, the company plans to only require negative PCR tests. If the CDC allows it, Wag- goner hopes to add the opulent American Queen, the world’s largest paddleboat — which can carry more than 420 passen- gers — by the end of May. All three vessels sail the Mississippi and some tributaries: the Ohio, Cumberland, and Tennessee rivers. A fourth riverboat may soon traverse the Columbia and Snake rivers in Washington and Oregon, following the route of 19th-century explorers Lewis and Clark, pending negotia- tions with those state govern- ments. Waggoner said the numbers at American Queen Steamboat are running ahead of 2019 lev- els. The company saw signifi- cant upticks in January, on the heels of the U.S. vaccine rollout, and again in February, when it announced a requirement that guests, crew, and even bus driv- Nike Continued from A11 Two of them are enormous — a 1-million-square-foot office build- ing named after tennis star Serena Williams and a 450,000-square-foot merchandising center. A large park- ing structure and a new fitness center rounded out the project. Nike declined to address whether the claims by its contractors are valid. “A project of this size and scope in- volves complexity,” the company said in a statement. ”We are committed to seeing through the successful comple- tion of our expansion. But as we have Prescriptions Continued from A11 Maryland was the first — and so far only — state to pass a comparable version of the pricing board law, although it only covered public employers and the board must get per- mission from legislative leaders on any payment limit, accord- ing to the health news organi- zation Stat. The board’s price control authority takes effect in 2022. In Maryland, the push to control drug prices got a boost from a billionaire Texas cou- ple, John and Laura Arnold, through their funding of Today Hi/Lo/W 86/63/s 80/56/t 70/47/pc 77/47/s 23/5/sn 74/63/t 57/47/s 91/65/s 68/50/pc 61/32/sh 80/60/t 69/37/pc 53/30/s 55/45/pc 61/44/pc 80/55/pc 69/49/pc 59/42/c 83/61/pc 81/59/pc 76/57/t 63/30/s 65/50/sh 67/52/t 81/57/t 69/39/s 52/44/sh 83/60/pc 75/63/t 75/53/t 66/39/c 88/71/pc 85/65/pc 68/53/t 68/37/s 55/46/c 74/54/t 46/43/r 88/62/s 10/-19/c 48/38/r 67/31/s 73/51/t 63/47/sh 79/58/t 71/50/pc 70/44/pc 50/28/pc 80/68/pc 87/69/pc 78/57/c 66/51/t 82/63/c 84/59/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 48/42/c 63/45/pc 72/61/pc 94/66/pc 92/78/sh 67/44/pc 72/58/s 46/36/sh 66/50/c 48/24/sh 80/70/pc 86/68/s 83/56/s 41/25/sn 87/77/pc 49/35/c 50/32/c 56/32/s 79/54/c 78/68/c 51/39/r 70/55/s 73/54/pc 75/67/c 69/56/t 52/40/c 66/46/t 93/78/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 91/49/s 76/56/t 68/48/pc 72/41/s 17/4/s 76/61/t 55/51/c 91/61/t 59/52/c 55/37/s 79/63/t 54/23/c 62/38/s 60/48/pc 56/46/pc 71/53/sh 72/51/pc 62/36/pc 79/62/c 78/60/t 79/61/t 45/27/pc 61/48/c 76/59/pc 77/56/pc 55/31/s 76/49/pc 80/60/t 76/61/t 76/57/pc 69/43/pc 88/69/pc 86/55/t 74/58/c 52/31/s 62/45/pc 72/52/t 52/40/r 85/53/s 7/-23/pc 49/30/c 67/29/s 63/47/c 55/47/r 73/57/t 59/51/sh 69/48/pc 60/35/pc 81/66/s 86/68/c 79/62/t 74/56/c 83/65/t 83/63/c 45/32/1.56 73/54/0.00 68/59/0.03 93/63/0.00 91/79/0.02 70/45/0.00 77/66/0.00 44/32/0.11 66/52/0.04 47/23/0.22 81/72/0.00 82/64/0.00 92/68/0.00 61/32/0.00 84/77/0.00 46/32/0.14 44/29/0.00 43/32/0.03 77/57/0.00 78/71/0.00 66/52/0.00 78/64/0.00 66/54/0.04 80/68/0.00 72/52/0.00 44/28/0.00 68/41/0.00 90/76/0.00 51/39/sh 59/44/s 71/64/c 98/65/pc 94/79/pc 66/42/pc 68/55/t 54/38/c 63/50/c 59/37/s 74/68/r 86/65/s 77/52/s 51/27/pc 87/78/pc 45/28/sh 46/25/sh 62/42/c 79/55/s 74/69/r 51/39/pc 63/50/s 76/56/s 75/67/pc 66/56/t 53/39/sh 60/47/t 93/79/pc A midday passage through The Dalles Dam has SS Legacy pas- sengers on deck to watch as their vessel is elevated by a navigation lock to continue up the Columbia River in 2016. Barb Gonzalez/for The Bulletin, file ers be vaccinated for sailings, starting in July, he said. “We’re excited with our sales momen- tum.” For trips before July, guests done throughout this project, we will refrain from sharing details related to costs and contracts.” “We’re excited to create an environ- ment that fosters creativity and collab- oration among our teammates and an expanded campus footprint that cel- ebrates the magic of sport,” the com- pany added. The buildings have sat mostly empty since their completion due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Like most companies, Nike sent its workers home and tried to adjust to a virtual workplace last spring when the virus first hit Oregon. Nike has never divulged the full health reform advocacy, Stat reported. The Arnolds are also lending financial support to the Oregon proposal, accord- ing to registered lobbyist and former state House speaker Dave Hunt. Hunt represents a coalition of public employee unions, health insurance and health care companies, AARP Oregon and OSPIRG. Oregon lawmakers’ proposal for the price control board comes three years after legis- lators passed a landmark drug price transparency law. Pru- sak said Senate Bill 844 is the logical next step. If the plan passes, “somebody can actually control the cost if the increase Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 78/54/0.00 Akron 82/56/0.00 Albany 67/34/0.00 Albuquerque 70/42/0.00 Anchorage 30/14/0.00 Atlanta 81/57/0.00 Atlantic City 65/49/0.08 Austin 85/69/Tr Baltimore 78/48/0.00 Billings 64/36/0.00 Birmingham 82/59/0.00 Bismarck 63/26/0.00 Boise 71/40/0.00 Boston 58/46/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 64/41/0.00 Buffalo 73/45/0.02 Burlington, VT 63/41/0.00 Caribou, ME 61/44/0.00 Charleston, SC 85/56/0.00 Charlotte 86/47/0.00 Chattanooga 82/52/0.00 Cheyenne 55/31/Tr Chicago 82/60/Tr Cincinnati 81/54/0.00 Cleveland 79/57/0.00 Colorado Springs 62/32/Tr Columbia, MO 69/62/1.16 Columbia, SC 86/54/0.00 Columbus, GA 80/51/0.00 Columbus, OH 81/53/0.00 Concord, NH 67/30/0.00 Corpus Christi 82/71/Tr Dallas 80/62/0.00 Dayton 81/60/0.00 Denver 62/33/0.00 Des Moines 75/63/1.30 Detroit 81/53/0.00 Duluth 44/42/0.44 El Paso 83/53/0.00 Fairbanks 19/14/0.00 Fargo 50/43/0.35 Flagstaff 68/23/0.00 Grand Rapids 80/56/Tr Green Bay 76/46/0.02 Greensboro 83/51/0.00 Harrisburg 75/51/0.00 Hartford, CT 71/38/0.00 Helena 69/31/0.00 Honolulu 80/68/0.02 Houston 84/72/Tr Huntsville 80/56/0.00 Indianapolis 79/57/0.23 Jackson, MS 82/60/0.10 Jacksonville 83/49/0.00 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. 38/30/0.06 65/58/0.56 80/54/0.00 87/56/0.00 79/55/0.00 50/47/0.06 71/64/0.34 73/55/0.00 83/59/0.37 78/55/Tr 78/67/0.79 81/62/0.00 75/56/0.29 74/55/0.46 82/58/0.00 81/67/0.00 72/51/0.00 71/49/Tr 78/52/0.00 69/48/Tr 53/50/0.54 82/56/0.00 97/63/0.00 75/59/0.03 70/50/Tr 92/62/0.00 81/54/0.00 60/37/0.00 64/39/0.00 86/50/0.00 58/32/0.18 70/37/0.00 84/47/0.00 66/48/Tr 71/46/0.00 77/66/0.64 64/37/0.00 94/71/0.00 73/56/0.00 59/50/0.00 62/50/0.00 70/30/0.00 83/53/0.00 48/42/0.04 52/46/0.62 55/38/0.00 70/63/0.83 82/63/0.00 88/55/0.00 71/54/0.03 83/53/0.00 50/46/0.02 58/31/0.00 96/64/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 37/34/sn 53/42/sh 73/52/t 86/61/s 69/52/t 54/38/sh 75/55/pc 77/56/s 72/54/t 63/47/sh 73/59/pc 82/68/s 59/47/sh 63/49/sh 74/55/pc 82/70/t 67/47/s 66/47/s 66/55/pc 78/53/s 50/42/r 86/60/s 96/66/s 57/47/sh 70/48/pc 92/65/s 79/53/t 57/43/pc 62/42/pc 79/59/t 68/35/s 69/37/s 70/52/pc 77/54/pc 74/45/s 57/50/sh 65/34/s 94/65/pc 70/56/pc 60/50/pc 66/46/pc 74/37/pc 83/59/pc 54/37/pc 50/41/r 51/30/s 64/50/r 81/66/s 90/59/pc 77/54/s 69/51/pc 74/45/pc 58/28/s 96/61/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 39/27/c 73/46/s 68/50/c 82/59/s 77/58/pc 68/43/pc 74/58/t 76/55/pc 82/60/pc 56/45/sh 79/61/s 83/71/s 57/46/c 55/42/r 82/60/t 83/72/t 61/48/c 60/49/c 68/57/c 75/43/t 66/43/pc 87/63/pc 96/66/pc 66/48/c 60/51/c 93/63/s 75/54/t 59/44/pc 64/45/pc 77/60/t 50/25/pc 71/39/s 67/54/c 68/50/sh 74/43/s 79/54/pc 56/39/s 94/65/pc 70/56/pc 59/49/pc 64/44/pc 71/33/s 78/62/sh 51/38/c 59/36/pc 53/34/c 75/47/pc 84/68/s 89/58/s 77/45/t 61/54/c 72/41/pc 62/37/c 95/57/pc 102/74/0.00 76/50/0.04 61/41/0.00 50/35/0.15 79/61/0.00 78/58/0.00 97/75/0.00 67/48/0.00 45/32/0.00 64/36/0.00 48/30/0.00 81/72/0.04 55/37/0.00 79/49/0.00 75/64/0.00 48/34/0.04 68/41/0.00 63/49/0.33 90/79/0.00 46/32/0.06 75/65/0.32 75/61/0.00 83/64/0.00 63/48/0.00 63/43/0.00 47/45/0.14 40/32/0.12 39/28/0.19 101/69/s 78/56/pc 66/44/pc 43/33/r 80/60/t 80/67/s 94/67/pc 66/45/pc 43/36/r 68/45/pc 54/37/s 82/71/s 56/34/s 71/46/s 78/61/s 40/31/pc 66/40/s 67/47/pc 87/76/t 45/34/s 75/63/sh 79/64/c 71/60/pc 60/49/pc 66/51/pc 50/39/pc 48/29/c 45/31/sn 100/71/s 79/55/pc 70/48/s 48/35/pc 81/61/t 81/70/s 96/69/pc 59/40/c 46/29/sn 69/48/pc 63/48/c 83/71/s 60/47/pc 73/43/s 81/61/s 44/37/r 66/43/s 66/49/s 90/77/t 47/33/c 81/62/pc 66/65/r 70/62/pc 59/44/sh 63/48/sh 47/38/r 62/35/pc 52/37/c INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 100° at Zapata, TX National low: 14° at Alamosa, CO Precipitation: 1.72" at Alexandria, MN In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 Hoodoo Ski Area 0 Mt. Ashland 0 Mt. Bachelor 0 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 1 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Squaw Valley, CA 0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Sun Valley, ID 0 Plenty of sunshine 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 49/42/0.08 50/34/pc 50/38/c La Grande 66/33/0.00 46/24/pc 64/35/pc Portland 52/42/0.01 56/36/pc 60/41/c Baker City 69/17/0.00 50/21/pc 63/29/pc La Pine 63/23/0.00 48/23/pc 59/28/pc Prineville 64/23/0.00 53/22/pc 59/33/pc Brookings 51/44/0.00 55/39/c 52/39/s Medford 70/38/0.00 61/35/c 67/37/s Redmond 68/24/0.00 52/20/pc 65/29/pc Newport 50/37/0.01 49/33/pc 49/39/c Roseburg 57/41/0.00 58/32/c 62/38/s Burns 69/19/0.00 52/18/s 65/29/s Eugene 54/41/0.00 56/31/pc 59/39/pc North Bend 54/45/Tr 52/36/pc 52/41/pc Salem 51/36/0.00 55/32/pc 58/39/c Klamath Falls 64/25/0.00 56/22/pc 65/29/pc Ontario 74/29/0.00 58/27/pc 65/34/s Sisters 61/27/0.00 51/22/pc 63/33/pc Lakeview 65/21/Tr 56/23/pc 66/28/s Pendleton 65/37/0.00 53/28/pc 63/38/c The Dalles 56/38/Tr 56/32/pc 61/41/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 67° 29° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 59/29 Rufus Hermiston 51/31 58/29 55/33 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 58/32 56/30 56/36 44/22 Wasco 43/19 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: A shower Tillamook 42/19 52/31 53/28 Sandy 56/32 McMinnville or two early Thursday, 50/30 Joseph Heppner La Grande 53/32 Maupin Government 55/33 then clouds giving way 46/24 41/20 Camp 52/29 Condon 49/30 Union Lincoln City to sun, breezy and 48/28 40/21 47/23 Salem 48/35 Spray cooler. Fair and cold Granite Warm Springs 55/32 Madras 53/26 Albany 40/18 at night. Newport Baker City 53/24 54/25 Mitchell 49/33 52/30 50/21 WEST: A morning Camp Sherman 49/28 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity shower, then partly 49/23 52/20 52/32 Day Prineville 46/20 sunny and cool Thurs- 48/36 Ontario Sisters 53/22 Paulina 49/27 58/27 day. Mostly clear and Florence Eugene 51/22 Bend Brothers 49/22 Vale chilly Thursday night. 51/35 56/31 51/26 47/22 Sunriver 58/27 Nyssa 49/24 Hampton Cottage La Pine 58/26 Juntura Oakridge Grove 48/23 49/23 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 55/23 51/31 55/32 Fort Rock 51/34 52/18 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 51/19 50/20 High: 74° 47/21 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Ontario Beaver Frenchglen Silver 51/37 58/32 52/19 50/24 Low: 17° Marsh Lake 53/24 Port Orford 49/21 53/19 at Baker City Grants Burns Junction Paisley 53/40 Pass 55/22 Chiloquin 56/25 62/34 Rome Medford 53/21 Gold Beach 61/35 56/23 53/41 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 56/25 58/35 56/22 55/23 55/39 56/23 -10s 65° 25° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Astoria 50/34 WEDNESDAY Mostly sunny and pleasant OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Rise/Set Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus New SUNDAY 46° 21° 65° 32° Clear and colder Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SATURDAY are required to take a PCR test during a one-night pre-cruise hotel stay that’s included in the price of eight-night sailings that start at $2,000 per person. price tag. But in its lien filed on Feb. 23 with the Washington County Re- corder’s Office, Hoffman revealed its original contract was for $433 million. Nike has already paid $410 million to Hoffman, the documents indicate. But the contractor insists it is owed another $48 million. The new structures were not your standard concrete tilt-up suburban office buildings. They are full of wild angles, vibrant color and unusual shapes. Architecture critics may love the daring look, but they proved chal- lenging to build. Construction liens are not unusual. As a project proceeds, clients often decide to make changes or various problems can arise that lead to delay and unexpected cost. In such cases, the parties have to negotiate whether subcontractors should be paid more or held to the initial contract. If the two sides can’t come to an agreement, contractors can file a con- struction lien against their client’s property. A construction lien can pressure the property owner because it creates uncertainty that makes sell- ing or refinancing a property difficult to impossible. But to have claims this large from this array of contractors is definitely uncommon. Oregon lawmakers’ proposal for the price control board comes three years after legislators passed a landmark drug price transparency law. Rep. Rachel Prusak, a Democrat from West Linn, said Senate Bill 844 is the logical next step. isn’t warranted,” Prusak said. “If (drug makers) can present their case that it’s warranted, I can’t imagine there’s a prob- lem.” Drug price data collected thus far by the state illustrates some of the limits of how much that approach has af- fected costs. In 2018, the Legislature passed with strong bipartisan support a law that requires Waggoner said he expects most passengers, a demographic that tends to be age 65 and up, will have already been vaccinated. Shots were a big factor in the company’s decision to get back on the river. “We’re like a family busi- ness,” Waggoner said. “I had to ask myself: When am I com- fortable? When would my wife be comfortable? Our family is rushing to get the vaccine and start cruising again.” Ports such as Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Natchez, Mis- sissippi, have been anxious for drug companies to report to the state any net annual price increase of 10% for prescrip- tion drugs that cost more than $100 a month. There is also a reporting requirement for new drugs that cost more than $670 a month. And under a second drug price reporting law the Legislature passed in 2019, companies must notify the state 60 days in advance if they expect annual price increases 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 the riverboats to get back in business. About 30,000 peo- ple sailed the Mississippi and its tributaries with American Queen Steamboat Co. in 2019 for an estimated impact of around $40 million in key river markets. To show Louisiana’s support, Lt, Gov. Billy Nung- esser was among the dignitaries attending the christening of the American Countess on March 21. During the pandemic, Amer- ican Queen Steamboat Co. laid off some 700 employees, Wag- goner said. About a third have been hired back, a number that will increase as more ships re- sume cruising. “A lot of people have been waiting for us to turn on the ‘We’re Open’ sign,” he said. “Right now we’re about where we should be.” Hoffman was the general contrac- tor on this job, meaning it managed all the other subcontractors. The Portland firm’s long partner- ship with Nike has helped it become the largest construction company based in the Northwest. Hoffman officials said they couldn’t talk about the matter at this time. Other companies to file construc- tion liens on Nike since the first of the year include: Culver Glass, $7.7 million; Performance Contracting, $13.4 million; Siemens, $4.2 million; Western States Fire Protection Co., $1.78 million; and Dynalectric, $13.2 million. of at least 10% or $10,000 for brand name drugs and at least 25% or $300 for generic phar- maceuticals. Proponents of the 2018 law described it as a first step to understand what drives increases in prescription drug prices. State regulators summed up the first two years of drug pricing data in annual reports which contain some interesting findings. The phar- maceutical industry has sued in federal court to overturn the laws, but in the meantime they remain in effect. In 2020, “drug manufactur- ers submitted 70% fewer price increase reports to the state” than in 2019, according to the Department of Consumer and Business Services. “The rea- sons for this trend are unclear … One explanation suggested by the data is that manufac- turers are spreading price in- creases more widely across their portfolio of drugs to avoid triggering transparency requirements.” Pharmaceutical makers in- creased prices in 2020 on drugs that had been profitable in 2019, the state found. There was an average 2019 profit mar- gin of 19% for drugs with 2020 price increases high enough to trigger reporting requirements, according to the state.