A8 The BulleTin • Friday, april 30, 2021 Star Wars Recovery Continued from A7 Continued from A7 These changes are among several ways the state’s health protocols are altering how theme park fans experience their favorite attractions. The state guidelines that al- lowed theme parks to reopen this month include rules that are designed to reduce the time parkgoers spend doing things in close proximity to strangers, such as standing in queues or inside poorly ven- tilated areas. For that reason, the rules limit the parks’ over- all capacity and require that all queues be outdoors and that indoor rides last no longer than 15 minutes. Over the last couple of de- cades, major theme parks such as Disneyland and Universal Studios Hollywood had leaned the opposite way, investing heavily to make rides’ long lines more tolerable by moving them indoors. That protects visitors from the weather and creates an opportunity to fill the space with entertainment to enhance the theme of the ride. The parks “spent millions of dollars and thousands of hours designing all the stuff in those queues,” said Martin Lewison, a business administration pro- fessor and theme park expert from Farmingdale State Col- lege in New York. Now, where possible, the parks are shortening or elim- inating the indoor queues in- stead of shortening the rides. At Universal Studios Hol- lywood, which also reopened this month, one of the most popular rides — Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey — takes place primarily inside what resembles the enchanted Hogwarts castle. During the indoor queue, parkgoers stroll past statues of wizards and lis- ten to dialogue coming from moving paintings, animated creatures and 3D projections. To reduce the time spent inside, Universal Studios is sending visitors into the queue in what Senior Vice President of Operations Scott Strobl de- scribed as “pulses” of 15 to 20 people at a time, with short breaks in between. In March, employers added 916,000 jobs — the biggest burst of hiring since August. Meantime, retail spending has surged, manufacturing output is up and consumer confidence has reached its highest point since the pandemic began. “We are seeing all the en- gines of the economy rev up,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at Oxford Eco- nomics. “We have an improv- ing health environment, fiscal stimulus remains abundant and we are starting to see re- bounding employment.” For all the U.S. economy’s gains, it still has a long way to go. More than 8 million jobs remain lost to the pandemic. And the recovery remains sharply uneven: Most col- Rent Continued from A7 However, it could take up to two months for those land- lords to receive the money as local public housing authori- ties finalize the grants. The state approved the grants despite a rocky rollout to the program and techni- cal issues with the online ap- plication portal that initially prevented landlords from submitting required docu- ments with their applications. lege-educated and white collar employees have been able to work from home over the past year. Many have even built up savings and expanded their wealth from rising home val- ues and a record-setting stock market, which has rocketed more than 80% from March of last year. By contrast, job cuts have fallen heavily on low-wage workers, racial minorities and people without college ed- ucations. In addition, many women, especially working mothers, have had to leave the workforce to care for children. A major reason for the brightening expectations is the record-level federal spending that is poised to flow into the economy. A $1.9 trillion package that Presi- dent Joe Biden got through Congress in March provided, Applications for the first round opened in February, but the technical issues led to major processing delays. Those technical issues forced the state to delay the second round. Applications for the second round open at 10 a.m. Thursday and close at 5 p.m. May 17. Landlords can seek funding to cover 80% of outstanding rent accumulated between April 2020 and May 2021. The state plans to make $70 million available during the second round. Lynne W. Haley of Prineville, OR Opal I. Wonser of Bend, OR June 18, 1926 - April 10, 2021 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Red- mond is honored to serve the family. 541-504-9485 Memories and condolenc- es may be expressed to the family on our website at www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A graveside service will take place at Eagle Point National Cemetery in Ea- gle Point, OR on Thursday, May 6, 2021 at 1:00 PM. Aug 1, 1936 - April 26, 2021 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.au- tumnfunerals.net Services: Graveside services will be held on Tue., May 4 at 1 PM at Pilot Butte Ceme- tery, Bend OBITUARY DEADLINE Call to ask about our deadlines 541-385-5809 among other rescue aid, $1,400 stimulus payments to most adults. The Federal Reserve’s ul- tra-low interest-rate policy, designed to encourage bor- rowing and spending, has provided significant support, too. In fact, the economy is expected to expand so fast that some economists have raised concerns that it could ignite inflation. As more business restric- tions are lifted and more peo- ple venture out to shop and eat out, companies that serve them are benefiting. McDon- ald’s, for example, posted a sharp jump in revenue last quarter — even surpassing the same period in 2019, long before the pandemic flattened the economy. Likewise, most major tech companies have reported impressive earnings. Bees Continued from A7 “Then the 80,000 honey bee colonies in (Oregon) don’t have a lot to go to.” According to the Califor- nia Farm Bureau, beekeepers statewide are worried about diminishing food sources. Experts say it’s import- ant for bees to have access to late-blooming plants through August when the landscape is dry and brown. Jacob, the beekeeper, said he’s prepared to do what- ever it takes to feed his bees through the drought, includ- ing feeding syrup. But this is expensive, and when bee- keepers across the sector do so, it can drive up hive rental costs for farmers. Tucker Pyne, owner of the Lucky Elk Farm in Rogue River, is one farmer Jacob works with. Pyne runs a small organic farm producing hemp, vegetables, fruit and meat. Pyne uses cover cropping systems — a rare practice in the hemp sector, according to experts. He said his primary goal is to enrich his soil, and supporting pollinators is just a secondary benefit. “The main reason why I use cover crops is to build organic matter in the soil,” Pyne said. Pyne uses several cover cropping methods: rotating fields, inter-seeding directly into his crops and planting in the aisles. His cover crops include sunflowers and buck- wheat, which bloom through August. “It provides tremendous food for pollinators, and it’s beautiful — very Insta- gram-friendly,” he said.