The BulleTin • Thursday, May 6, 2021 A13 Masks Continued from A11 It also mandates that businesses make sure peo- ple aren’t within 6 feet of each other — unless that’s not practical for certain ac- tivities. The agency said it would be considered if the rule can be repealed, starting no later than July. Besides mask and dis- tancing requirements, the rule — which also includes requirements and guide- lines regarding airflow, ven- tilation, employee notifica- tion in case of an outbreak and sanitation protocols — dovetails with separate actions and restrictions by Gov. Kate Brown, the latest being increased county risk levels. Buyers Continued from A11 Parmon tells her local cli- ents, some of whom have lost out after a dozen offers to buy, that if they can stick with it, they will eventually purchase a home. Interest in suburban living, with larger homes on larger lots, had been growing for years, said real estate profes- sionals, but the coronavirus amplified the desire for more size, comfort and livability as well as space to entertain outside and replace vacation getaways while remaining so- cially distant. “The coronavirus has fun- damentally changed how you view your house,” said Israel Hill, the office leader of John L. Scott Real Estate’s Portland Northeast office. “Before COVID-19, people wanted to walk to get coffee, delicious food and join activ- ities like movies in the park. Now that people are working, home schooling and cooking at home, they wish they had a backyard to hang out in.” He said less populated ar- eas, including suburbs and second-home markets like Paycheck Protection Program runs out of money BY JOYCE M. ROSENBERG Associated Press NEW YORK — The govern- ment’s key COVID-19 relief program for small businesses has run out of money. The Small Business Admin- istration said Wednesday that the Paycheck Protection Pro- gram has been exhausted. As of Sunday, the program PPP had given out nearly 10.8 mil- lion loans worth more than $780 billion since April of last year. The program, which has run out of cash and refunded by Congress twice before, was scheduled to expire May 31. It’s not yet known if lawmakers will approve another round of funding. Bend, continue to tempt peo- ple who can work remotely. Danielle Snow, a broker with John L. Scott in Bend, said an influx of out-of-state buyers willing to make a fast offer and pay over asking price have made a tight mar- ket more difficult for locals. She ticks off recent Bend deals: • A four-bedroom town- home listed at $699,000 sold for $774,277 — $75,277 over the asking price — after six days on the market. Snow’s clients, who are Oregon resi- dents, were in the backup po- sition for the home, but they didn’t get it. • A three-bedroom town- house with riverfront and Cascade mountain views was listed for $2,175,000 and sold for $2,260,000 after four days on the market, $85,000 over asking price. Snow’s clients from Seattle couldn’t get to Bend fast enough to make an offer, she said. • A 2,715-square-foot, sin- gle-level house on the eighth fairway in Awbrey Glen was listed for $1,149,000 on March 24. It went pending three days later and closed on April 9 for $1,200,500. The SBA said in a statement it will still fund applications that have been approved. New applications made through Community Financial Insti- tutions, which are financial lenders that serve underserved communities, would also be funded. More than half the loans and nearly a third of the loan money were distributed this year. The average loan size was $46,000, less than half the $101,000 average loan in 2020. That is a sign that smaller com- panies unable to get loans last year were now getting funding. Companies have been drawn to the loans because they promised forgiveness if the money is used for payroll and Buyers from California paid $51,000 over asking price, Snow said. Another of Snow’s out-of- state clients bought a house in Bend after a video walk- through; they have yet to see the property in person even though it’s now being signifi- cantly remodeled. Snow calls Bend the “As- pen of Oregon,” and said it’s attractive to city “stress ca- dets” who want to be closer to nature and enjoy a more hectic lifestyle. Bend was once a place where people retired, she said. Now more tech com- pany employees are mov- ing to Bend, Redmond and Prineville, which was a “cow town,” she said, before Apple and Facebook invested bil- lions of dollars in data cen- ters there. But not every residential property is selling fast. The price has to be right, said Snow, who has been selling property for 40 years but said pricing a property is chal- lenging in the current mar- ket. Her approach: “Start at a number and the market will tell you if it’s too much.” other essentials. But, while the Paycheck Pro- tection Program helped save many companies devastated by the pandemic, the Biden administration has estimated that more than 400,000 U.S. businesses have permanently closed due to the virus. More aid is still available to small businesses through SBA Economic Injury Disas- ter Loans, and restaurants with no more than 20 locations can apply for grants through the Restaurant Revitalization Fund that began accepting applica- tions on Monday. Help is also available to owners of theaters and other entertainment com- panies under the Shuttered Venues Operator Grants. Wind Continued from A11 “This is a community of sur- vivors, forgotten by the world and ever shrinking, but not going anywhere anytime soon. And lately we are feeling rather betrayed by our neighbors in the Tri Cities,” Wiley wrote. “Shame on you for condemn- ing construction on a ridge while hoping to someday build a mansion on the very same hill. Shame on you for being this upset about something that, at very most, would be a slight change to your back- yard view. Because this same thing would be an absolute, life-changing blessing to your neighboring community.” Wiley’s letter, published on- line and in several newspapers, drew hundreds of responses that offered stark evidence of the fault lines that have opened up in Benton County over this project in the Horse Heaven Hills. “People were either very supportive or like, ‘I hope you go broke and your family starves,’” Wiley said. “I defi- nitely had a target on my back.” The project was put together by Boulder, Colorado-based Evan Vucci/AP file President Joe Biden speaks after signing the PPP Extension Act on March 30. The Small Business Administration said Wednesday the Pay- check Protection Program has been exhausted. As of Sunday, the PPP had given out nearly 10.8 million loans worth more than $780 billion since April of last year. Scout Clean Energy, which is owned by Quinbrook Infra- structure Partners, a global pri- vate equity firm. As proposed, Scout could erect up to 244 wind turbines spaced across a 24-mile swath of the upper elevations of the Horse Heaven Hills, a long, prominent ridgeline — formed of volcanic basalt — in the Co- lumbia River basin to the south and west of the Tri-Cities. The wind turbines’ height, for the preferred model as measured from ground to blade tip, would rise up to 496 feet. Some could tower 671 feet, taller than the Space Needle. The project also would in- clude several solar sites that could eventually cover more than 6,500 acres, as well as a battery complex to store and then release some electricity in the evening when demand may be stronger. Running at full capacity, the project could produce up to 1,150 megawatts of power. With the up-and- down nature of solar and wind power, the project would op- erate over the course of a year at well below half that capacity. Still, the output is expected to generate enough electricity for some 275,000 homes. Proponents say it is the kind of project needed to help Washington meet the require- ments of a 2019 law that calls for ending by 2045 electricity production from coal and gas unless some way is found to capture planet-warming car- bon emissions. This epic change is expected to contribute to a regional build-out of tens of thousands of megawatts of new zero-car- bon energy generation by midcentury, according to Ben Kujala, director of power plan- ning with the Northwest Power and Conservation Council. The Scout project does not yet have contracts with util- ities that will use the power, but expects to put in bids to deliver electricity to Seattle City Light, Puget Sound En- ergy, Portland General Elec- tric and other regional utili- ties. The utilities benefit from the region’s abundant low-car- bon hydropower, but forecast a need for additional renew- able resources in the years ahead. “We have a resource gap. And we want to be part of the puzzle in meeting that,” said Javon Smith, a Scout spokes- person.