A7 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 7, 2021 p DOW 34,548.53 +318.19 BRIEFING Jobless claims fall to a pandemic low The number of Amer- icans seeking unemploy- ment aid fell last week to 498,000, the lowest point since the viral pandemic struck 14 months ago and a sign of the job market’s growing strength as busi- nesses reopen and con- sumers step up spending. Thursday’s report from the Labor Department showed that applications declined 92,000 from a re- vised 590,000 a week ear- lier. The number of weekly jobless claims — a rough measure of the pace of layoffs — has declined significantly from a peak of 900,000 in January as employers have ramped up hiring. At the same time, the pace of applications is still well above the roughly 230,000 level that pre- vailed before the viral outbreak tore through the economy in March of last year. The turnaround has led many businesses to complain that they can’t find enough workers . Some other employers are raising pay to attract ap- plicants. U.S. withdraws Trump-era rule The Labor Department is rescinding a rule that made it harder for gig and contract workers to argue they were entitled to min- imum wage and overtime protections, part of a push to undo Trump-era deci- sions that favored busi- nesses and employers. The withdrawal of the “Independent Contractor” rule, which limited the ability of workers to argue that they were misclassi- fied as contractors when they should have been employees, was expected to become effective on Thursday. Companies have in- creased the use of con- tractors in recent decades in part to lower labor costs. Employees are enti- tled to a range of benefits not afforded to contrac- tors, including a minimum wage and overtime pay. Labor advocates say that many of these work- ers are misclassified, and should be counted as employees. The Labor De- partment has the power to investigate these cases and rectify violations when they are found. p bendbulletin.com/business NASDAQ 13,632.84 +50.42 p S&P 500 4,201.62 +34.03 q 30-YR T-BOND 2.23% -.03 q CRUDE OIL $64.71 -.92 p GOLD $1,815.50 +31.40 p p SILVER $27.46 +.96 Intel says it will build more Oregon factories BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, vis- iting the company’s Hillsboro factories Wednesday, said the company isn’t done expanding in Oregon and expects to add to its local manufacturing foot- print again within the next few years. That’s the first time Intel has indicated that it plans to con- tinue building in Oregon after it wraps up construction of a $3 billion expansion to its D1X re- search factory, which is nearing completion in Hillsboro. Intel develops each new gen- eration of microprocessor in its Oregon factories, then precisely duplicates its manufacturing process at sites in Arizona, Ire- land and Israel. “In another three or four years, I anticipate we’ll have an- other expansion here that we’ll then replicate across the man- ufacturing network,” Gelsinger said in an interview Wednesday with The Oregonian. Before Gelsinger’s hiring in January, Intel had been con- templating outsourcing its ad- vanced manufacturing, which would have permanently di- minished Oregon’s role as the heart of Intel’s research. Now, with Gelsinger leading a global building boom for the company, Intel is going in the opposite direction — planning new factories around the globe. Gelsinger is also expanding into contract manufacturing, offer- ing up Intel factories to build chips for other companies. On Wednesday, Gelsinger said Oregon will get a share of that growth, eventually, and the new jobs and billions of dollars in investment that go along with it. Intel said it still has room to build in Hillsboro; planning documents submit- ted to the city in past years had shown no factory expansion be- yond its current footprint. “This is the hub of our semi- conductor research,” Gelsinger said Wednesday. “It’ll always be that.” In the four months since Intel announced Gelsinger’s hiring, he has embarked on an un- precedented spending spree to expand the company’s factory network after a string of tech- nological failures. And he has campaigned aggressively for government incentives for the chip industry in Europe and the U.S. to reduce reliance on chip factories in Taiwan and South Korea. —Bulletin wire reports See Intel / A8 FLOWER GROWERS SCRAMBLE TO MEET HUGE DEMAND W BY SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press estern U.S. flower growers say demand this spring has reached “exponentially higher” levels. A few days before Mother’s Day, growers across California and Oregon said they were overwhelmed with orders. With COVID restrictions loosening, many antici- pate big sales for events this summer. “There’s definitely an uptick in demand for fresh flowers this year,” said Steve Dionne, ex- ecutive director of the California Association of Flower Growers and Shippers, or CalFlowers. Industry leaders say the American consum- er’s relationship with flowers has also changed. The past year, more shoppers have bought flowers for “ordinary days” rather than just for special occasions — a trend that’s continuing. But flower farmers continue to wrestle with COVID-related challenges, including labor shortages, transportation disruptions and over-consolidation of the industry that will likely result in a flower shortage this year. This spring stands in bold contrast to spring of 2020, which Dionne described as “a time of terror through the industry.” During 2020’s toughest months, the domes- tic flower industry underwent major consoli- dation. Many florists, wholesalers and growers went out of business. Some farmers switched flower acreage to other crops. The industry made a U-turn during the summer as Americans bought more flowers to adorn their homes and give to friends. Flower demand in 2021, growers say, is “ex- ponentially higher.” In the lead-up to Mother’s Day, marketers and florists say they’re seeing record sales. Julie Ortiz, a second-generation flower farmer and sales manager at California com- pany Joseph and Sons Inc., said she’s “fortunate and blessed” customers have recently shown “nonstop interest” in cut flowers. See Flowers / A8 An employee at Joseph and Sons Inc. carries flowers. Productivity at solid 5.4% rate U.S. productivity posted a sharp rebound between January and March af- ter falling in the previous quarter. Labor costs de- clined slightly. Productivity increased at an annual rate of 5.4% in the first quarter, recov- ering from a 3.8% rate of decline in the fourth quar- ter of last year, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Labor costs fell at a 0.3% rate in the first quarter following a 5.6% jump in the fourth. It was the biggest quarterly rise in produc- tivity since an 11.2% surge in the second quarter of last year. That period was skewed because it showed how the tremen- dous speed at which mil- lions of jobs evaporated during the pandemic out- paced even the output of those workers. Productivity is the amount of output per hour of work. The first quarter gain had been expected given that the gross domestic product, the country’s total output of goods and services, had risen by a robust 6.4% rate in the first quarter. EURO $1.2056 +.0057 Courtesy of California Cut Flower Commission EU NATIONS OREGON LEGISLATURE Mealworms on the menu? State wants to delay paid family, medical leave program 1 year European Union OKs beetle larvae on the market as a ‘novel food.’ The Associated Press BRUSSELS — Dried yellow mealworms could soon be hit- ting supermarket shelves and restaurants across Europe. The European Union’s 27 nations gave the greenlight Tuesday to a proposal to put the Tenebrio molitor beetle lar- vae on the market as a “novel food.” The move came after the EU’s food safety agency pub- lished a scientific opinion this year that concluded worms were safe to eat. Researchers said the worms, either eaten whole or in powdered form, are a protein-rich snack or an ingredient for other foods. Allergic reactions may occur for people with pre-existing al- lergies to crustaceans and dust mites, the Commission said. Insects as food represent a BY JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian Virginia Mayo/AP file Microbar food truck owner Bart Smit holds a container of yellow meal- worms during a food truck festival in Antwerp, Belgium, in 2014. very small market but EU of- ficials said breeding them for food could have environmental benefits. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization calls insects “a healthy and highly nutritious food source with a high content of fat, protein, vi- tamins, fibers and minerals.” Following Tuesday’s ap- proval by EU states, a EU regu- lation authorizing dried yellow mealworms as a food will be adopted in the coming weeks. Oregon says it won’t be ready to start providing paid family and medical leave benefits by a January 2023 deadline and has asked law- makers to delay the rollout of the state’s long-anticipated program. A bill introduced in the Oregon House on Tuesday on behalf of the Oregon Em- ployment Department would give the state agency until September 2022 to adopt rules to establish the program and would defer the date when employers must begin paying into the program un- til January 2023 — delaying both deadlines by a full year. If the bill is adopted, Ore- gon workers would not start seeing benefits through the new program until Septem- ber 2023, eight months after the program is currently sup- posed to go into effect. Both advocates of the leg- islation and the employment department said the corona- virus pandemic has laid bare the vital need for paid family and medical leave. However, Patty Jo Angelini, a spokesperson for the em- ployment department, said the timeline lawmakers set for the rollout of the program was always ambitious and that the agency was forced to shift its focus away from the program due to the pan- demic. See Paid leave / A8