A12 The BulleTin • Wednesday, May 12, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY THURSDAY TONIGHT HIGH 77° LOW 43° Warm with sun and some clouds Yesterday Normal Record 75° 63° 90° in 1924 37° 35° 19° in 1953 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.56" in 2015 Month to date (normal) 0.03" (0.27") Year to date (normal) 1.40" (4.40") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.10" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Thu. Sun 5:42am/8:22pm 5:41am/8:23pm Moon 6:18am/9:34pm 6:49am/10:35pm Mercury 6:39am/10:20pm 6:39am/10:22pm Venus 6:21am/9:25pm 6:21am/9:27pm Mars 8:46am/12:21am 8:45am/12:20am Jupiter 2:37am/1:06pm 2:33am/1:03pm Saturn 1:54am/11:41am 1:50am/11:37am Uranus 5:16am/7:22pm 5:12am/7:18pm First Full Last New May 19 May 26 Jun 2 Jun 10 Tonight's sky: Conjunction of the waxing crescent and Venus below the western horizon. (Not visible.) Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 8 8 5 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. POLLEN COUNT Trees Moderate Weeds Absent Source: Oregon Allergy Associates EAST: Partly sunny and warm Wednesday. Fair Wednesday night. A mix of sun and clouds Thursday; still warm. CENTRAL: Partly sunny and warm Wednesday. Fair weather at night. A little cooler Thursday; clouds and sun. WEST: Warm Wednes- day; a mix of clouds and sun. Partly cloudy Wednesday night. Partly sunny Thursday; warm. 82° 48° Nice and warm with plenty of sunshine Astoria 63/49 Mostly sunny and remaining very warm Mostly sunny and not as warm but pleasant Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 47725 86% Wickiup 90565 45% Crescent Lake 23205 27% Ochoco Reservoir 11062 25% Prineville 87774 59% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 105 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1190 Deschutes R. below Bend 81 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1490 Little Deschutes near La Pine 158 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 15 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 45 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 247 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 60 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 12 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Base 42-82 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 0-0 Timberline Lodge 0 0-141 T-storms Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 67/55/0.36 Akron 55/43/0.00 Albany 56/38/0.00 Albuquerque 79/54/0.00 Anchorage 52/41/0.13 Atlanta 78/63/0.00 Atlantic City 64/46/0.02 Austin 78/61/0.06 Baltimore 69/46/0.00 Billings 60/36/Tr Birmingham 74/60/Tr Bismarck 68/29/0.00 Boise 70/41/0.00 Boston 66/53/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 67/47/0.00 Buffalo 51/39/0.04 Burlington, VT 60/42/0.04 Caribou, ME 62/40/0.45 Charleston, SC 87/67/0.00 Charlotte 73/58/0.00 Chattanooga 71/54/0.00 Cheyenne 35/31/0.32 Chicago 56/36/0.00 Cincinnati 61/43/0.00 Cleveland 54/39/0.00 Colorado Springs 41/33/0.30 Columbia, MO 59/41/0.00 Columbia, SC 80/60/0.00 Columbus, GA 83/66/0.08 Columbus, OH 57/45/Tr Concord, NH 62/46/0.03 Corpus Christi 88/72/0.03 Dallas 62/57/1.49 Dayton 57/44/0.03 Denver 43/33/0.36 Des Moines 61/41/0.00 Detroit 56/36/Tr Duluth 59/26/0.00 El Paso 89/73/0.00 Fairbanks 68/49/0.00 Fargo 65/29/0.00 Flagstaff 71/28/0.00 Grand Rapids 57/34/0.00 Green Bay 58/33/0.00 Greensboro 67/53/0.00 Harrisburg 65/44/0.00 Hartford, CT 66/48/0.00 Helena 63/33/0.02 Honolulu 84/73/0.15 Houston 90/77/0.13 Huntsville 70/52/0.01 Indianapolis 58/44/Tr Jackson, MS 75/64/0.09 Jacksonville 88/66/0.08 Today Thursday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 63/52/c 71/56/pc 59/35/s 63/41/s 61/39/pc 67/44/s 74/51/s 81/57/s 52/40/c 53/40/pc 61/49/r 61/48/pc 63/52/s 63/51/s 66/57/r 72/56/pc 67/46/pc 70/46/s 62/46/pc 65/46/t 65/51/r 66/45/pc 70/42/pc 70/43/pc 80/52/s 81/52/s 65/50/pc 67/54/s 64/49/s 67/50/s 59/41/pc 62/43/s 61/40/t 68/46/pc 54/38/sh 62/38/c 67/49/r 63/53/pc 55/43/r 68/47/pc 61/49/c 66/49/pc 53/35/pc 66/39/pc 62/41/s 67/46/pc 62/40/s 66/43/s 57/37/s 61/41/s 53/37/pc 70/46/s 65/42/pc 68/46/pc 60/45/r 65/49/pc 70/51/r 64/48/pc 61/37/s 65/41/s 62/39/pc 70/44/s 77/65/r 78/67/pc 65/55/c 73/57/pc 61/38/s 65/42/s 61/41/pc 73/46/pc 64/42/pc 66/48/pc 62/40/s 66/45/s 64/43/pc 67/45/pc 82/57/s 86/62/t 61/40/c 62/39/pc 71/45/pc 70/46/pc 74/34/s 76/38/s 62/36/s 66/38/s 64/39/pc 68/43/pc 55/42/sh 67/44/pc 67/43/s 69/45/s 65/43/s 70/46/s 66/46/pc 69/45/pc 84/73/pc 84/73/pc 75/62/r 79/60/pc 64/49/c 67/45/pc 61/40/s 65/44/s 66/56/r 72/51/pc 87/61/t 67/57/t 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 60/47/pc 76/61/pc 67/51/sh 104/75/pc 97/82/t 82/57/s 77/64/s 62/51/c 68/50/c 75/54/sh 64/50/s 88/77/s 89/63/s 63/41/pc 89/80/s 53/39/sh 55/43/sh 61/46/sh 75/50/s 90/82/t 69/53/s 75/60/s 74/48/s 68/62/s 68/54/r 60/50/pc 69/43/pc 98/82/pc 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 63/50/0.67 81/63/0.00 65/57/0.55 100/82/0.00 92/82/0.03 77/47/0.00 79/68/0.00 84/59/0.72 68/50/0.08 84/52/0.00 63/48/0.00 95/75/0.00 88/68/0.00 54/37/0.05 90/80/0.00 55/43/0.00 62/48/0.52 61/50/0.41 73/51/0.00 92/79/0.12 66/52/0.00 83/62/0.00 71/49/0.00 69/62/0.00 64/52/0.02 61/45/0.00 66/46/0.00 95/81/0.00 62/47/pc 78/62/s 59/44/r 107/76/s 96/82/s 83/59/pc 76/63/s 62/48/c 67/50/pc 64/51/sh 65/51/s 91/74/pc 91/65/s 61/38/c 90/79/pc 55/41/sh 53/42/c 57/43/sh 74/51/pc 90/81/t 72/58/s 74/58/s 74/49/s 68/62/pc 69/56/pc 60/49/sh 70/50/pc 97/83/s Space Seed Continued from A11 Continued from A11 Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic aims to kick off tourist flights next year, just as soon as he straps into his space-skim- ming, plane-launched rocket ship for a test run from the New Mexico base. And Elon Musk’s SpaceX will launch a billionaire and his sweepstakes winners in September. That will be followed by a flight by three businessmen to the Inter- national Space Station in January. “We’ve always enjoyed this incredible thing called space, but we always want more people to be able to experience it as well,” NASA astronaut Shane Kimbrough said from the space station May 5. “So I think this is a great step in the right di- rection.” It’s all rooted in Shepard’s 15-minute flight on May 5, 1961. Investigators later deter- mined the company mislabeled 161 seed lots as K-31, totaling 207 infractions. Each lot equals up to 55,000 pounds of seed. False labeling is a violation of both the Federal Seed Act and Oregon seed laws, regulat- ing the sale and commerce of agricultural seed crops. “It’s all about consumer pro- tection,” said Elizabeth Savory, Seed Regulatory Program man- ager at the Oregon Department of Agriculture. “You want to make sure what’s on the label, that’s the seed they’re getting.” Savory made the compari- son to someone buying a bag of M&Ms, only to open the bag and find out there were Skittles inside — they’re both round candy, she said, but not the same thing and not what the person thought he was buying. K-31 is sought after for its heat and drought tolerance, low maintenance and durabil- ity, fetching a premium price for growers. Second in space Shepard was actually the second person in space — the Soviet Union launched cos- monaut Yuri Gagarin three weeks earlier, to Shepard’s everlasting dismay. The 37-year-old Mercury astronaut and Navy test pilot cut a slick sci-fi figure in his silver spacesuit as he stood in the pre-dawn darkness at Cape Canaveral, looking up at his Redstone rocket. Im- patient with all the delays, including an- other hold in the countdown just minutes before launch, he famously growled into his mic: “Why don’t you fix your little problem and light this candle?” His capsule, Freedom 7, soared to an altitude of 116 miles before parachuting into the Atlantic. Twenty days later, President John F. Kennedy committed to landing a man on the moon and returning him safely by de- cade’s end, a promise made good in July 1969 by Apollo 11’s Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. Shepard, who died in 1998, went on to command Apollo 14 in 1971, becoming the fifth moonwalker — and lone lunar golfer. Following in his footsteps Since Gagarin and Shepard’s pioneer- ing flights, 579 people have rocketed into space or reached its fringes, according to NASA. Nearly two-thirds are Ameri- can and just over 20% Soviet or Russian. About 90% are male and most are white, although NASA’s crews have been more diverse in recent decades. A Black community college educa- tor from Tempe, Arizona, sees her spot on SpaceX’s upcoming private flight as a symbol. Sian Proctor uses the acronym J.E.D.I. for “a just, equitable, diverse and inclusive space.” NASA wasn’t always on board with space tourism but is today. “Our goal is one day that everyone’s a Maxim Marmur/AP file Reporters and officials at the Mission Control Center outside Moscow watch space tourist Dennis Tito, a California businessman, speaking from inside the International Space Station in May 2001. Russian cosmonauts Yuri Baturin, left on the screen, and Talgat Musabayev, right, listen. Tito paid $20 million to visit the space station. space person,” NASA’s human spaceflight chief, Kathy Lueders said following the recent splashdown of a SpaceX capsule with four astronauts. “We’re very excited to see it starting to take off.” Twenty years ago, NASA clashed with Russian space officials over the flight of the world’s first space tourist. California businessman Dennis Tito paid $20 million to visit the space station, launching atop a Russian rocket. Virgin- ia-based Space Adventures arranged Ti- to’s weeklong trip, which ended May 6, 2001, as well as seven more tourist flights that followed. “By opening up his checkbook, he kicked off an industry 20 yrs ago,” Space Adventures co-founder Eric Anderson tweeted last week. “Space is opening up more than it ever has, and for all.” There’s already a line. A Russian actress and movie director are supposed to launch from Kazakhstan in the fall. They’ll be followed in Decem- ber by Space Adventures’ two newest cli- ents, also launching on a Russian Soyuz rocket. SpaceX will be next up in January with the three businessmen; the flight from Florida’s Kennedy Space Center was arranged by Axiom Space, a Houston company run by former NASA employ- ees. And as early as 2023, SpaceX is sup- posed to take a Japanese entrepreneur and his guests around the moon and back. The cost While no fan of human spaceflight — he prefers robotic explorers — Duke Uni- versity emeritus history professor Alex Roland acknowledges the emergence of spaceflight companies might be “the most significant change in the last 60 years.” Yet 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. 51/43/0.20 62/46/0.00 56/32/Tr 87/69/0.00 63/38/0.00 64/41/0.00 63/56/0.93 72/61/0.00 67/48/0.00 59/30/0.00 69/55/0.10 90/76/0.00 53/37/0.00 63/36/0.00 72/45/0.00 81/71/1.70 67/49/0.00 70/50/0.00 70/55/Tr 57/50/0.84 63/41/0.00 91/71/0.00 99/66/0.00 60/40/Tr 67/48/0.00 95/68/0.00 56/40/Tr 63/49/0.01 66/49/0.00 70/55/Tr 61/31/Tr 76/42/0.00 73/46/0.00 54/36/Tr 93/53/0.00 61/43/0.00 64/42/0.00 86/63/0.15 67/62/0.00 72/51/0.00 83/53/0.00 74/42/0.00 87/66/0.00 70/46/0.00 62/29/0.00 69/43/0.00 60/41/0.00 91/77/0.00 93/57/0.00 58/46/0.44 70/52/0.00 61/47/0.00 77/41/0.00 96/68/0.00 Today Thursday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 51/41/c 48/40/c 63/42/pc 68/50/pc 61/35/s 65/39/s 94/72/s 98/71/s 61/40/s 63/39/s 64/43/pc 70/51/pc 64/49/c 71/46/s 77/60/pc 74/60/pc 66/44/s 68/46/s 64/38/pc 67/42/pc 67/50/c 71/49/s 89/76/t 89/75/t 58/41/s 62/46/pc 67/46/pc 67/49/pc 65/46/c 69/44/s 78/68/t 76/63/pc 65/49/pc 68/52/s 67/49/pc 70/51/s 60/50/pc 67/49/s 61/46/c 70/51/pc 65/44/pc 68/50/pc 90/72/t 83/67/t 102/72/s 102/71/s 63/39/pc 66/43/pc 67/47/s 70/50/s 99/71/s 101/71/s 58/36/pc 63/41/s 62/43/pc 67/48/s 65/46/s 69/49/s 55/41/r 69/44/pc 58/37/t 64/42/pc 84/52/s 86/52/s 65/44/pc 71/44/s 59/41/s 64/42/s 93/53/s 90/52/s 65/42/pc 69/46/pc 73/52/s 83/58/s 69/61/r 75/61/pc 69/62/pc 70/62/pc 70/50/pc 66/52/pc 81/53/s 77/52/pc 71/43/pc 79/47/s 74/51/r 62/54/c 69/51/pc 71/50/pc 66/45/pc 62/50/pc 71/47/pc 74/49/pc 61/39/pc 66/44/pc 90/74/pc 85/69/pc 95/65/s 99/67/s 65/46/pc 71/51/s 67/48/s 70/51/s 62/42/c 69/50/pc 80/47/pc 80/51/pc 98/63/s 100/65/s 106/75/0.00 75/60/0.84 55/44/0.12 72/41/0.00 70/63/1.67 88/70/0.01 102/77/0.00 76/59/0.00 54/45/0.00 52/38/0.09 59/48/0.15 79/65/0.00 69/55/0.16 75/41/0.00 77/58/0.00 62/45/0.00 79/45/0.00 79/73/1.47 91/80/0.29 73/46/0.00 64/60/0.12 95/77/0.00 83/69/0.00 66/57/0.00 50/36/0.01 61/45/0.00 83/59/0.00 81/54/0.00 105/77/s 75/56/t 62/42/pc 70/52/sh 72/59/t 88/76/pc 97/75/pc 73/64/sh 54/49/r 61/40/pc 61/48/pc 79/69/pc 69/57/pc 76/43/s 73/58/t 62/47/pc 79/56/pc 81/67/c 87/78/t 65/49/pc 68/56/pc 97/78/pc 78/69/s 71/63/pc 61/42/s 60/49/pc 61/53/sh 77/51/s INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 101° at Zapata, TX National low: 16° at Dakota Hill, CO Precipitation: 3.27" at Shreveport, LA SKI REPORT New snow 0 Partly sunny, a couple of showers possible NATIONAL Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday 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 65/40/0.00 63/49/c 61/48/pc La Grande 69/35/0.00 75/46/c 74/51/pc Portland 76/48/0.00 77/52/pc 77/53/pc Baker City 67/27/0.00 76/40/pc 76/43/pc La Pine 73/27/0.00 76/38/pc 76/44/pc Prineville 72/30/0.00 81/42/pc 76/49/pc Brookings 82/60/0.00 66/50/pc 64/49/pc Medford 84/44/0.00 87/51/pc 86/55/pc Redmond 76/33/0.00 79/40/pc 79/47/pc Burns 70/31/0.00 80/42/pc 79/44/pc Newport 55/39/Tr 58/47/pc 57/47/pc Roseburg 77/46/0.00 82/51/s 81/52/pc Eugene 75/44/0.00 79/48/pc 78/49/pc North Bend 61/44/0.00 61/49/s 60/50/pc Salem 76/44/0.00 80/51/pc 79/52/pc Klamath Falls 73/32/0.00 80/41/pc 80/43/pc Ontario 75/38/0.00 83/53/pc 85/55/s Sisters 71/30/0.00 79/43/pc 79/48/pc Lakeview 74/29/0.00 78/41/pc 78/44/pc Pendleton 75/39/0.00 79/47/c 79/54/pc The Dalles 81/48/0.00 83/52/c 83/55/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 -10s 61° 34° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 84/46 Rufus Hermiston 81/51 84/46 84/52 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 84/51 77/47 77/52 73/41 Wasco 74/43 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles Tillamook 71/42 81/51 79/47 Sandy 83/52 McMinnville 67/46 Joseph Heppner La Grande 74/50 Maupin Government 79/47 75/46 71/44 Camp 82/48 Condon 77/46 Union Lincoln City 74/47 66/42 75/43 Salem 60/49 Spray Granite Warm Springs 80/51 Madras 81/45 Albany 68/40 Newport Baker City 80/44 81/43 Mitchell 58/47 76/48 76/40 Camp Sherman 76/45 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity 78/43 79/40 74/48 Day Prineville 58/48 74/41 Ontario Sisters 81/42 Paulina 77/46 83/53 Florence Eugene 79/43 Bend Brothers 77/41 Vale 63/49 79/48 77/43 75/39 Sunriver 83/54 Nyssa 77/39 Hampton Cottage La Pine 84/55 Juntura Oakridge Grove 76/38 77/40 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 82/47 78/49 80/51 Fort Rock 62/47 80/42 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 79/40 79/41 High: 84° 76/38 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Medford Beaver Frenchglen Silver 59/49 82/51 80/40 76/45 Low: 27° Marsh Lake 80/43 Port Orford 76/38 80/40 at Meacham Grants Burns Junction Paisley 63/50 Pass 83/43 Chiloquin 81/41 87/53 Rome Medford 78/40 Gold Beach 87/51 84/41 64/53 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 80/47 84/50 80/41 76/46 66/50 78/41 Seaside 63/48 Cannon Beach 62/49 TUESDAY 73° 38° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 541-683-1577 WATER REPORT Ski resort Mt. Bachelor MONDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Grasses Moderate SUNDAY 75° 43° Pleasantly warm with clouds and sun Partly sunny and warm ALMANAC SATURDAY 74° 42° 77° 48° Mainly clear Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low FRIDAY he wonders whether there will be much interest once the novelty wears off and the inevitable fatalities occur. Then there’s the high price of admission. The U.S., Canadian and Israeli entre- preneurs flying SpaceX early next year are paying $55 million — each — for their 1½-week mission. Virgin Galactic’s tickets cost consider- ably less for minutes versus days of weight- lessness. Initially $250,000, the price is ex- pected to go up once Branson’s company starts accepting reservations again. Blue Origin declined to give a ticket price for future sales and would not com- ment on who else — besides the auction winner — will be on board the capsule in July. A couple more crew flights, each last- ing minutes, would follow by year’s end. As for SpaceX’s private flight on a fully automated Dragon capsule, tech entre- preneur Jared Isaacman won’t say what he’s paying. He considers his three-day flight a “great responsibility” and is taking no shortcuts in training; he took his crew- mates hiking up Mount Rainier recently to toughen them up. “If something does go wrong, it will set back every other person’s ambition to go and become a commercial astronaut,” Isaacman said. John Logsdon, professor emeritus at George Washington University, where he founded the Space Policy Institute, has mixed feelings about this shift from space exploration to adventure tourism. “It takes the romance and excitement out of going to space,” Logsdon said in an email this week. Instead of the dawn of a new era like so many have proclaimed, it’s “more like the end of the era when space flight was special. I guess that is progress.” Rent Continued from A11 Congress also passed two rounds of federal assistance for renters, the latest round approved in March. Oregon’s senators announced May 10 that the state will be in line for $222.5 million from President Joe Biden’s pandemic recov- ery plan, which became law in March. Among other provisions of SB 282, which was brokered by Sen. Kayse Jama, D-Portland, with tenant and landlord ad- vocates: • Potential landlords would be barred from screening out applicants based on COVID- era evictions. The bill would al- low sealing of evictions during COVID from a tenant’s record. • Credit history reports would be barred on any late payments during the moratorium. Land- lords would be barred from screening out tenants based on nonpayment of past-due rents during the eviction moratorium and grace period. • Landlords could not evict 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 105/77/s 64/55/t 68/46/s 65/49/sh 74/59/t 87/74/t 92/73/t 74/62/c 64/48/sh 67/46/s 59/47/sh 73/68/r 68/53/pc 73/45/s 63/56/r 66/45/pc 81/59/s 77/70/c 88/79/t 68/46/s 72/54/s 96/79/pc 76/66/s 70/64/c 65/44/s 63/50/s 59/50/sh 70/53/pc About half of all K-31 grass seed comes from Missouri, Savory said, and the other half is grown in Oregon. In 2017, Missouri experienced a record-low harvest caused by several years of difficult weather. The shortage led to a spike in demand and prices. The state began an industry- wide investigation in 2018 at the request of the Oregon Seed Association to root out bad actors misrepresenting K-31 seed, based on anomalies in the market. The violations allegedly committed by Dynamic Seed Source and Abbott occurred between 2016 and 2018. Un- der the terms of the settlement reached May 6, Abbott and the company neither admit nor deny any wrongdoing, but agreed to pay the combined $300,000 in fines and a one- year license suspension. In a statement, Abbott and Dynamic Seed Source said ODA’s case was “unnecessary,” and they were always willing to prepare their labels per the state’s specifications. tenants for doubling-up/occu- pancy limits that are narrower than current law, during the COVID period when people have had to share housing due to the pandemic and wildfires. • Increased damages would remain in effect temporarily for retaliation violations by land- lords during the COVID era. All of the votes against the final version were cast by Re- publicans, although three Re- publicans joined Democrats to vote for it. “This bill has another side that has not been given any consideration,” Rep. Kim Wal- lan, R-Medford, said. A move by Republicans to send the bill back to committee failed on a party-line vote. Rep. Jack Zika of Redmond, said he sought an amendment that would have allowed land- lords to check some tenant re- cords unrelated to finances. He said his intent was not to block the bill itself, and that he felt an agreement was close. “Nobody wants to see any- body evicted,” he said. e e pwong@pamplinmedia.com