A12 The BulleTin • Thursday, June 3, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY FRIDAY TONIGHT HIGH 89° LOW 53° Partly sunny and very warm Partly sunny and very warm ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 97° 69° 97° in 2021 64° 40° 22° in 1902 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.43" in 1993 Month to date (normal) 0.00" (0.07") Year to date (normal) 2.15" (5.09") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29.93" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Fri. Sun 5:24am/8:43pm 5:24am/8:44pm Moon 2:35am/2:14pm 2:55am/3:17pm Mercury 6:12am/9:25pm 6:08am/9:18pm Venus 6:34am/10:10pm 6:35am/10:12pm Mars 8:27am/11:43pm 8:26am/11:41pm Jupiter 1:15am/11:50am 1:11am/11:46am Saturn 12:28am/10:14am 12:24am/10:10am Uranus 3:52am/6:01pm 3:48am/5:58pm New First Full Last Jun 10 Jun 17 Jun 24 Jul 1 Tonight's sky: Just below the bowl of the Big Dipper and above Leo's head is constellation of Leo Minor. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 9 9 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 MONDAY 72° 40° Sunny and cooler but pleasant EAST: Breezy and hot Thursday with some sunshine. An afternoon shower or brief thunderstorm will move through. CENTRAL: Sunny to partly cloudy, breezy and hot Thursday. There will be a brief afternoon shower in parts of the area. WEST: Mostly sunny and not as warm Thursday. Fair and comfortable at night. Partly sunny and pleasant Friday. 70° 38° Mostly sunny Times of clouds and sun Astoria 63/48 Partly sunny with a shower possible Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 47821 86% Wickiup 65485 33% Crescent Lake 24694 28% Ochoco Reservoir 9623 22% Prineville 79986 54% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 120 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1380 Deschutes R. below Bend 123 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1620 Little Deschutes near La Pine 82 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 16 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 10 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 242 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 45 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 11 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the 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: USDA Forest Service Delta-8 Continued from A11 The effort by industry lead- ers to rein in the booming but unchecked sector comes as chemists and health advocates sound alarms over potentially dangerous contaminants, such as lead and arsenic, and unpredictable potency levels in some commercially avail- able products. Two tests of Delta-8 samples — one by the U.S. Cannabis Council trade group and another commis- sioned by Bloomberg News — found high levels of intox- icants in several of the prod- ucts, as well as metals in some of them. Delta-8 is particularly con- cerning to some scientists be- cause it can be easy to make. Poison control centers are seeing an uptick in incidents related to Delta-8, and many health workers don’t know what the substance is or how best to treat patients suffering ill effects, said Christopher Holstege, director of the Blue Ridge Poison Center in Char- lottesville, Virginia. “We’ve had at least 10 calls in the last couple of months, and a cou- ple of people hospitalized.” Some of the industry’s larg- est cannabis operators are worried that contaminated and dangerous items could torpedo an otherwise prom- ising line of products, which some big-name companies already offer or are planning to introduce. On top of the health concerns, unregu- “The states have got to get their hands around this.” — Boris Jordan, executive chairman of Curaleaf Holdings Inc. lated Delta-8 risks becoming a competitive threat to their existing offerings, sold in states they can’t get into, and it’s undercutting their prices by avoiding license fees, taxes and quality testing. Regulators “should look to clamp down and stop this un- regulated market,” said Steve Hawkins, interim chief execu- tive officer of the U.S. Canna- bis Council. The council has already consulted with state governments on Delta-8, he said, and it will step up efforts this week to encourage the U.S. Food and Drug Adminis- tration and the Drug Enforce- ment Administration to take action. Boris Jordan, executive chairman of Curaleaf Hold- ings Inc., one of the industry’s biggest companies, compared the situation to the vape cri- sis from a couple years ago, when black-market products caused lung illnesses, souring regulators on even approved products. “The states have got to get their hands around this,” he said. ‘THC Light’ Delta-8 tetrahydrocannab- inol is a naturally occurring compound found in low lev- els in marijuana plants. The Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 79/60/0.10 Akron 70/58/0.08 Albany 74/46/0.19 Albuquerque 82/58/Tr Anchorage 57/45/0.00 Atlanta 81/64/0.00 Atlantic City 76/59/0.01 Austin 86/66/0.00 Baltimore 81/62/0.00 Billings 88/56/0.00 Birmingham 86/69/0.16 Bismarck 90/50/0.00 Boise 96/63/0.00 Boston 79/58/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 74/56/Tr Buffalo 79/53/Tr Burlington, VT 82/54/0.00 Caribou, ME 78/47/0.00 Charleston, SC 85/68/Tr Charlotte 81/66/Tr Chattanooga 79/67/0.06 Cheyenne 74/46/0.00 Chicago 78/55/0.00 Cincinnati 67/62/0.57 Cleveland 68/58/0.30 Colorado Springs 73/47/0.00 Columbia, MO 74/60/0.00 Columbia, SC 85/62/0.01 Columbus, GA 87/63/0.00 Columbus, OH 68/62/0.14 Concord, NH 83/44/0.00 Corpus Christi 90/69/Tr Dallas 83/60/Tr Dayton 66/60/0.91 Denver 75/49/0.00 Des Moines 82/54/0.00 Detroit 67/58/0.53 Duluth 76/56/0.06 El Paso 94/62/Tr Fairbanks 67/45/0.02 Fargo 90/52/Tr Flagstaff 79/41/0.00 Grand Rapids 78/50/0.00 Green Bay 81/56/0.00 Greensboro 79/62/Tr Harrisburg 78/63/0.00 Hartford, CT 82/50/0.01 Helena 92/54/0.00 Honolulu 87/74/0.00 Houston 91/69/1.89 Huntsville 81/64/1.64 Indianapolis 70/60/0.55 Jackson, MS 86/72/1.46 Jacksonville 87/63/Tr Today Hi/Lo/W 77/63/t 71/61/t 72/61/t 83/62/c 58/48/pc 84/68/t 70/64/t 79/67/t 82/67/t 95/66/s 82/66/t 95/63/s 100/67/s 71/65/sh 69/62/t 69/60/t 72/63/t 70/58/sh 80/71/t 82/66/t 81/65/t 79/53/s 85/65/pc 72/60/t 72/60/t 77/54/t 79/60/pc 81/67/t 87/68/t 73/60/t 75/62/sh 84/69/t 81/68/t 71/60/t 82/56/s 84/61/pc 76/59/c 80/58/pc 89/64/pc 69/53/c 94/64/pc 80/48/pc 82/59/pc 85/62/pc 77/65/t 78/65/t 72/63/t 94/63/s 86/74/pc 83/71/t 81/62/t 71/58/pc 84/68/t 85/68/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 76/56/t 78/64/s 62/47/pc 105/75/pc 100/83/pc 81/55/s 78/68/s 77/57/pc 68/52/t 73/53/pc 65/57/pc 88/74/s 88/65/pc 89/55/s 89/79/s 65/46/sh 62/47/pc 78/60/t 76/49/s 92/84/t 67/58/pc 74/57/s 58/38/s 67/61/s 68/54/pc 74/57/pc 86/58/pc 90/85/t Friday Hi/Lo/W 79/64/t 81/64/pc 76/58/t 83/62/pc 56/47/c 84/68/t 70/63/t 78/66/t 82/63/t 94/61/pc 85/66/t 101/65/s 94/61/s 76/64/t 72/61/t 76/64/pc 81/62/pc 78/55/c 85/71/t 85/64/t 85/63/t 85/58/s 88/68/pc 81/62/pc 82/66/pc 83/59/s 84/63/s 85/66/t 86/68/t 81/61/pc 81/58/pc 80/70/t 81/67/t 82/63/pc 87/59/s 88/67/s 83/64/pc 89/68/s 90/66/c 69/50/c 100/68/s 81/48/pc 84/64/pc 88/69/s 83/62/t 80/61/t 75/60/t 89/56/pc 86/75/pc 79/70/t 84/63/t 82/62/pc 83/69/t 88/69/t molecule is almost identical to that of Delta-9 THC — com- monly known as just “THC,” the main psychoactive com- pound in marijuana — and some users say Delta-8 offers a more-relaxing, “THC-light” kind of high. Delta-8 products are sold in gas stations and smoke shops across the country, falling in a gray area of U.S. law. Under the 2018 Farm Bill, hemp — cannabis containing less than 0.3% THC content — can be transported and sold within the country. CBD, an increas- ingly popular cannabinoid ex- tracted from hemp, is allowed as well, but there was little said about the dozens of other compounds that can be ex- tracted, such as Delta-8. Some companies and law- yers therefore argue Delta-8 is legal because it can be derived from CBD, which is made from hemp. Others say it de- pends on the interpretation of a DEA rule over “synthetically derived” cannabinoids, which are illegal. Given the ambiguity, com- panies are taking a risk by selling the products, said Laura Bianchi, a partner at cannabis-focused law firm Bi- anchi & Brandt. Manufactur- ers “could face some enforce- ment action from the DEA or consequences from another agency such as the FDA.” When asked about the products, the FDA referred questions to the DEA, which wouldn’t go into detail about Delta-8 because it said it’s cur- rently in the rule-making pro- cess regarding how the Farm Bill has been implemented. “There is a lot to learn about the impacts of marijuana and its chemical constituents,” the agency said. Legal questions aren’t hurting demand. U.S. sales in April of products listing Delta-8 soared 144% from a year earlier, according to can- nabis data provider Headset. Unexpected Substances The lack of oversight in this relatively new market is rais- ing concerns about what un- expected and potentially dan- gerous substances are ending up in commercially available products. The U.S. Cannabis Council said it tested 16 Delta-8 prod- ucts from vendors across the U.S. and found that all but one of them exceeded the allow- able level of THC. On average, they had more than 10 times the legal limit. Seven of the samples also exceeded lim- its on metals such as copper, chromium or nickel. “This represents a major consumer safety issue, posing dangers greater than the ‘vape crisis’ of 2019,” the group said in a report it plans to release this week, a copy of which was viewed by Bloomberg News. 79/57/0.00 79/61/0.00 58/45/0.06 107/82/0.00 100/84/0.00 80/61/0.00 79/67/0.00 75/52/0.14 68/50/0.12 72/46/0.00 63/55/0.02 91/76/0.00 90/70/0.00 86/55/Tr 88/73/0.14 64/50/0.05 62/49/0.00 70/57/0.08 71/53/0.00 90/84/0.00 63/55/0.02 78/60/0.00 55/35/0.00 67/63/Tr 67/54/0.02 81/55/0.00 82/54/0.00 86/81/0.46 75/58/pc 80/63/s 61/49/pc 107/77/pc 100/82/pc 83/58/s 78/68/s 76/61/pc 65/51/t 76/54/pc 65/58/sh 89/73/s 88/66/s 79/46/pc 90/80/pc 64/49/c 63/46/pc 79/60/pc 68/43/pc 91/80/t 69/58/c 74/58/s 57/35/s 67/61/s 71/56/s 66/53/pc 84/58/t 92/84/t Freebies Continued from A11 Other new incentives include a $2 million commitment from DoorDash to provide gift cards to community health centers to be used to drive people to get vaccinated. CVS launched a sweepstakes with prizes includ- ing free cruises and Super Bowl tickets. Major League Baseball will host on-site vaccine clinics and ticket giveaways at games. And Kroger will give $1 mil- lion to a vaccinated person each week this month and doz- ens of people free groceries for the year. Oregon and four other states are holding vaccine-incentive lotteries, similar to one in Ohio. Additionally, the White House is partnering with early childhood centers such as KinderCare, Learning Care Group, Bright Horizons and more than 500 YMCAs to pro- vide free child care coverage for Americans looking for shots or needing assistance while recov- ering from side effects. The administration is also launching a new partnership to bring vaccine education and even doses to more than a thousand Black-owned bar- bershops and beauty salons, building on a successful pilot program in Maryland. “The fact remains that de- spite all the progress, those who are unvaccinated still remain Cyberattack Continued from A11 Visit Bend Continued from A11 Tillamook County will re- develop the parking lot in Pacific City and a mountain bike trail in Coos Bay will be developed, Dugan said. “We wanted to fund enough meaningful proj- ects and enough projects to have meaning,” Dugan said. “There will be flexibility. We wanted to start with a mean- ingful dollar amount and grow it as we go.” Over the years the market- ing nonprofit has attempted to address the impact of tourism on recreational ar- eas. It launched a Visit Like a Local initiative and Pledge for the Wild, which took do- nations from visitors who wanted to support recre- ational areas. For years Visit Bend has funded the marketing of cul- tural tourism with 7.5% of its annual budget. This year that’s $340,000. The transient room tax funds Visit Bend’s marketing effort to promote tourism in Bend. Since the start of the pandemic, the group has not 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. 56/50/1.11 78/55/0.00 77/50/0.03 107/81/0.00 67/62/0.26 83/47/Tr 79/67/1.23 73/60/0.00 70/63/0.82 80/49/0.00 83/68/1.10 86/76/0.62 75/54/0.00 84/60/Tr 74/65/1.19 88/75/0.15 75/62/0.00 79/60/Tr 81/62/0.07 75/55/Tr 84/51/0.00 89/71/Tr 106/78/0.00 79/55/0.00 79/61/0.00 106/80/0.00 69/59/0.08 79/47/0.00 76/55/0.00 81/60/1.81 82/48/0.00 97/63/0.00 82/59/0.04 78/51/Tr 93/58/0.00 73/63/0.03 91/62/0.00 86/69/0.07 71/62/0.00 67/53/0.00 74/56/0.00 79/47/Tr 82/67/1.52 85/60/0.00 83/51/0.00 94/64/0.00 66/59/0.21 90/74/0.31 101/71/0.00 76/58/0.13 81/64/0.00 76/61/0.06 100/57/0.00 105/76/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 51/45/r 81/62/pc 81/58/pc 106/81/s 72/58/t 86/62/pc 82/63/pc 77/62/pc 75/61/t 84/64/pc 81/65/c 86/78/sh 82/65/pc 86/67/pc 78/62/t 85/74/t 73/66/t 79/67/t 81/70/t 80/60/pc 85/64/pc 88/73/t 108/77/s 82/60/pc 79/67/t 106/81/s 70/60/t 68/60/sh 69/63/t 78/68/t 86/59/s 97/63/s 78/68/t 71/60/t 94/60/s 81/64/pc 96/68/s 79/69/t 69/62/c 68/55/pc 79/57/pc 80/53/t 83/69/t 73/52/pc 90/63/pc 91/59/s 75/56/pc 89/75/t 101/72/pc 82/63/pc 81/69/t 81/61/pc 95/57/pc 104/70/s Friday Hi/Lo/W 58/46/r 86/67/s 83/65/pc 107/79/s 80/58/s 92/67/s 85/66/t 80/61/pc 84/62/pc 87/68/s 84/68/pc 88/79/t 85/68/s 94/74/s 82/62/pc 84/74/t 76/64/t 80/64/t 82/67/t 82/63/t 92/69/s 87/73/t 107/77/s 85/63/s 81/64/t 106/80/pc 78/61/t 76/58/pc 73/62/t 83/65/t 95/62/s 95/60/s 83/63/t 81/63/pc 92/54/s 86/67/s 99/69/s 78/68/t 70/62/pc 67/54/pc 78/53/pc 82/53/t 87/70/t 69/53/pc 95/69/s 82/52/s 80/61/s 87/75/t 101/71/pc 85/66/t 81/65/t 84/64/s 86/51/s 106/70/s 110/89/0.00 71/56/0.07 81/57/0.04 68/48/0.00 75/57/0.00 84/72/0.82 97/77/0.00 82/68/0.00 72/46/0.00 81/50/0.00 81/59/0.02 81/70/0.00 74/55/0.00 73/48/0.00 79/58/0.00 72/50/0.00 86/59/0.00 75/71/0.11 90/82/0.06 69/45/0.00 70/54/0.04 94/79/0.00 78/69/0.00 77/64/0.00 77/55/0.02 82/57/0.00 72/46/0.00 70/50/0.00 109/81/s 70/56/t 69/61/r 68/52/c 76/56/pc 86/76/pc 96/79/t 82/71/pc 70/51/sh 69/58/sh 79/62/t 83/72/s 78/56/pc 73/46/pc 77/59/pc 74/62/pc 73/58/r 85/65/t 90/80/sh 69/45/pc 61/56/sh 98/81/pc 78/67/s 78/68/pc 71/58/t 68/52/pc 75/54/pc 72/54/c 105/81/s 68/55/t 81/62/c 72/52/s 76/57/pc 86/77/t 97/80/pc 77/65/r 71/52/pc 82/61/pc 70/57/sh 79/70/s 79/58/s 63/45/pc 78/60/pc 64/52/r 74/60/s 80/66/pc 89/79/t 69/49/pc 67/48/pc 92/79/sh 78/67/s 75/68/r 82/63/sh 64/52/r 78/57/pc 73/55/pc INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 118° at Death Valley, CA National low: 27° at West Yellowstone, MT Precipitation: 4.77" at Fort Myers, FL FIRE INDEX Very high Very high Very high Very high Very high Variably cloudy with a shower possible 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 71/54/0.00 63/48/pc 63/50/pc La Grande 94/55/0.00 88/57/t 83/48/s Portland 90/66/0.00 79/51/pc 77/54/pc Baker City 92/45/0.00 90/54/t 85/44/s La Pine 95/46/0.00 86/47/pc 79/42/pc Prineville 95/52/0.00 92/54/pc 79/46/pc Brookings 59/50/Tr 63/49/pc 63/47/pc Medford 97/69/0.00 93/59/s 89/52/pc Redmond 99/54/0.00 90/51/pc 85/44/s Burns 96/51/0.00 93/55/t 89/47/s Newport 59/54/Tr 59/47/pc 58/49/pc Roseburg 94/61/0.00 84/54/pc 81/50/pc Eugene 91/60/0.00 82/49/pc 78/49/pc North Bend 64/53/0.00 63/51/pc 63/50/pc Salem 92/60/0.00 83/50/pc 79/52/pc Klamath Falls 95/51/0.00 89/49/s 86/41/pc Ontario 99/60/0.00 101/71/c 97/63/s Sisters 90/51/0.00 88/53/pc 83/47/s Lakeview 93/47/0.00 91/53/t 87/47/pc Pendleton 100/59/0.00 94/60/t 87/53/s The Dalles 98/66/0.00 90/60/pc 83/56/s 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 69° 44° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 99/63 Rufus Hermiston 85/58 99/64 92/63 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 94/60 79/45 79/51 87/51 Wasco 90/54 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles Tillamook 89/52 88/60 94/60 Sandy 90/60 McMinnville 66/45 Joseph Heppner La Grande 77/49 Maupin Government 81/46 88/57 90/54 Camp 91/58 Condon 88/56 Union Lincoln City 84/54 69/46 89/55 Salem 61/46 Spray Granite Warm Springs 83/50 Madras 92/54 Albany 84/53 Newport Baker City 90/54 91/54 Mitchell 59/47 79/46 90/54 Camp Sherman 87/53 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity 87/54 90/51 76/47 Day Prineville 59/47 91/55 Ontario Sisters 92/54 Paulina 91/55 101/71 Florence Eugene 88/53 Bend Brothers 90/50 Vale 63/49 82/49 89/53 86/49 Sunriver 102/73 Nyssa 88/52 Hampton Cottage La Pine 103/74 Juntura Oakridge Grove 86/47 89/50 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 99/60 82/52 83/52 Fort Rock 64/48 93/55 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 89/50 92/56 High: 102° 85/46 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Hermiston Beaver Frenchglen Silver 62/50 84/54 91/50 94/56 Low: 43° Marsh Lake 94/55 Port Orford 86/45 91/50 at Meacham Grants Burns Junction Paisley 65/51 Pass 97/64 Chiloquin 93/53 93/56 Rome Medford 86/51 Gold Beach 93/59 99/63 61/50 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 98/60 89/58 89/49 97/57 63/49 91/53 Seaside 63/47 Cannon Beach 61/47 WEDNESDAY 67° 41° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 541-683-1577 WATER REPORT Bend Redmond/Madras Sisters Prineville La Pine/Gilchrist TUESDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Grasses Very high SUNDAY 70° 41° 84° 47° Mostly clear and mild Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low SATURDAY marketed the region. From July through March the city of Bend collected $7.5 mil- lion in transient room tax, which is 0.6% less than the same time the year before. According to state law, 70% of the transient room tax goes to the city’s general fund to pay for things like police or firefighters. Bend city Councilor Anthony Broadman said amending the law to allow for funding of tourism-re- lated facilities has been a fo- cus of his because the com- munity will benefit as well. “This allows us as a com- munity who live here to ben- efit more from the taxes the city collects from tourists,” Broadman said. “By the vir- tue of the travel industry and Visit Bend and the city all working together right out the gate, we’ve achieved something so important. “The people of Bend will benefit from tourism-related facilities more than they ever would benefit from the tran- sient room tax as a promo- tional tool.” e e Reporter: 541-633-2117, sroig@bendbulletin.com The attack targeted servers supporting JBS’s operations in North America and Austra- lia. Backup servers weren’t af- fected and the company said it was not aware of any customer, supplier or employee data be- ing compromised. JBS said late Tuesday that it had made “significant prog- ress” and expected the “vast majority” of its plants to be op- erating Wednesday. It is not known if JBS paid a ransom. The company hasn’t discussed it in public state- ments, and did not respond to phone and email messages Wednesday seeking comment. 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 at risk of getting seriously ill or dying or spreading the disease to others,” said Rowe. Aiming to make injections even more convenient, Biden is announcing that many pharmacies are extending their hours this month — and thousands will remain open overnight on Fridays. The White House is also stepping up its efforts to help employ- ers run on-site vaccination clinics. About 63% of the adult U.S. population have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 133.9 million are fully vaccinated. The rate of new vaccinations has slowed to an average below 555,000 per day, down from more than 800,000 when incentives like lotteries were announced, and down from a peak of nearly 2 million per day in early April when demand for shots was much higher. The lengths to which the U.S. is resorting to convince Americans to take a shot stands in contrast to much of the world, where vaccines are far less plentiful. Facing a mount- ing U.S. surplus, the Biden administration is planning to begin sharing 80 million doses with the world this month. “All over the world peo- ple are desperate to get a shot that every American can get at their neighborhood drugstore,” Biden said. The FBI and the White House declined to comment on the ransom. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday the U.S. is con- sidering all options in dealing with the attack. “I can assure you that we are raising this through the highest levels of the U.S. government,” she said. JBS is the second-largest producer of beef, pork and chicken in the U.S. If it were to shut down for even one day, the U.S. would lose almost a quarter of its beef-processing capacity, or the equivalent of 20,000 beef cows, according to Trey Malone, an assistant pro- fessor of agriculture at Michi- gan State University.