A12 The BulleTin • Wednesday, June 16, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY THURSDAY TONIGHT HIGH 75° LOW 50° Pleasant and warmer with plenty of sun Very warm with plenty of sunshine ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 66° 72° 92° in 1917 52° 42° 24° in 1902 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Record 1.35" in 1903 Month to date (normal) 0.37" (0.41") Year to date (normal) 2.52" (5.43") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.25" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Thu. Sun 5:22am/8:51pm 5:22am/8:51pm Moon 11:20am/12:53am 12:30pm/1:19am Mercury 5:11am/7:51pm 5:06am/7:45pm Venus 6:56am/10:25pm 6:58am/10:25pm Mars 8:18am/11:17pm 8:17am/11:15pm Jupiter 12:25am/11:01am 12:22am/10:57am Saturn 11:36pm/9:21am 11:32pm/9:17am Uranus 3:03am/5:14pm 2:59am/5:10pm First Full Last New Jun 17 Jun 24 Jul 1 Jul 9 Tonight's sky: Emerging from the east near midnight is the great square of Pegasus the Flying Horse. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 10 10 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 SUNDAY 87° 56° Mostly sunny and very warm EAST: Plenty of sunshine and warmer Wednesday. Clear and comfortable Wednes- day night. Very warm Thursday; sunny. CENTRAL: Sunshine Wednesday; pleasant. Fair and comfortable Wednesday night. Sunny and very warm Thursday. WEST: Mostly sunny Wednesday; a pleas- ant afternoon. Fair and cool Wednesday night. Sunny and warmer Thursday. 81° 48° Sunny and remaining very warm Plenty of sunshine Astoria 69/50 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 47630 86% Wickiup 50472 25% Crescent Lake 24982 29% Ochoco Reservoir 8621 19% Prineville 73080 49% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 113 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1230 Deschutes R. below Bend 128 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1580 Little Deschutes near La Pine 87 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 17 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 1 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 202 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 57 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 California Continued from A11 The Democratic governor pointed to the more than 40 million doses of vaccine ad- ministered and the resulting plunge in cases as the reason for the reopening. “Foundationally, that’s why we’re here today,” Newsom said. Ready for summer Just in time for summer, California wants to send the message that life is getting much closer to normal. The economy is fully reopen for the first time in 15 months and people can largely return to pre-pandemic lifestyles. Fans can cheer maskless at Dodgers and Giants baseball games. Disneyland is opening to all tourists after allowing just California residents since April. People can pack indoor bars and nightclubs from the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles to the Castro in San Francisco. Tourism was among the hardest-hit industries. “In terms of our incredible cities, our iconic attractions, the industry is ready to roll out the red carpet to visitors in California, around the na- tion and even the world,” said Caroline Beteta, president and CEO of Visit California. Pandemic highs and lows saw California go from being a success story to the U.S. epi- center of the virus. As the first in the country to impose a statewide lockdown in March 2020, California’s businesses were just starting to reopen last June when cases started rising. By summer’s end, a darker reality set in as California hurtled toward a deadly win- ter surge. Shutdowns, curfews and harrowing images from overwhelmed hospitals be- came the norm as the state set records almost daily for infec- tions and deaths. More people tested posi- tive for the virus in California (3.8 million and counting) and more people died (63,000 plus) than anywhere else in the country, although the na- tion’s most populous state had a lower per capita death rate than most others. California now has one of the lowest rates of infection in the country, below 1%. That dramatic drop in infections combined with an increasing number of vaccinated resi- dents — over 70% of adults have had at least one dose — led Newsom to announce in April that most COVID-19 restrictions would be lifted June 15. Oregon, meanwhile, is on track to lift restrictions this month if vaccinations hit the 70% mark. Anticipation replaces anxiety California’s reopening doesn’t necessarily mean peo- ple will immediately flock to places and events they once packed or that businesses will opt to return to full capacity immediately. But a palpable feeling of anticipation has re- placed the anxiety, frustration and sadness that ushered in summer 2020. For Angie Barragan, who was born in L.A. and visited last week from Las Vegas, so many things that were once normal feel new, awkward and amazing: strolling in pub- lic without a mask, socializing for the first time in ages. “It’s kind of learning how to be a human again,” she said as Tax break Continued from A11 “The only thing Burdick and I did is fine tune some issues we’d raised over those four months (writing the tax law) in 2013,” Boquist said. He said the bill now moving for- ward does not address all of the prob- lems leaders were aware of when they drafted the law all those years ago. “The concern then was OK, you’re trying to create jobs and we know for Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 95/71/0.00 Akron 75/56/0.00 Albany 73/54/0.03 Albuquerque 98/74/0.05 Anchorage 64/51/0.00 Atlanta 90/71/0.00 Atlantic City 79/66/0.80 Austin 95/71/0.00 Baltimore 83/63/0.70 Billings 105/66/0.00 Birmingham 89/70/0.00 Bismarck 95/58/0.00 Boise 87/62/0.00 Boston 73/62/0.01 Bridgeport, CT 80/65/Tr Buffalo 75/61/0.00 Burlington, VT 79/61/0.42 Caribou, ME 70/57/0.52 Charleston, SC 94/73/0.00 Charlotte 88/66/0.00 Chattanooga 88/71/0.00 Cheyenne 92/55/0.00 Chicago 77/62/0.00 Cincinnati 82/57/0.00 Cleveland 72/55/0.04 Colorado Springs 92/60/0.00 Columbia, MO 92/66/0.00 Columbia, SC 93/72/0.00 Columbus, GA 96/72/0.00 Columbus, OH 81/59/0.01 Concord, NH 77/61/0.47 Corpus Christi 95/73/0.00 Dallas 97/77/0.00 Dayton 82/57/0.00 Denver 101/65/0.00 Des Moines 91/60/0.00 Detroit 77/59/0.00 Duluth 72/53/0.00 El Paso 98/72/0.00 Fairbanks 84/55/0.00 Fargo 82/52/0.00 Flagstaff 94/49/0.00 Grand Rapids 79/58/0.00 Green Bay 78/57/0.00 Greensboro 83/68/0.00 Harrisburg 80/61/0.01 Hartford, CT 81/64/0.01 Helena 94/59/0.00 Honolulu 87/74/0.00 Houston 98/77/0.03 Huntsville 88/68/0.00 Indianapolis 81/57/0.00 Jackson, MS 96/72/0.00 Jacksonville 95/72/0.28 Today Hi/Lo/W 95/70/s 72/48/s 71/46/s 98/70/c 60/52/pc 86/65/s 77/61/pc 94/72/pc 79/57/s 85/55/s 87/63/s 95/54/s 85/56/s 77/58/s 78/56/s 69/49/s 73/51/pc 68/46/c 87/68/sh 86/59/pc 87/63/s 93/59/pc 78/58/s 79/57/s 70/49/s 95/65/c 91/68/s 88/61/pc 89/64/s 77/51/s 75/45/s 92/75/s 98/76/s 78/56/s 100/66/pc 90/69/s 76/53/s 78/57/pc 101/73/s 83/56/pc 93/61/c 90/56/pc 78/49/s 78/56/s 82/56/pc 78/53/s 76/50/s 81/49/s 87/74/pc 97/76/pc 86/62/s 81/57/s 91/65/s 90/71/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 84/66/pc 84/66/pc 64/53/c 104/78/pc 90/80/t 78/66/pc 80/71/pc 81/65/s 63/48/t 83/60/pc 52/44/pc 89/75/s 91/68/s 69/44/s 85/76/t 63/47/c 61/48/c 88/64/pc 71/47/pc 91/84/t 70/64/r 74/70/s 65/45/s 70/63/s 71/62/pc 84/63/pc 88/62/t 93/82/s Thursday Hi/Lo/W 96/72/s 79/61/s 73/47/s 96/71/pc 64/53/c 88/66/s 75/63/s 95/72/s 79/57/s 87/55/s 89/66/s 89/55/pc 92/61/s 77/59/s 78/58/s 74/59/s 77/55/s 67/48/sh 88/68/pc 84/59/s 88/65/s 91/58/pc 89/69/pc 83/63/s 80/64/s 94/65/c 96/76/pc 86/61/s 91/65/s 82/61/s 77/46/s 92/74/s 98/77/s 83/64/s 97/64/pc 96/71/t 83/64/s 83/60/t 98/73/s 63/48/r 88/59/s 89/56/c 84/65/pc 87/65/c 80/57/s 79/54/s 78/50/s 84/51/s 87/74/sh 96/74/s 88/65/s 85/67/pc 92/67/pc 90/71/pc 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. 60/52/0.67 93/72/0.00 78/55/0.00 114/85/0.00 79/57/0.00 93/69/Tr 93/69/0.00 90/66/0.00 84/63/0.00 82/58/0.00 90/73/0.00 89/74/0.70 73/61/0.00 83/63/0.00 86/70/0.00 95/77/0.00 80/67/0.01 85/68/0.02 83/75/0.00 94/66/0.00 94/64/0.00 88/72/0.08 120/82/0.00 88/59/0.00 81/65/0.82 115/85/0.00 75/56/Tr 69/59/0.17 79/64/0.01 85/71/0.00 99/64/Tr 88/56/0.00 84/67/Tr 73/56/0.16 91/54/0.00 91/66/0.00 107/75/0.00 94/73/0.18 86/65/0.00 74/57/0.57 78/55/0.00 96/68/0.34 96/72/0.00 69/53/0.01 92/54/0.00 68/55/0.36 91/65/0.00 89/77/0.31 115/80/0.00 97/67/0.00 82/66/1.83 95/62/0.00 76/52/Tr 116/83/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 61/47/c 93/74/s 77/50/s 115/90/pc 77/55/s 99/73/pc 89/71/s 98/72/pc 84/61/pc 80/57/s 89/71/s 87/78/t 74/57/s 89/68/pc 87/62/pc 94/78/pc 77/58/s 80/57/s 82/66/t 94/70/s 97/75/pc 89/73/t 118/91/pc 84/60/s 78/57/s 116/91/s 72/45/s 76/52/s 78/55/s 85/59/pc 89/57/s 96/63/s 82/58/pc 69/47/s 100/64/s 90/68/s 97/69/pc 93/74/pc 75/65/pc 78/58/s 89/61/s 95/61/t 91/69/pc 71/51/pc 98/69/c 72/49/s 90/70/s 90/79/t 112/81/s 97/74/s 79/59/s 97/72/s 79/52/s 111/79/s Thursday Hi/Lo/W 66/51/pc 99/77/c 86/64/pc 114/90/pc 80/61/pc 102/69/pc 92/72/s 92/69/s 87/68/s 88/66/c 91/72/s 88/81/t 87/69/pc 86/67/t 89/67/s 92/79/pc 77/62/s 80/60/s 80/62/pc 96/70/s 101/70/pc 89/73/t 118/90/s 90/75/pc 78/59/s 117/91/pc 76/56/s 77/52/s 78/54/s 82/58/s 85/58/s 102/68/pc 80/55/pc 76/55/s 108/65/s 95/79/pc 98/73/s 94/73/s 76/66/s 81/58/s 93/62/s 95/62/c 90/71/s 76/53/s 90/63/t 81/54/s 93/73/pc 89/78/c 111/81/pc 98/76/s 79/59/s 100/75/pc 88/57/s 117/83/s 107/85/0.00 71/55/0.24 73/63/0.11 81/61/0.01 75/55/0.00 90/77/0.02 99/82/0.00 86/72/0.67 68/48/0.00 73/61/0.15 86/64/0.00 75/63/0.00 79/66/0.00 55/43/0.00 73/54/0.00 69/56/0.07 79/70/0.18 91/79/0.12 87/79/0.09 66/54/0.00 61/51/0.00 94/82/0.00 80/71/0.00 82/68/0.21 72/61/0.17 68/55/0.11 81/46/0.00 75/50/0.00 105/80/c 70/54/t 72/52/pc 75/55/pc 72/54/t 89/79/t 93/79/pc 74/68/t 67/51/pc 71/47/pc 92/69/pc 73/66/pc 80/64/s 63/41/pc 65/55/pc 76/57/pc 85/65/pc 86/76/c 88/79/t 70/52/s 66/51/s 99/85/pc 79/69/s 75/69/r 69/49/s 66/52/pc 85/58/pc 77/54/s 107/81/s 70/55/t 76/58/s 74/54/s 71/55/c 88/79/t 92/79/s 84/70/sh 71/60/c 78/55/pc 87/66/t 71/67/t 82/62/pc 63/40/pc 64/56/c 76/56/s 77/66/c 84/76/t 88/78/t 75/57/pc 64/51/s 102/84/c 79/71/s 75/65/sh 78/61/pc 67/54/s 87/64/s 83/58/s INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 124° at Death Valley, CA National low: 33° at Gothic, CO Precipitation: 3.07" at Fort Lauderdale, FL FIRE INDEX Moderate Moderate Moderate Moderate Moderate Mostly sunny, a shower possible; warm Sunshine and very warm 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 65/52/Tr 69/50/s 68/52/s La Grande 66/53/0.15 77/48/s 85/51/s Portland 70/56/0.03 79/55/s 83/55/s Baker City 74/49/0.12 76/42/s 84/46/s La Pine 61/45/0.09 78/43/s 84/48/s Prineville 66/52/0.12 79/48/s 84/55/s Brookings 64/52/Tr 68/53/s 71/55/s Medford 75/56/0.00 88/55/s 91/58/pc Redmond 69/51/0.03 78/46/s 86/49/s Burns 78/51/0.02 81/45/s 90/51/s Newport 61/54/0.03 62/49/s 63/50/s Roseburg 70/52/0.01 83/53/s 86/56/s Eugene 71/51/Tr 79/49/s 84/51/s North Bend 67/51/0.00 67/53/s 66/52/s Salem 68/53/0.09 80/52/s 85/51/s Klamath Falls 69/40/Tr 85/46/s 91/50/s Ontario 89/64/0.00 86/55/s 94/59/s Sisters 62/48/0.12 76/49/s 84/54/s Lakeview 73/39/0.00 85/48/s 91/52/pc Pendleton 71/57/0.14 76/50/s 86/53/s The Dalles 77/58/Tr 84/55/s 92/57/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 88° 56° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 81/50 Rufus Hermiston 81/53 81/50 83/56 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 83/54 78/50 79/55 75/44 Wasco 77/46 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles Tillamook 75/46 79/52 76/50 Sandy 84/55 McMinnville 70/49 Joseph Heppner La Grande 77/53 Maupin Government 79/49 77/48 75/49 Camp 78/51 Condon 74/51 Union Lincoln City 73/50 70/46 78/46 Salem 65/51 Spray Granite Warm Springs 80/52 Madras 80/48 Albany 73/45 Newport Baker City 76/49 78/47 Mitchell 62/49 76/49 76/42 Camp Sherman 76/49 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity 76/49 78/46 76/50 Day Prineville 63/50 78/44 Ontario Sisters 79/48 Paulina 79/49 86/55 Florence Eugene 76/49 Bend Brothers 78/44 Vale 67/52 79/49 75/50 76/43 Sunriver 87/55 Nyssa 75/46 Hampton Cottage La Pine 87/55 Juntura Oakridge Grove 78/43 78/43 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 84/49 81/50 79/50 Fort Rock 68/52 81/45 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 79/44 81/44 High: 89° 78/42 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Ontario Beaver Frenchglen Silver 66/53 83/53 80/43 80/48 Low: 39° Marsh Lake 82/50 Port Orford 80/44 81/42 at Crater Lake Grants Burns Junction Paisley 68/53 Pass 85/52 Chiloquin 85/46 88/54 Rome Medford 84/49 Gold Beach 88/55 86/50 65/55 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 85/52 84/55 85/46 87/51 68/53 85/48 Seaside 69/50 Cannon Beach 68/51 TUESDAY 90° 58° 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 MONDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Grasses High SATURDAY 87° 56° 83° 55° Clear Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low FRIDAY Jobs Continued from A11 Ringo H.W. Chiu/AP Silvia Guillen, 19, and Joseph Alvarez, 22, both from El Paso, Texas, kiss at Universal Studios on Tuesday during California’s “grand reopening.” she shopped and strolled on LA’s historic Olvera Street, a restored Mexican marketplace once clogged with tourists. “But it’s great to be among people.” People attending in- door concerts, sporting events or other large gatherings of more than 5,000 people will have to show proof they are vaccinated or have a recent negative COVID-19 test. While fully vaccinated peo- ple will no longer be required to wear masks in most places, those who are unvaccinated are expected to, but it won’t be enforced. Businesses have three choices: operate on an honor system, require cus- tomers to show proof of vac- cination or require everyone to cover their faces. Many question if the honor system will work, including the California Nurses Asso- ciation, which said the new rules essentially call on busi- nesses and essential workers to be the vaccination police. For now, masks are still re- quired in places like public transit, airports, health care settings and indoor school classes. the most part closely held doctor’s of- fices don’t create jobs,” Boquist said. He said it has proved challenging to find a way to restrict the break to cer- tain sectors of business without draw- ing a legal challenge. A large share of the state’s top 1% of earners receive income from the types of businesses that can take advantage of the tax break: nearly 70%, accord- ing to the Legislative Revenue Office. Construction represented the largest sector of pass-through businesses in Restaurant owners, retail stores and other service-sector employers have complained for months that enhanced jobless benefits are giving prospective hires an incentive to stay home. Many national chains, from Costco to Amazon to Chipotle, have offered bonuses or raised their starting wages in an effort to lure workers off the sidelines. Acknowledging the labor squeeze, the employment de- partment is beginning to nudge benefits recipients back to the job market. Beginning Satur- day, some unemployed Orego- nians will have to register with the state’s iMatchSkills program in order continue receiving benefits. The rest must register within the next few weeks. And by the end of July, Or- egonians collecting unem- ployment benefits will have to demonstrate they are actively looking for work to remain eli- Rent Continued from A11 Assistance in covering fu- ture rent could be particularly important for renters who are continuing to struggle amid the pandemic. Renters who are unable to pay their July rent on time could face eviction. However, renters who missed rent payments between April 2020 and June 2021 will have until Feb. 28, 2022 to re- pay that debt under a new state law. That means renters should prioritize paying their July rent on time before trying to make up any missed rent payments. Oregon Housing and Com- munity Services, the state Oregon, followed by the combined category of “professional,” scientific and technology, which includes law- yers and doctors, according to the state’s most recent tax data from 2018. The current proposal, Senate Bill 139, would eliminate the tax break for own- ers of businesses with more than $5 mil- lion in annual profits. For partnerships and S corporations with $251,000 to $500,000 in income, including lawyers and doctors, it would lower the tax rate from 7.2% to 7%. By way of compari- 71/59/0.00 77/59/0.00 61/54/0.10 111/86/0.00 88/81/0.06 89/67/0.00 81/72/0.00 76/61/0.01 64/50/0.14 79/50/0.00 54/44/0.00 97/77/0.00 90/70/0.00 79/61/0.01 86/75/0.65 72/43/0.00 64/46/0.00 86/59/0.00 71/43/0.00 90/81/0.12 68/57/0.09 78/62/0.00 65/46/0.00 70/64/0.00 88/63/0.00 79/59/0.00 93/64/0.00 90/81/0.00 81/63/t 84/67/s 60/49/pc 100/78/pc 90/80/t 90/62/s 80/70/s 91/70/s 65/49/t 85/62/s 52/43/pc 89/76/s 90/69/s 70/45/s 83/79/t 63/44/pc 65/45/pc 88/64/t 73/48/s 91/84/t 74/66/sh 75/67/s 68/44/s 68/64/c 69/57/t 70/57/t 76/59/t 93/83/pc 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 Dutch Bros gible for aid. That’s standard practice during normal eco- nomic times, but Congress allowed states to suspend that requirement during the pandemic. While the jobless rate hasn’t moved much in re- cent weeks, other economic barometers suggest thou- sands of Oregonians are indeed going back to work. The number of people col- lecting state unemployment benefits plunged by 80,000 in the first five months of the year. “Oregon is still seeing a tremendous amount of hir- ing,” employment depart- ment economist Gail Kru- menauer said Tuesday. On Tuesday, the depart- ment said six broad labor categories — trade, trans- portation, finance, infor- mation, construction and professional services — are within 3% of returning to their pre-pandemic levels. The company filed for its IPO confidentially, meaning it has started the regulatory pro- cess of going public but isn’t ready to disclose financial re- sults and other corporate infor- mation required of public com- panies. The state’s last major IPOs were 17 years ago, when Cascade Microtech and McCormick & Schmick’s went public. McCor- mick & Schmick’s sold in 2011, Cascade Microtech in 2016. A succession of relatively small Oregon companies have sold stock to the public in sub- sequent years with mixed re- sults, among them Erickson Air Crane, Laird Superfood and electric vehicle manufacturer Arcimoto. A Wilsonville battery inno- vator, ESS Tech, plans to go public in September by merg- ing with an investment fund in a deal valued at $1.1 billion. agency administering the new rental assistance program, had received more than 8,000 applications from renters re- questing more than $56 mil- lion for rent and utility assis- tance as of June 7. A separate rent assistance program, the Landlord Com- pensation Fund, is currently ac- cepting applications for a third round of funding. Landlords will be able to submit applica- tions until June 18 to receive as- sistance from that fund to cover their tenants’ past-due rent. Landlords who accept as- sistance from that fund will receive money to cover 80% of their tenants’ past-due rent and will be required to forgive the other 20% of missed rent. Landlords can access the appli- cation at lcf.oregon.gov. The state provided more than $113 million in rental as- sistance to help nearly 21,000 households through two previ- ous assistance programs created during the pandemic, according to Oregon Housing and Com- munity Services spokesperson Connor McDonnell. McDon- nell said those numbers could include some overlap The state has also allocated about $73 million to landlords to forgive the rent of approx- imately 22,000 households through the Landlord Com- pensation Fund, according to the agency. son, people’s wages are taxed at 8.75% for a single filer with $9,200 to $125,000 of income and 8.75% for joint filers with $18,400 to $250,000 of income. Senate Bill 139 would also tighten employment requirements businesses must meet to qualify, with an increas- ing ratio of employees to owners the more profits a business makes. For ex- ample, business owners with $250,000 to $500,000 in profits would have to employ one Oregon worker per owner of the business, according to a legisla- Continued from A11 tive document. Currently, the state al- lows businesses to qualify if they have at least one employee other than the owner who works at least 1,200 hours a year. Businesses that could not meet the tighter requirement could still qualify for the special business tax rates, if they plow a large portion of their profits — 75% — back into the business. Lawmakers on the Senate Com- mittee on Finance and Revenue voted along party lines Monday to send the proposal to the full Senate for a vote.