The BulleTin • Tuesday, June 29, 2021 A13 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY WEDNESDAY TONIGHT HIGH 111° LOW 66° Very hot; dangerous heat Sunshine with record- breaking temperatures ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 108° 76° 108° in 2021 66° 44° 28° in 1902 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.53" in 1933 Month to date (normal) 0.68" (0.67") Year to date (normal) 2.83" (5.69") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29.86" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Wed. Sun 5:25am/8:52pm 5:26am/8:52pm Moon 12:15am/10:55am 12:38am/12:02pm Mercury 4:21am/7:04pm 4:18am/7:03pm Venus 7:26am/10:27pm 7:28am/10:27pm Mars 8:10am/10:49pm 8:09am/10:46pm Jupiter 11:34pm/10:09am 11:30pm/10:05am Saturn 10:44pm/8:26am 10:40pm/8:22am Uranus 2:13am/4:25pm 2:09am/4:22pm Last New First Full Jul 1 Jul 9 Jul 17 Jul 23 Tonight's sky: Virgo the Maiden is low above the western horizon. 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 Low Weeds Absent Source: Oregon Allergy Associates SATURDAY 100° 61° Partly sunny; record-tying temperatures EAST: Extreme heat will continue Tuesday along with scorching sun. Fair and warm at night. Sunny and hot Wednesday. CENTRAL: The extreme and record- breaking heat will continue Tuesday and Wednesday with sizzling sunshine. WEST: Sunshine and continued hot Tuesday. Fair and warm Tuesday night. Sunny and not quite as warm Wednesday. 98° 63° Sunshine with record- breaking temperatures Partly sunny with near- record temperatures Astoria 71/59 Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 47344 86% Wickiup 38722 19% Crescent Lake 24694 28% Ochoco Reservoir 7608 17% Prineville 67407 45% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 113 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1100 Deschutes R. below Bend 138 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1450 Little Deschutes near La Pine 94 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 65 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 1 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 301 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 40 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 4 -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 Winery Continued from A11 Bernau said the sparkling winery and tasting room is a “considerable in- vestment,” with the building and road improvements exceeding $15 million. The site is already home to a mature vineyard, and will also feature a bio- dynamic garden. Growth for Willamette Valley Vine- yards doesn’t stop there. The company is building four winery restaurants, with the first to open before the end of the year in Lake Oswego. Three others are planned for Vancouver, Washing- ton, Bend and Happy Valley. Along with increasing brand aware- ness nationally for Oregon Pinot noir, Bernau said the restaurants will only add further demand. He estimates that Willamette Valley Vineyards will need to double production over the next 5-7 years to keep pace. The Salem Hills winery will still be used to make small lots of Pinot noir, with more of the space to be dedicated to wine tastings and hospitality, Ber- Wages Offices Continued from A11 Continued from A11 The federal minimum wage, mean- while, has been stagnant at $7.25 an hour since 2009. There is a general agreement in Congress that the na- tional minimum should rise, but Re- publicans and Democrats have been unable to agree on how much and how quickly. That reflects a perennial debate among economists over how much higher minimum wages inhibit job growth, the fear being that employers will hire fewer workers if they must pay them more. There’s no debate, though, that it’s easier to raise wages when the economy is strong. Oregon’s succession of minimum wage increases coincided with a long stretch of economic growth, when the state’s jobless rate was at historic lows – dependably below 4% in the months before pandemic recession hit. And even as the minimum wage rose, the number of Oregon workers earning the minimum steadily de- clined from 7.3% in 2018 to 6.6% in 2019 and just 6.1% last year. Some 123,000 workers statewide earned the minimum in 2020, according to the Oregon Employment Department. That could suggest that employers were raising wages to attract work- ers during the strong economy, not only because the state was mandating higher pay. Of course, the pandemic changed everything. Many low-wage work- ers lost their jobs last year when bars, restaurants and other hospitality sec- tors cut back or shut down. That meant fewer workers in those industries, and fewer workers earning the minimum. And now, with employers facing a labor shortage, there is evidence that wages are rising for a new reason — employers racing to reopen after the pandemic are paying more so they can staff up quickly and capitalize on the economic rebound. To improve mental health, the company transformed a planned work area into a spa-like “relaxation room” with reclining chairs and soft music. A test kitchen is wired for virtual presen- tations in case clients don’t want to travel. And a clean- ing crew comes through twice a day, leaving Post-it notes to show what’s been disinfected. “Maybe it’s over the top, but maybe it provides com- fort to those that have sen- sitivities to returning to an in-person work environ- ment,” said Ryan Smith, the executive vice president of Ajinomoto North America. Smith estimates 40% of the new headquarters design changed due to COVID. Shobha Surya, an associate manager of projects and sales at Ajinomoto, is energized by the space. Surya said she’s also thrilled to be working along- side her co-workers again. She’s not alone. Surveys show the thing employees Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 88/69/0.44 Akron 92/73/0.00 Albany 90/73/0.19 Albuquerque 73/64/0.06 Anchorage 60/52/0.00 Atlanta 89/73/0.00 Atlantic City 91/73/0.00 Austin 89/71/0.02 Baltimore 94/75/0.00 Billings 86/59/0.00 Birmingham 90/72/0.00 Bismarck 81/58/0.00 Boise 103/73/0.00 Boston 97/75/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 91/71/0.00 Buffalo 86/73/0.00 Burlington, VT 93/76/0.07 Caribou, ME 83/69/0.08 Charleston, SC 83/72/0.22 Charlotte 90/69/Tr Chattanooga 92/73/0.00 Cheyenne 71/50/0.00 Chicago 82/66/0.17 Cincinnati 92/71/Tr Cleveland 90/74/0.02 Colorado Springs 69/53/0.29 Columbia, MO 86/72/1.59 Columbia, SC 90/71/Tr Columbus, GA 88/72/Tr Columbus, OH 93/71/0.00 Concord, NH 97/70/0.00 Corpus Christi 89/74/0.02 Dallas 89/75/0.72 Dayton 90/74/0.02 Denver 74/53/0.17 Des Moines 83/69/0.00 Detroit 90/73/0.30 Duluth 79/55/0.00 El Paso 70/62/1.61 Fairbanks 72/52/0.00 Fargo 79/63/0.22 Flagstaff 79/51/0.00 Grand Rapids 84/61/0.15 Green Bay 80/59/0.00 Greensboro 88/69/0.00 Harrisburg 95/74/0.00 Hartford, CT 95/72/0.00 Helena 95/57/0.00 Honolulu 88/73/0.00 Houston 80/75/0.88 Huntsville 92/72/0.00 Indianapolis 90/71/0.53 Jackson, MS 93/75/0.00 Jacksonville 82/73/0.29 Today Wednesday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 82/69/t 87/70/t 90/74/t 84/70/t 90/72/t 88/68/t 68/60/t 77/63/t 65/54/pc 63/54/pc 83/72/t 88/72/t 84/74/s 84/75/s 84/71/t 89/71/t 96/74/s 97/73/s 92/61/s 96/64/s 85/72/t 87/71/t 87/57/pc 91/61/s 104/75/s 104/72/s 97/77/s 94/74/t 89/74/s 90/72/pc 89/73/t 79/65/t 89/73/pc 85/64/t 84/64/pc 76/61/r 87/74/t 87/74/t 90/71/pc 91/72/pc 88/72/t 89/72/t 72/52/pc 75/55/pc 82/71/t 82/67/t 90/73/t 83/69/t 88/73/t 81/67/t 71/54/t 74/57/c 83/70/t 79/69/r 90/71/t 91/72/pc 88/72/t 89/71/t 92/73/t 85/70/t 93/70/s 91/68/t 86/75/t 89/75/t 87/74/t 88/76/pc 90/73/t 84/69/t 76/58/pc 80/59/pc 81/67/t 85/66/pc 87/72/t 81/67/t 73/58/t 83/56/pc 75/67/t 80/68/t 71/58/pc 77/58/pc 83/58/pc 88/62/s 72/47/t 71/50/t 81/69/t 80/62/c 77/63/t 83/60/pc 88/71/pc 90/72/pc 95/73/t 96/72/t 96/74/pc 96/71/t 97/61/s 98/63/s 87/75/s 87/75/pc 85/75/t 89/74/t 87/70/t 88/70/t 88/72/t 81/68/t 91/71/pc 90/71/t 86/72/t 86/72/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 69/56/t 94/77/s 54/41/sh 118/86/s 96/81/t 81/71/t 88/77/s 86/66/pc 66/47/t 97/69/pc 54/44/pc 84/70/r 101/76/s 96/64/c 86/78/t 69/49/pc 66/51/pc 73/53/t 77/50/s 90/84/t 86/71/s 87/73/s 70/52/s 66/62/pc 73/58/s 66/54/sh 88/60/s 91/82/t 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. 79/54/0.00 80/70/0.05 85/65/0.14 106/91/0.00 90/71/0.00 86/67/0.00 91/72/0.00 81/66/0.00 94/76/0.00 79/65/0.00 93/76/0.00 86/77/0.80 76/65/Tr 84/64/0.78 93/73/0.09 88/78/0.02 92/76/0.00 99/77/0.00 89/74/0.00 83/70/0.82 84/69/1.07 90/74/0.00 117/89/0.00 84/72/0.38 94/72/0.00 109/89/0.00 92/70/0.00 97/70/0.00 93/72/0.00 90/67/0.00 80/54/Tr 103/67/0.00 90/71/0.00 92/74/0.00 91/58/0.00 88/74/1.70 93/71/0.00 90/74/Tr 71/66/0.00 69/59/0.00 76/59/0.00 70/54/Tr 79/72/0.94 107/71/0.00 88/65/0.00 105/75/0.00 86/70/0.06 95/77/0.00 103/82/0.00 88/72/0.11 91/76/0.00 82/68/0.01 109/69/0.00 112/86/0.00 Today Wednesday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 71/52/pc 63/49/pc 76/69/t 80/69/r 83/69/t 81/63/t 100/80/t 94/81/t 90/71/t 83/69/t 84/65/t 84/64/pc 91/74/pc 91/75/c 85/68/pc 82/67/pc 93/75/t 87/73/t 78/65/t 83/64/pc 92/75/pc 89/74/t 88/79/sh 88/78/t 81/69/t 81/64/pc 82/65/c 87/67/pc 92/72/t 87/73/t 87/78/t 87/77/t 95/78/pc 96/74/pc 96/78/pc 99/75/pc 90/76/s 93/77/s 78/69/t 81/69/t 85/68/t 86/66/pc 89/75/t 89/73/t 104/83/pc 105/80/t 83/70/t 79/68/r 95/76/pc 96/74/s 104/84/t 103/83/t 90/71/t 84/68/t 92/70/s 88/68/t 93/74/s 93/73/pc 90/72/pc 91/74/pc 82/55/pc 87/59/s 100/67/s 97/66/s 93/75/s 95/76/s 87/72/t 82/64/t 98/62/s 91/59/s 88/74/t 83/72/t 94/69/s 90/68/pc 84/75/t 89/75/sh 72/66/pc 73/66/pc 74/61/pc 72/62/pc 82/60/s 79/59/s 65/53/t 74/56/t 88/73/t 88/73/t 90/63/s 82/62/s 85/60/pc 89/61/s 110/78/s 108/72/s 85/70/t 82/70/t 91/76/t 89/76/t 97/77/t 95/75/t 84/73/t 85/72/t 95/78/pc 97/75/s 77/69/t 83/69/r 115/76/s 112/70/s 104/79/t 103/79/t 109/89/0.00 70/54/0.73 88/75/0.13 81/66/0.16 73/56/0.00 89/77/0.03 102/86/0.00 84/68/0.28 70/55/0.00 90/72/0.09 77/61/0.11 79/67/0.00 90/66/0.00 66/27/0.00 70/57/0.00 72/64/0.00 85/72/0.28 83/74/0.00 88/79/0.43 75/55/0.00 61/49/0.14 90/81/0.14 90/75/0.00 81/71/0.99 90/73/0.00 90/72/0.00 91/61/0.00 79/54/0.00 108/81/s 67/55/t 85/71/pc 69/61/t 72/55/c 88/78/t 108/90/pc 85/71/t 73/56/pc 83/69/pc 64/56/t 73/64/pc 85/67/pc 69/41/pc 56/46/sh 77/63/c 85/68/pc 86/74/pc 86/77/t 76/57/pc 63/51/c 94/83/c 89/80/s 79/68/r 83/71/t 82/64/s 93/65/pc 84/61/pc INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 124° at Death Valley, CA National low: 31° at Gothic, CO Precipitation: 3.43" at Odessa, TX FIRE INDEX Extreme Extreme Very high Extreme Very high Mostly sunny and very warm Mostly sunny and hot NATIONAL Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday 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 67/63/0.02 71/59/pc 70/58/c La Grande 102/67/0.00 106/69/s 105/68/s Portland 115/76/0.00 97/64/s 89/63/s Baker City 100/54/0.00 104/59/s 102/58/s La Pine 105/55/0.00 103/56/s 97/55/s Prineville 106/61/0.00 114/69/s 97/65/s Brookings 61/56/Tr 64/55/pc 66/54/pc Medford 115/75/0.00 103/65/s 100/65/s Redmond 110/62/0.00 112/64/s 104/60/s Burns 100/55/0.00 103/60/s 102/59/s Newport 63/54/0.00 64/57/pc 64/57/c Roseburg 101/74/0.00 94/62/s 87/62/s Eugene 93/69/Tr 90/59/s 84/58/pc North Bend 69/57/0.00 67/59/pc 67/58/pc Salem 117/75/0.00 94/61/s 89/60/s Klamath Falls 103/62/0.00 102/56/s 97/56/s Ontario 105/64/0.00 108/72/s 107/70/s Sisters 103/57/0.00 110/65/s 100/62/s Lakeview 102/66/0.00 101/58/s 96/58/s Pendleton 113/73/0.00 114/76/s 106/72/s The Dalles 118/73/0.00 117/74/s 99/70/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 90° 57° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 118/77 Rufus Hermiston 109/71 118/79 122/79 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 117/75 96/60 97/64 105/64 Wasco 105/67 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles Tillamook 103/65 119/75 114/76 Sandy 117/74 McMinnville 71/59 Joseph Heppner La Grande 95/61 Maupin Government 95/58 106/69 103/71 Camp 119/75 Condon 111/74 Union Lincoln City 108/71 97/60 107/66 Salem 66/57 Spray Granite Warm Springs 94/61 Madras 112/74 Albany 95/61 Newport Baker City 114/68 116/69 Mitchell 64/57 88/58 104/59 Camp Sherman 108/68 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity 109/65 112/64 83/58 Day Prineville 63/56 100/58 Ontario Sisters 114/69 Paulina 105/71 108/72 Florence Eugene 110/65 Bend Brothers 104/62 Vale 65/58 90/59 111/66 103/60 Sunriver 107/73 Nyssa 107/63 Hampton Cottage La Pine 107/72 Juntura Oakridge Grove 103/56 103/60 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 106/67 92/61 92/59 Fort Rock 68/57 103/60 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 104/59 102/60 High: 118° 101/57 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at The Dalles Beaver Frenchglen Silver 65/57 94/62 103/60 97/65 Low: 54° Marsh Lake 102/64 Port Orford 100/56 103/59 at Baker City Grants Burns Junction Paisley 64/56 Pass 104/64 Chiloquin 103/62 104/64 Medford Rome 99/56 Gold Beach 103/65 105/63 61/54 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 103/65 100/64 102/56 100/63 64/55 101/58 Seaside 73/57 Cannon Beach 70/57 MONDAY 92° 59° 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 SUNDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Grasses High FRIDAY 98° 60° 102° 61° Clear and warm Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low THURSDAY nau said. In addition, Willamette Valley Vineyards is creating a new posi- tion, director of winemaking and vineyards, who will help manage the transition into the new winery while overseeing operations and assisting in the development of brands and products. Willamette Valley Vineyards owns five vineyards in the Willamette Val- ley, totaling about 500 mature acres, as well as 35 acres in Eastern Oregon and Washington in the Walla Walla 73/63/0.21 95/79/0.00 63/53/0.28 117/81/0.00 95/80/0.06 89/71/0.36 86/77/0.00 86/60/0.00 66/48/0.05 91/61/0.00 48/43/0.00 90/75/0.00 103/79/0.00 93/63/0.00 90/75/0.34 66/48/0.00 64/53/0.12 79/63/0.02 72/51/0.00 89/81/0.37 88/73/0.00 89/70/0.00 68/45/0.00 66/62/0.00 73/57/0.00 68/59/0.09 84/57/0.00 93/82/0.21 62/57/t 96/77/s 57/41/s 120/84/pc 97/81/t 88/69/pc 88/79/s 73/59/t 64/49/c 90/65/c 54/47/pc 80/73/r 100/76/s 96/66/s 87/77/t 68/51/s 64/48/pc 71/54/t 77/48/s 90/84/t 87/70/s 87/73/s 70/49/s 65/61/pc 76/58/s 64/54/sh 94/63/s 93/81/t Valley and The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater American Viticul- tural Area. The winery also has 500 acres under contract with Oregon growers. Bernau credits expansion of the winery to its business model, as a publicly traded company with more than 19,000 wine enthusiasts as share- holders. In mid-June, the winery issued a $10.7 million stock offering to fund the new restaurants. Shares are be- ing sold at $5.05 with a 4.36% annual Shafkat Anowar/AP Facebook Continued from A11 Boasberg dismissed the separate complaint made by the state attor- neys general as well. The FTC didn’t immediately have a comment on the ruling and it wasn’t known whether the agency planned to try again. Facebook, in an e-mailed state- ment, said “We are pleased that to- hubs for employees. Some mimic coffee houses, with wood floors, booth seating and pendant lamps. “Companies are trying to create the sense that this is a cool club that people want to come into,” Newman said. day’s decisions recognize the defects in the government complaints filed against Facebook. We compete fairly every day to earn people’s time and attention and will continue to deliver great products for the people and businesses that use our services.” Alex Harman, competition policy advocate for Public Citizen, a con- sumer advocacy group, said the rul- ing wasn’t surprising in that other courts had grappled with and thrown Mark Bryan, a senior in- terior designer with Colum- bus, Ohio-based M+A Ar- chitects, expects a more fluid office culture in the future, with different places to work on any given day. Introverts might choose a small, private out cases in which consumers weren’t charged directly for the services in question. “Courts really have a hard time with that market definition for some reason,” Harman said. “It’s Exhibit A for why we need the laws changed.” An ambitious package of legisla- tion to overhaul the antitrust laws, which could point toward break- ing up Facebook as well as Google, Amazon and Apple, was approved 104/80/s 67/56/t 82/62/t 63/61/pc 72/52/pc 87/76/sh 110/88/pc 87/74/pc 67/55/pc 81/57/r 68/54/t 67/62/sh 85/68/pc 59/41/pc 56/45/pc 80/60/pc 83/68/c 86/75/c 87/78/c 64/53/pc 65/51/pc 93/81/c 90/81/s 75/70/c 83/62/t 75/61/s 80/61/t 82/62/t dividend, or wine credit worth 15% more. “The foundation of our success is our owners,” Bernau said. According to its latest annual re- port filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Willamette Valley Vineyards managed to increase sales and income, despite the pan- demic. Net sales were $27.3 million, up approximately 10% over 2019, while net income was $6.9 million, a 23% increase. The auditorium of Ajinomoto, a global food and pharmaceutical company in Illinois. In May, Ajinomo- to’s employees returned to work in a space designed for a post-COVID world. Hallways are wider. Glass panels separate cubicles. A work space has been transformed into a spa-like relaxation area. The culi- nary center is wired for virtual presentations. And a cleaning crew comes through twice a day, leaving Post-it notes to show what’s been disinfected. miss most about office work is socializing and collaborat- ing with colleagues, said Lise Newman, workplace practice director at architecture firm SmithGroup. Companies are trying to encourage that rap- port by building more social 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 room; extroverts, a table in the office cafe. Some office changes re- flect a new commitment to hybrid work. Valiant Tech- nologies, which provides tech support and other ser- vices to businesses, is letting its employees work primar- ily at home but has them reserve a desk for the days they want to come to the office. The New York com- pany has removed rows of desks and put more space between the remaining ones. Employees leave their key- board, mouse and headsets in lockers. Not every design change will stick. Last summer, when Steelcase started bring- ing back some workers, they pushed tables in the cafete- ria far apart from each other and only allowed one person per table. It made the space so depressing that no one wanted to sit there, Steelcase CEO Jim Keane said. “An important lesson is that, yes, it has to be safe, but also has to be inspiring,” he said. “People are actually go- ing to expect more from of- fices in the future.” by the House Judiciary Committee last week and sent to the full U.S. House. Rep. Ken Buck of Colorado, the chief Republican sponsor of the legis- lation, said in a statement that Mon- day’s ruling “shows that antitrust re- form is urgently needed. Congress needs to provide additional tools and resources to our antitrust enforcers to go after Big Tech companies engag- ing in anticompetitive conduct.”