A11 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 2021 p DOW 34,292.29 +9.02 BRIEFING Home prices soar to 15-year highs U.S. home prices soared in April at the fast- est pace since 2005 as potential buyers bid up prices on a limited supply of available properties. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index, released Tuesday, jumped nearly 15% in April from the previous year. That is up from a 13.4% annual gain in March. Still, economists said there is little sign that the housing market’s blister- ing price increases are likely to cool off soon. “The forces that have propelled home price growth to new highs over the past year remain in place and are offering lit- tle evidence of abating,” said Matthew Speakman, an economist at real es- tate data provider Zillow. All 20 cities that make up the index reported higher year-over-year price gains in April than the previous month. Five cities — Charlotte, Cleve- land, Dallas, Denver, and Seattle — had the largest 12-month price increases on records dating back 30 years. Sales of existing homes have fallen for four straight months, likely because soaring prices have discouraged some would-be buyers. Confidence level continues upward p NASDAQ 14,528.33 +27.83 bendbulletin.com/business p n S&P 500 4,291.80 +1.19 30-YR T-BOND 2.10% ... p CRUDE OIL $72.98 +.07 q GOLD $1,762.80 -17.00 BY JOSH BOAK AND JONATHAN LEMIRE Associated Press LA CROSSE, Wis. — President Joe Biden declared America urgently needs a “generational investment” in its in- frastructure, as he looked to sell voters Tuesday on the economic benefits of the $973 billion bipartisan package that still faces an uncertain future in Congress. Biden traveled to La Crosse, Wiscon- sin, population 52,000, and toured its public transit center, highlighting proj- ects — including hybrid buses and road repair equipment — that would receive additional funding from the infrastruc- ture bill. He argued that the package, which is held together in large part by the promise of millions of new jobs, is a way for the United States to assert both the principles of democracy and the economic might that can come from dramatic investments in the country’s future. “This deal isn’t just the sum of its parts. It’s a signal to ourselves, and to the world, that American democracy can come through and deliver for all our people,” said Biden. “America has always been propelled into the future by land- mark investments.” He said there is a critical need to im- prove crumbling infrastructure — from overwhelmed power grids to lead-filled water pipes to traffic-clogged roads — and stressed that the effort needs to be ambitious to not only improve Amer- icans’ daily lives now but also to com- bat the growing challenges of climate change. “We’re not just tinkering around the edges,” Biden said. He also made his pitch in personal terms, reminiscing about driving a bus during law school and noting the 1972 traffic accident that killed his first wife and daughter, as he called for improve- ments to make the nation’s roads safer. The visit to Wisconsin was the be- ginning of what the White House has declared will be a series of presidential trips to sell the bipartisan bill — and to reassure the nervous Republicans who helped craft it. “I’m going to be out there making the case for the American people until this job is done, until we bring this bi- partisan bill home,” said the president, though he allowed that “there will be more disagreements to be resolved, more compromises” to be made. Record heat wave EURO $1.1904 -.0020 CHERRY GROWERS RACE TO HARVEST Evan Vucci/AP President Joe Biden speaks about infra- structure spending Tuesday at the La Crosse Municipal Transit Authority in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Picking crews working overnight to avoid heat BY SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press I n a race against nature, cherry growers across the Northwest are scrambling to pick fruit during the record-breaking heat wave. Across Washington and Oregon, crews have been working night shifts or early mornings to avoid the heat. Some growers are leaving large blocks of fruit on trees to protect work crews or because the fruit, ex- posed to too much heat too quickly, became overripe. Growers are moving 500,000 boxes a day, B.J. Thurlby, president of Northwest Cherry Growers, told the Associated Press. “We’re right in the middle of Bing har- vest,” said Andy Handley, a small-scale or- chardist in East Wenatchee, Washington. “(The heat) couldn’t have come at a worse time.” According to the National Weather Ser- vice, Wenatchee has been in triple-digit heat since Saturday: 107 degrees Fahrenheit on Sunday, 108 on Monday and a projected 115 for Tuesday. With nights in the 80- to 90-degree range, most cherries have had no opportunity for overnight chilling, crucial for size develop- ment and firmness. The heat has also has- tened sugar development, meaning cherries ripen all at once, compressing the harvest timeline. “When it gets so hot, the fruit stops grow- ing. And then it just starts to cook on the trees,” said Handley. In one orchard, Handley walked away from 40,000 pounds — about 30% of that orchard’s crop. Eastern Oregon faces RV shortage United orders 270 new jets BY CARLOS FUENTES The Observer — Bulletin wire reports q SILVER $25.87 -.35 Roads, bridges, jobs: Biden is selling big infrastructure deal U.S. consumer con- fidence rose for a fifth month in June to the highest level since the pandemic began last year as households responded to increased vaccinations and the further reopen- ing of businesses. The Conference Board reported Tuesday that its consumer confidence index increased to 127.3 in June, up from a May reading of 120.0. The June increase reflected an improvement in consum- ers’ assessment of current conditions. Consumer sentiment is expected to keep rising in coming months which will provide more support for consumer spending, which accounts for 70% of economic activity. “Consumers’ short- term optimism re- bounded, buoyed by ex- pectations that business conditions and their own financial prospects will continue improving in the months ahead,” said Lynn Franco, senior di- rector of economic indi- cators at the Conference Board. United Airlines is mak- ing one of the largest or- ders ever for commercial airplanes in an aggressive bet that air travel will re- bound strongly from the pandemic. United said Tues- day that it will buy 200 Boeing Max jets and 70 planes from Europe’s Airbus so that it can re- place many of its smallest planes and some of its oldest and have room to grow its fleet. It’s the biggest order in United’s history and the biggest by any U.S. carrier since American Airlines ordered 460 Boeing and Airbus jets in 2011. At list prices, the deals would be worth more than $30 billion, although airlines routinely get deep discounts. Figures from Ascend by Cirium, would put the deal around $15 billion. United declined to disclose financial terms. q See Cherry / A12 The heat wave has forced cherry pickers to work at nights or the early mornings to avoid high temperatures. Capital Press file LA GRANDE — In an average year, the Thunder RV parking lot can have as many as 45 RVs, rang- ing from truck campers to fifth wheels to travel trailers. But these days, there are four RVs sitting in the mostly empty lot at the Island City dealership. The shortage has lasted a full year now, with no end in sight, according to Thunder RV salesman Mike Weinkauf said. “The shortage started last sum- mer right after COVID-19 shut ev- erything down,” he said. “I think it’s because people are getting cabin fe- ver and wanting to go out more.” Thompson RV, based in Pendle- ton, has also seen a large increase in demand over the last year. Ac- cording to Thompson RV Man- ager Corrin Thompson, part of the shortage can be attributed to the Thompson RV being the big- gest dealer of Outdoors RVs in the world. “We’re totally sold out for the year,” she said. “We’re actually pre- selling RVs up to 16 months in ad- vance now. Someone might come in today and want to order an RV, and they won’t get it until the end of 2022.” Vanishing teller jobs threaten entry point for women BY KEVIN ORLAND Bloomberg about 50% less sales this year than normal years,” Thunder RV owner Caleb Samson said. “The demand is just far bigger than the supply, and we can’t replace them at the same rate as we’re selling them.” Northwood Manufacturing, which produces most of Thunder RV’s supply, is based in La Grande and works with 66 dealerships in Oregon and surrounding states, nearly all of which are also facing a shortage. For years, women have gotten a foot in the door to the finance industry by becom- ing bank tellers. Now that path is disappearing. The number of tellers — a job in which four out of five positions are held by women — has dropped more than 20% in the U.S. and Canada in the past decade as trans- actions move from branches to mobile phones. The figure, already projected be- fore the pandemic to fall further over the next 10 years, may decline even faster after COVID-19 lockdowns accelerated the adop- tion of digital banking. Technological advances are eliminating the need for bank tellers, threatening an en- try point for women into the male-domi- nated industry that has sought to promote more females to leadership roles. While the climb remains steep, some financial compa- nies have managed to improve the gender balance in their executive ranks. “I wouldn’t have been a banker without it,” former Wells Fargo & Co. Chair Betsy Duke, who started as a teller, said in an in- terview. “I wouldn’t have had the career that I had.” See RVs / A12 See Tellers / A12 Carlos Fuentes/The Observer A 2021 Northwood Grande Ronde sits on a mostly empty lot at Thunder RV June 15. The increase in recreational ve- hicle demand is not just local. Ac- cording to the RV Industry Asso- ciation, RV sales in the U.S. have significantly increased during the pandemic, with total 2021 RV ship- ments projected to reach more than 576,000 — 18% higher than the 2017 record. However, not all dealerships are seeing the same sales trends. “According to the national trend, we should be seeing a huge increase in sales, but we’ve actually seen