A7 B USINESS THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JULY 2, 2021 p DOW 34,633.53 +131.02 BRIEFING Jobless claims fall to 364,000 The number of Amer- icans applying for unem- ployment aid fell again last week to the lowest level since the pandemic struck last year, further evidence that the job market and the broader economy are rebounding rapidly from the coronavi- rus recession. The Labor Department reported Thursday that jobless claims dropped by 51,000 to 364,000. Ap- plications for unemploy- ment benefits have fallen more or less steadily since the year began. The rollout of vaccines has sharply reduced new COVID-19 cases, giving consumers the confi- dence to shop, travel, eat out and attend public events as the economy recovers. Last week’s drop in jobless claims was steeper than economists had expected. Appli- cations for unemploy- ment benefits have now fallen in 10 of the past 12 weeks. p bendbulletin.com/business p NASDAQ 14,522.38 +18.42 S&P 500 4,319.94 +22.44 p 30-YR T-BOND 2.07% +.01 p p CRUDE OIL $75.23 +1.76 GOLD $1,775.90 +5.10 q SILVER $26.08 -.09 q EURO $1.1842 -.0005 TAX FRAUD CHARGES Trump Organization, CFO indicted BY MICHAEL R. SISAK AND TOM HAYS Associated Press NEW YORK — Donald Trump’s company and its longtime finance chief were charged Thursday in what a prosecutor called a “sweep- ing and audacious” tax fraud scheme that saw the Trump ex- ecutive allegedly receive more than $1.7 million in off-the- books compensation, includ- ing apartment rent, car pay- ments and school tuition. It is the first criminal case New York authorities’ two- year investigation into the former president has yielded. According to the indictment filed Wednesday and unveiled Thursday, from 2005 through this year, CFO Allen Weissel- berg and the Trump Organiza- tion cheated the state and city out of taxes by conspiring to pay senior executives off the books. Weisselberg and lawyers for the Trump Organization pleaded not guilty. Prosecutor Carey Dunne de- scribed a 15-year scheme “or- chestrated by the most senior executives.” Trump himself was not charged at this stage of the in- vestigation, jointly pursued by Manhattan District Attor- ney Cyrus Vance Jr. and New York Attorney General Letitia James, both Democrats. Dunne asserted politics played no role in the decision to bring charges. “Politics has no role in the jury chamber, and I can assure you it had no role here,” Dunne said. The indictment says that Weisselberg, 73, concealed that he was a New York City resident to avoid city income tax. See Trump / A8 COVID-19 | Restriction lifted ASTORIA COLUMN REOPENS Construction spending falls 0.3% in May U.S. construction spending fell 0.3% in May. Growth in housing, the economy’s standout performer, slowed while activity in areas most di- rectly impacted by the pandemic showed fur- ther weakness. The Commerce De- partment reported Thurs- day that the May decline followed a slight 0.1% rise in April and left overall construction spending up 7.5% from a year ago. Housing construction, which has been a driving force for the economy during the pandemic, posted a tiny 0.2% gain in May as single-family home construction rose 0.8% while apartments and other multifamily construction was flat. Over the past year, hous- ing construction is up 28.7% with single-family construction up a sizzling 46.1%. Nonresidential con- struction activity fell 1.1% in May with hotel and motel construction and the category that covers shopping centers, two areas heavily affected by the pandemic shut- downs, both falling. Over the past year, nonresiden- tial construction is down 5.8% while the hotel and motel category is down 23.2%. Spending on govern- ment projects dipped a slight 0.2% in May and is down 8.7% over the past year, reflecting the squeeze many levels of government have felt from falling tax revenues Hailey Hoffman/The Astorian The stairs and railing inside the Astoria Column were cleaned before the reopening. BY ETHAN MYERS • The Astorian V isitors can once again climb the narrow, 164-step spiral staircase to see the views atop the Astoria Column. The Column closed during the coronavirus pandemic due to the difficulty of regulating social distancing and sanitizing surfaces inside the monument. The Friends of the Astoria Column, a nonprofit that oversees the park on Coxcomb Hill for the city, worked closely with the Clatsop County Public Health Department to determine when it was safe to fully open, according to Willis Van Dusen, a former Astoria mayor and treasurer for the Friends group. The Column reopened on Saturday. “We were excessively careful,” Van Dusen said. “It just made sense.” Fred Pynes, the park host, said they were ready to reopen for some time and spent much of the closure cleaning the stairs and railings inside the Column in anticipation for the return of visitors. “People can regulate themselves and wear a mask if they’d like,” he said. But due to the close quarters inside “It’s great to see the kids at the top throwing off airplanes again. You can hear the adults, too ... It feels great to be getting back to normal.” — Fred Pynes, the host of the park on Coxcomb Hill the Column, Pynes said they withheld announcing the reopening widely in hopes of avoiding a “stampede” of vis- itors all at once. They plan to make an official announcement on Thursday. Pynes said the sales of parking passes atop Coxcomb Hill, which cost $5 for a calendar year, dropped significantly last year due to the closure of the Column. Some visitors complained they had to pay to park but could not climb up to the viewing deck of the 125-foot high landmark. “It was inconvenient and a little bit of an irritant having the monument closed,” Van Dusen said. But as most coronavirus restrictions in Oregon are lifted, Pynes and Van Dusen are thrilled visitors can return to witness a “360-degree view.” See Astoria / A8 Vancouver biotech firm files for IPO Absci Corp., a Vancou- ver-based biotech firm, said Wednesday it’s filed for an initial public of- fering. The company, founded in Portland, aims to use computer technology to identify new pro- tein-based drugs known as biologics, then synthe- size them using specially engineered bacteria as factories. It moved to Vancouver in 2016 after Washington Gov. Jay In- slee invested $200,000 from his office’s strate- gic reserve fund. The company has to date attracted $230 million in investment, including a $125 million round earlier this year. — Bulletin wire reports What could be cooler? Heineken device trails along — with beer BY DALVIN BROWN The Washington Post Cargo-carrying robots have yet to go mainstream, but they certainly make for appealing internet videos. They tote groceries around the supermarket and hold your luggage at the airport. In one wild dis- play, someone retrofitted a tank of beer, a nozzle and a camera onto a robotic dog, which then showed a unique “peeing” function- ality. See Cooler / A8 Heineken’s cooler in- novation, powered by robot- ics and artificial intelli- gence, is supposed to fol- low users around. Heineken via The Washington Post WASHINGTON STATE Darigold to build $450 million facility BY MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press PASCO, Wash. — Darigold announced Thursday that it plans to build a $450 mil- lion dairy processing plant in Pasco, Washington. The plant will produce a new specialized protein pow- der and butter at what the company and Port of Pasco officials are touting as “the most sophisticated large-scale milk protein facility in North America.” “It’s great news for ag and all of Washington State, keep- ing a processing plant of this size and scope,” Randy Hayden, executive director of the port, told the Capital Press. “(It) will support not just the manufacturing jobs at the plant — all of the jobs at the farms and transportation in- dustry. It’s great to have these facilities here supporting our farmers.” See Darigold / A8