A8 The BulleTin • Friday, July 30, 2021 Lumber companies post record profits cluding West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd., Canfor Corp. and Weyerhaeuser Co. have been swimming in cash during the last year due to an unex- pected boom in homebuilding and renovations that caused wood prices to quadruple in 12 months and hit record highs in May. That will result in “the mother of all quarterly returns with record profitabil- ity” and revenues that exceed first-quarter results, said Greg Kuta of Westline Capital Strat- egies Inc. Lumber prices have since cooled along with a decline in DIY renovations, prompting analysts to anticipate lower quarterly earnings ahead for the producers. The impact of lower lumber prices and re- duced renovations won’t be felt until the third quarter, said Kuta, whose Ohio-based firm specializes in lumber-trading strategies. West Fraser, the world’s big- gest lumber producer, kicked off the second-quarter earn- ings season for the industry on Wednesday, reporting earn- ings that beat analyst estimates. Montreal-based Resolute For- est Products Inc. on Thursday also posted better-than-ex- pected net profit and sales. “With benchmark prices reaching record highs in May and our best-ever quarterly shipments, we used the excep- tional cash generation from our wood products segment to make lasting changes to our business,” Resolute’s Chief Executive Officer Remi G. Lalonde said in a statement. Seattle-based Weyerhaeuser will report on Friday. acquiring other vacation man- agement businesses — some of them large, and others tiny out- fits run by families in commu- nities popular among tourists. In Central Oregon, Vacasa bought vacation rental manage- ment company Discover Sun- river in 2016 and Carefree Va- cation Rentals, which handled vacation rentals around Eagle Crest, in 2015. Vacasa has sometimes faced accusations of strong-arming smaller competitors, including a lawsuit last spring alleging it waged a “smear campaign” to win renters away from a rival management firm. The company’s technology tracks rental bookings in its markets and dynamically ad- justs prices to reflect demand. Vacasa claims that boosts rev- enue for the property owners who list with it, though it may also have the effect of driving up the cost of getaways for those who rent vacation homes. Breon, 42, ran Vacasa for a decade but stepped down last year. He still lives in the Port- land area. Vacasa made Roberts — previously CEO of online restaurant reservation company OpenTable — its new chief. Vacasa employs 6,500, most of whom work in vacation com- munities to maintain rental properties between guests, and 400 in Portland. Its Pearl Dis- trict headquarters reopened this week for employees who choose to return voluntarily. Both Roberts and Vacasa’s chief financial officer, Jamie Co- hen, live in California. Roberts said Thursday that Vacasa is a distinctly Oregon company, but he said its workforce will re- main distributed after the pan- demic. “Things are more remote than they’ve ever been,” he said. “We’re not unusual in that. That trend is well established now across a ton of different com- panies.” Vacasa disclosed its finan- cial results for the first time on Thursday in conjunction with its pending public offering, re- porting $492 million in revenue last year and a $92 million loss. It’s typical for young, fast-growing companies to lose money while they’re investing in their growth, but investors will be watching carefully to en- sure Vacasa has a path to prof- itability. Vacasa had $290 million in cash at the end of March, ac- cording to the financial filings, and $458 million in long-term debt. On Thursday, Roberts said Vacasa is spending aggressively to bring new properties into its management portfolio. That spending will continue indef- initely, he said, but Vacasa an- ticipates the contribution from each new property will soon overtake the money going out the door. Roberts said the com- pany expects to be profitable by one measure of its cash flow in 2023. Vacasa will list its stock through a mechanism called a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC. Vacasa will absorb the stock listing of the TPG investment fund, which is already trading on Wall Street. It’s become a fashionable way to facilitate stock listings as an al- ternative to a traditional IPO. Vacasa said Breon and other major shareholders, which in- clude six large investment firms, will retain their shares in the Thursday’s deal. They will col- lectively own 88% of the com- pany after the transaction. The Portland company said it hasn’t determined which ex- change will list the stock. It plans to complete the transac- tion sometime this fall. cinated included: • “The jab is a psychotic global attempt to fulfill a de- population agenda,” wrote one Crook County resident. • “This is not a vaccine,” wrote a Deschutes County resi- dent. “It is an experimental gene therapy drug. I chose not to be a guinea pig.” • Another Crook County resident said he had survived severe acute respiratory syn- drome in 2003. As of Thursday, the Oregon Health Authority reported that 130,981 people have been fully vaccinated or are in progress in Crook, Deschutes and Jeffer- son counties. That translates to about 59% of the population who are 18 and older in the three Central Oregon counties, according to the OHA data. “Oregonians who remain unvaccinated share the same reasons as being the most in- fluential in their decision not to get vaccinated: Long- and short- term side effects and the con- cerns that the vaccine was de- veloped too quickly,” Vogel said. The survey conducted July 9-14 of 1,464 residents has a margin of error for the full sam- ple ranging from plus or minus 1.5% to plus or minus 2.6%, de- pending on the response cate- gory for any given question. The Oregon Values and Voices project, a nonpartisan charitable organization, has partnered with Pamplin Media Group, EO Media Group and the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center. EO Media Group owns newspapers in Oregon and Washington state, including The Bulletin. BY MARCY NICHOLSON Bloomberg North American lumber producers are expected to post another quarter of record prof- its this week, but most atten- tion will be on the outlook, with prices for wood products stumbling and do-it-yourself renovations slowing. Producers are building and expanding sawmills in the southern U.S., where costs are low and timber is plenti- ful, while boosting output on expectations that the surge in homebuilding will continue. Some analysts warn that an oversupply may be building up, even with bottlenecks and sup- ply constraints in British Co- lumbia, Canada’s biggest lum- ber exporter to the U.S. “We need to see some more supply cuts to re-balance in- ventories and turn prices around,” said Mark Wilde, a timber and wood products an- alyst at BMO Capital Markets. Lumber companies in- Vacasa Continued from A7 At $4.5 billion, Vacasa would be Oregon’s fifth most-valuable business, ahead of Portland General Electric, Umpqua Bank and NW Natural. Vacasa manages vacation rentals, listing owners’ prop- erties online and performing cleaning and maintenance. It has more than 30,000 listings in 400 communities around the country, from Manzanita to Myrtle Beach. The company, which had already raised about $630 mil- lion through prior investments, will receive $485 million in new funding through its public of- fering. “It’s all about pace of play,” CEO Matt Roberts said in an interview Thursday. He said the new funding will enable the company to substantially boost its spending on technology and on adding properties to its management service. “We’re going to be able to move against a long list of ideas we have to improve the business at a faster pace,” Roberts said. Founded in 2009 by Portland business analyst Eric Breon, Vacasa has grown rapidly by Christinne Muschi/Bloomberg Logs stacked at the Groupe Crete Inc. sawmill in Chertsey, Quebec, in 2018. Ted S. Warren/AP file A worker stands near a lift June 29 as he works on a future Sound Tran- sit light rail station near Federal Way, Washington, south of Seattle. Heat Continued from A7 The emergency rules re- quire employers to provide sufficient water and shade to workers, grant workers 10-minute breaks every two hours once temperatures reach 90 degrees, monitor em- ployees for signs of heat-re- lated illnesses and conduct adequate training by Aug. 1 to provide employees and man- agers with information about heat-related illnesses. Oregon OSHA will reas- sign inspectors and approve overtime to ensure that more enforcement officers are in the field on hot days, with a particular emphasis on en- forcing safety in agriculture and construction, said Aaron Corvin, a spokesperson for the agency. Oregon OSHA is also of- fering employers free con- sultations and educational resources to help them com- ply with the rules, Corvin said. The agency sent out an announcement Wednesday reminding employers of the regulations. Ira Cuello-Martinez, the climate policy associate for PCUN, Oregon’s largest farmworkers union, said he is hopeful the new rules will help to better protect workers during hot days this summer, but said workers need the freedom to take even more frequent breaks than the state is mandating once tempera- tures reach 100 degrees. Oregon OSHA said it does not have the legal right to mandate that employers shut down operations. Liz Merah, a spokesperson for Gov. Kate Brown, said state lawmakers would need to grant Oregon OSHA that authority. At the same time, workers have little recourse if they feel unsafe working in extreme heat. In many cases, employ- ees can legally be fired for not showing up to work in ex- treme heat, unless they qual- ify for protected leave under Oregon’s sick leave law or rea- sonable accommodation un- der Oregon’s disability laws, said Cristin Casey, chief pros- ecutor for the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. Oregon OSHA received 109 complaints about unsafe working conditions due to heat from June 24 to June 30, before the emergency rules were in place, according to an analysis of Oregon OSHA data. The agency received ad- ditional complaints in July. It has conducted 63 in- spections in response to the heat-related complaints. Cor- vin said the agency has opted to resolve other complaints by contacting employers by letter or phone, but could conduct additional inspec- tions if it isn’t satisfied with an employer’s response or it learns that an employer has not addressed concerns. OBITUARY Michael Lawrence Lovely April 23, 1938 - July 2, 2021 Survey Continued from A7 “In Oregon, as in most other states, vaccination has become a politically polarized issue,” said Amaury Vogel, Oregon Values and Beliefs Center associate executive director. “Political ideology when it comes to so- cial issues, is a strong predictor of whether or not a person has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.” Some of the responses to the survey of why Central Oregon people would not become vac- e Reporter: 541-633-2117, sroig@bendbulletin.com It is on a sad and somber occasion that I announce that my partner in life, Michael Lawrence Lovely, has passed away. I come before you today to pay homage to an incredible man that was a gentleman and a scholar. A man that took community involvement to the highest degree. The numbers of groups that he acti vely was a part of, I can only guess were none less than a dozen. Mike was a man that rarely ever missed a Sunday church service and loved God dearly. Mike was my wish come true. God bless you, Mike. You are home now, with all of your family in heaven, working in God’s garden. In that, I know what a bounti ful harvest there will be. “Bringing in the sheath, bringing in the sheath, we will come rejoicing, bringing in the sheath.” Masks Continued from A7 For many stores looking to generate sales in an overall re- tail sales slump last year, masks were a bright spot. Most nota- bly, Gap, along with its port- folio of brands including Old Navy and Athleta, as well as Etsy made millions of dollars on masks. Etsy, a global online market- place for handmade goods, has seen its masks go from 14% of gross merchandise sales in the second quarter of 2020 to less than 3% in the first quarter of 2021. The company declined to comment on mask sales trends on Wednesday, noting it’s in its quiet period ahead of its earn- ings release next week. Since the onset of the pan- demic, 3M Co. increased its annual production of N95 masks fourfold to 2.5 billion by building extra capacity. It said We hear you. We’re dedicated to helping you! Contact your local DISH Authorized Retailer today! Juniper Satellite 410 3474 410 3474 (541) 410-3474 410 3474 410 3474 635 SW Highland Ave., Redmond, OR junipersatellite.com that global demand reached its peak in the first quarter of this year, which included stock- piling from governments and hospitals. It’s now seeing a de- celeration in overall health care demand and is adjusting pro- duction, increasing supply to industrial and consumer out- lets while continuing to prior- itize health care workers in the geographies seeing increased COVID-19 cases and elevated hospitalization rates. But 3M CEO Mike Roman told analysts on Tuesday that, just like in the past, it is “pre- pared to increase production in response to COVID-19-re- lated needs or future emergen- cies when needed.” Honeywell International Inc., another big manufacturer of N95 masks, said it “contin- ues to produce N95 masks in the U.S. to meet the needs of front-line and essential work- ers.” Located in Downtown Bend is Central Oregon’s foremost wine bar/shop. It features: Wine by the glass, Premium selection of wine, Champagne, Ports and sake, Bottles to go, On-line ordering & shipping, Public wine tastings, Three wine clubs, & more! Tues-Thurs 11-6:30 Fri/Sat 12-8 Sun/Mon Closed 141 NW Minnesota Ave 541.410.1470 The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away. Blessed be the name of the Lord. Amen. Michael Lawrence Lovely, born the 23rd of April 1938, made his fi nal journey on the 2nd of July 2021. I have been incredibly blessed that Mike and I have shared in a loving relati onship that spanned just two- and one-half months shy, of thirty years of togetherness. I was the one that was blessed in the presence of Mike. The Lord has called Mike’s name and Mike has returned to heaven. “To be absent in the body, is to be present in the Lord”......and you, my precious Mike, have returned to your mother, father, and your two brothers, Patrick, and litt le Moe. Mike, I see you dawning a white robe, a golden halo, and a melodic harp. You left an indelible mark on all of us. We love you. You my sweeti e, are not only loved by this community, but you are also loved by your Kelly. Mike could never wait for me to come through our front door and be able to give love and receive love in return. You are my beloved and for almost thirty years we shared in a warm, loving, kind, relati onship and ALL that is noble in the human heart. “Jesus, our wonderful counselor and Holy one.” Gathering of friends for Mike will be held Friday July 30, 2021, from 9:00am-10:00pm. Shevlin Park in Aspen Hall 18920 NW Shevlin Park Rd, Bend, OR 97701. Memorial Service with Military Honors 2:00pm