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SHOWERS 54 • 41  |  WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2020  |  theworldlink.com

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Judge denies restrictions lawsuit PORTLAND (AP) — A federal judge has rejected an effort from Oregon restaurants to stop the most recent COVID-19-related restrictions imposed by Gov. Kate Brown. The lawsuit from the Oregon Restaurants and Lodging Association said restaurants were being unfairly singled out. The judge from the Oregon federal district court on Tuesday

did not agree and said the freeze is within the state’s authority, KOIN-TV reported. Two restaurant industry groups filed the lawsuit against Brown last week in response to her executive order forcing restaurants to move to takeout for two weeks, among other measures, as the state tries to lower a spike in cases. At the time, representatives

from the Oregon Restaurant & Lodging Association and the Restaurant Law Center said the action was taken to “prevent economic devastation.” After the ruling, Jason Brandt with the association said their real focus is doing what they can to help people keep their jobs. “We are not blind to the fact that face coverings have to come off in our industry when

you are eating or drinking in a restaurant,” he said. “Our challenge is the inequity having people gather in private spaces up to 6 people, two households, where people are moving around with their face coverings off.” Brandt said the association has had several meetings with the governor’s office and that they want to keep working with

the governor’s office. The current restrictions are in place until December 3. “I am hopeful,” Brandt said, “come December 3, at least some of our restaurants in some counties across the state will have the opportunity to have the freeze lifted and have the opportunity to make the revenue they desperately need for their business.”

Trump pardons turkeys Gives thanks for COVID-19 vaccines

David Rupkalvis, The World

North Bend Mayor Jessica Engelke signs her oath of office after being sworn in Monday. Engelke presided over her first meeting as mayor Tuesday.

North Bend Council reappoints Slater, extends pipeline permits JOHN GUNTHER The World

NORTH BEND — Timm Slater will get at least two more years on the North Bend City Council. After finishing fourth in the general election earlier this month, Slater was appointed Tuesday night to fill the council seat that became open when Jessica Engelke was elected North Bend’s mayor. In Engelke’s first meeting as the first female mayor for North Bend, the new council voted to appoint Slater to fill the final two years of her unfinished term on the council. The vote wasn’t unanimous, with new councilors Pat Goll and Susanna Noordhoff voting against Slater’s appointment.

“I think this is a huge decision,” Goll said. “I would love to have had a work session to talk about it. Tonight is basically my first time on the job. I don’t know that I want to make a decision right now. “I’m not against Timm, but I would like to have a little investigation.” Noordhoff agreed. “We should give it a rest,” she said of choosing Engelke’s replacement. “It is our first meeting. It is a very significant decision. I have spoken to several people who were on the ballot. Several are interested.” Noordhoff suggested waiting until the council’s next meeting to make the decision. But other councilors suggested Slater was the logical choice based on the election results.

“I think a lot of us … we ran on the concept that we took the will of the people into account,” said Eric Gleason, the other new council member. “Timm Slater, very closely, was No. 4. My thought on this is, if he was willing to take up the call and fill those last two years, I feel based on the election results, he would be a viable candidate.” Engelke said she had spoken with Slater and he had said if it was the will of the council, he would serve the rest of her term. Ultimately, Larry Garboden moved to nominate Slater and Bill Richardson, the other continuing council member, seconded the motion. Noordhoff said she wanted to make a motion for Jonathan Vinyard, who also had run for the council, but the other motion was already in place and

Gleason and Engelke joined Richardson and Garboden in approving Slater. Filling the council seat was one of two big decisions by the new council in its first meeting. The other, which drew much more public interest, granted the developers of the proposed Jordan Cove liquefied natural gas export terminal a one-time, oneyear extension on a pair of city permits that would be required for the construction of the Pacific Connector Gas Pipeline and the export facility. The unanimous decision by the council followed a lengthy public hearing in which nearly all the people who spoke or submitted comments voiced opposition to the project and permit extension.

er impact on 401(k) accounts than the Dow, rose 1.6%, climbing to its own all-time high. The gains extend a monthlong market rally driven by growing optimism that development of coronavirus vaccines and treatments will loosen the pandemic’s stranglehold on the economy. They also mark a rapid climb for the Dow from its March 23 low of just under 18,600 during the worst of its early pandemic nosedive. “We are one step closer to moving past the election uncertainty,” said Lindsey Bell, chief investment strategist at Ally

Invest. “People are still optimistic about what 2021 has to bring, from an economic perspective and an earnings perspective.” The S&P 500 rose 57.82 points to 3,635.41. The Dow gained 454.97 points to 30,046.24. Both indexes eclipsed record highs set early last week. The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite picked up 156.15 points, or 1.3%, to 12,036.79. Traders continued to favor stocks that stand to gain the most from a gradual reopening of the economy, such as banks and industrial companies. Technology and communication stocks,

which have been investor favorites through the pandemic, also helped lift the market. In another signal that investors were feeling confident, the Russell 2000 index of smaller stocks outpaced the broader market, picking up 35.23 points, or 1.9%, to 1,853.53, also a record high. “There’s some relief that Biden is choosing moderates to fill out the cabinet,” said Barry Bannister, head of institutional equity strategy at Stifel. Bannister also said the encouraging vaccine news continues to give hope that there is an end in sight

Please see Council, Page 3

Dow tops 30,000 for first time (AP) - The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 30,000 points for the first time Tuesday as progress in the development of coronavirus vaccines and news that the transition of power in the U.S. to President-elect Joe Biden will finally begin kept investors in a buying mood. Traders were also encouraged to see that Biden had selected Janet Yellen, a widely respected former Federal Reserve chair, as treasury secretary. The Dow rose more than 450 points, or 1.5%, to cross the milestone. The S&P 500 index, which has a far great-

Please see Stocks, Page 3

WASHINGTON (AP) — Nostalgia was in and jokes were out Tuesday as President Donald Trump offered a reprieve to a pair of meaty turkeys at the traditional Thanksgiving turkey pardon ceremony at the White House. The National Turkey Federation presented the White House with two birds, Corn and Cob. Corn was declared the national Thanksgiving turkey, though both will retire to a new home on the campus of Iowa State University. It’s not the first time the typically light-hearted turkey pardon ceremony has taken place in a tense time for the nation. This time, the ceremony came amid a global pandemic and as Trump refuses to concede he lost his reelection bid. In his remarks, Trump cited the vaccines that could soon receive emergency approval from U.S. regulators. “We give thanks for the vaccines and therapies that will soon end the pandemic,” Trump said at one point. He did not reference the recent surge in confirmed COVID-19 cases in many parts of the country. The turkey pardon ceremony came just a few hours after President-elect Joe Biden announced his national security team and emphasized the need to work with allies. Trump worked into his remarks a familiar refrain of his presidency: “America first -- shouldn’t go away from that,” he said. Trump did not take questions from reporters as he spoke in the Rose Garden to more than 100 staff and guests, the vast majority wearing masks. His tone was more serious than in prior turkey pardon ceremonies. Trump used last year’s pardon to make jokes about the impeachment process. The House would go on to approve two articles of impeachment the next month and the Senate would subsequently vote to acquit him. In 2018, Trump joked about one of the turkeys contesting the election. The scenario he described bears a striking resemblance to the one he faces today. “This was a fair election,” the president joked two years ago. “Unfortunately, Carrots refused to concede and demanded a recount, and we’re still fighting with Carrots. But I will tell you, we’ve come to a conclusion. Carrots. I’m sorry to tell you, the result did not change. That’s too bad for Carrots.” The practice of sending a turkey to a farm became the norm under President Ronald Reagan. George H.W. Bush established the annual turkey pardon tradition in 1989 by sparing a 50-pound (23-kilogram) bird as animal rights activists picketed nearby.


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