32/27 DAWGS WIN A PAIR THAW COMING SOON SPORTS/1B WEATHER/2A TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2017 141st Year, No. 66 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. DAY Electric co-ops feud over service territory Complaint fi led with Oregon Public Utility Commission By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian A high-profi le wind farm and mega-dairy are at the center of a territo- rial dispute between two local electric utilities in Umatilla and Morrow counties. The Columbia Basin Electric Cooperative, based in Heppner, fi led a complaint Jan. 13 with the Oregon Public Utility Commission accusing its neighbor, Herm- iston-based Umatilla Electric Cooperative, of encroaching on its exclusive service territory in deals with the proposed Wheatridge Wind Energy Facility and Lost Valley Ranch. First, Columbia Basin argues that UEC installed electrical systems for irrigation circles at Lost Valley, located on the former Boardman Tree Farm, which cross into Columbia Basin’s service territory and bypass existing infrastructure. UEC is also in talks with Wheatridge Wind Energy LLC to build a 23-mile transmission line that would cross service territories to connect the wind farm onto the regional electricity grid. If that happens, Columbia Basin offi cials say they will be forced to use the UEC line to distribute power to its other retail customers. If UEC refuses that request, Columbia Basin might be forced to build a duplicate line of its own, at members’ expense. “Columbia Basin believes in and encour- ages the development of renewable energy projects in its service territory, and the transmission projects to support such develop- ment,” said Kirk Gibson, attorney for the co-op. “But not to the disadvan- tage of Columbia Basin members.” See UEC/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Ariana Borden, 6, of Umatilla carries a quote from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. while walking with her mother, Selene Torres, right, and Alex Hobbs, left, of Hermiston in the B.I.A.C Peace Walk on Monday in Hermiston. Love and courage Hermiston marchers aim to emulate MLK’s example during trying times By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian A s the nation prepares for Friday’s presidential inauguration, Martin Luther King Jr.’s words are taking on new weight for those who are still struggling to come to terms with the nation’s president-elect. “Thinking about the Martin Luther King Days I’ve been through, I can’t remember one more signifi - cant than the one today, given the times we live in,” Jordan Chaney said. Chaney, a black poet from the Tri-Cities, gave the keynote address at Hermiston’s annual Martin Luther King Peace Walk. Never before, he admitted, has he been tested so much on following the civil rights leader’s teachings about “choosing to love when the invitations to hate are so abundant.” “I wanted to love as indiscriminately as the sun shines,” he said. “You ask for something, you’re going to get tested on it, and I failed that test several times.” The tests came as Chaney felt blindsided by friends who came out in support of a candidate who frequently makes headlines for his nega- tive comments about minori- ties and women. Chaney said he also lost friendships when he decided to join in calling for the resignation of a Kennewick city councilor who made a derogatory post about Latinos on Facebook. When Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, two unarmed black men, were shot and killed by police within 24 hours of each other, Chaney spent a night praying and worrying for the safety of his son, who was visiting Seattle. Chaney has never been dragged at gunpoint out of his car before, he said, but that didn’t make the fear and depression any less real as it hung over his life. “Inside of my depression I could feel hate forming,” he said. See LOVE/8A “I wanted to love as indis- criminately as the sun shines ... You ask for something, you’re going to get tested on it, and I failed that test several times.” — Jordan Chaney, Tri-Cities poet Staff photo by E.J. Harris Poet Jordan Chaney from the Tri-Cities speaks about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Monday at the First Methodist Church in Hermiston. The music of MLK Pendleton honors King with song, giving spirit By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Kathy Beck, from left, Erin McCusker, Margaret Mayer and Geor- gina Johnson perform “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around” on Monday at the Great Pacifi c Wine & Coffee Co. in Pendleton. Martin Luther King Jr. would have felt right at home. A packed house at the Great Pacifi c Wine & Coffee Co. embraced the music of the Civil Rights Movement on MLK Day. Freedom songs ricocheted off the brick walls, high ceiling and oak fl oors of the popular Pendleton eatery. It’s been almost 50 years since the pastor, Nobel Prize winner and civil rights leader was gunned down while standing on the balcony of his motel room in Memphis, Tennessee. He had traveled there to support a sanitation workers’ strike. Those gathered Monday night at the Great Pacifi c focused not on the activist’s tragic death, however, but on King’s message of freedom, equality and justice. Bill Young started off the evening by quoting MLK. “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter,” Young quoted. Young gave up the stage to a string of musicians who unleashed freedom songs of the late sixties. The clear, booming See MUSIC/8A