DEVASTATION: WINTER STORM WIPES OUT 1,600 DAIRY COWS NORTHWEST/A2 SWIMMING: BARNARD DIVES INTO FOUR STATE EVENTS SPORTS/B1 E O AST 143rd year, No. 86 REGONIAN Thursday, February 14, 2019 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD “HE ALWAYS TOLD ME THAT I WAS HIS ANGEL. AND NOW HE IS MINE.” — Franca Krajeski Love and loss PGE farm to combine wind, solar, battery Wheatridge project in Morrow County to go online after coal plant shuts down By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN and PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Morrow County is going to be home to the nation’s first large-scale energy facility to combine power from wind, solar and bat- tery storage. Portland General electric has partnered with Nextera energy resources to build the new Wheatridge renewable energy Facil- ity, consisting of a 300-megawatt wind farm, a 30-megawatt battery storage facil- ity and a new 50-megawatt solar farm. PGe spokesperson steve Corson said the combi- nation of that size is a first in North Amer- ica, according to the experts at Nextera. “They have told us the only other facil- ities are pretty tiny — in the 2 megawatt range,” he said. The new facility will put PGe’s wind gen- eration portfolio to more than 1,000 mega- watts (1 gigawatt) — enough to serve the See Project, Page A8 Staff photo by E.J. Harris Franca Krajeski moved to Pendleton to be close to her husband, Michael, who was serving a 90-month sentence at the Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution. Businessman purchases iconic Dave’s Food Mart Couple spent most of their married life separated by bars By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Mcanally, co-founder of Whisky Fest, now owns 3 nearby establishments advertisements often show true love as dewey-eyed couples exchanging romantic looks over candlelight, holding hands at sunset or kissing on the beach. real love is rarely so idyllic and carefree, however. and sometimes it is forged with hard times. Take the case of Michael and Franca Krajeski, who took the “for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health” portion of their wedding vows to the extreme. after Franca suffered a traumatic brain injury in a car acci- dent in 2008, Mike nursed her through it. When Mike started serving a 90-month sentence at the eastern Oregon Correc- tional Institution, Franca moved to Pendleton to be close, sometimes visiting him twice a day. Now, Franca wears some of her husband’s ashes in a silver heart around her neck. The inscription reads, “I used to be his angel, now he’s mine.” Their story includes plenty of human failure and heartbreak, Contributed photo See Love, Page A8 Mike and Franca Krajeski pose during a visit at the Eastern Ore- gon Correctional Institution. By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian andy Mcanally owns another Pendleton hot spot — dave’s 12th street Food Mart. Mcanally also owns big John’s Pizza and Mac’s bar and Grill, each a few blocks from the popular fuel station and conve- nience store at 220 s.W. 12th st. dave Walters, a 1966 Pendleton high school graduate, founded dave’s. he started in the fuel-and-convenience-store business in 1972 at another location in Pendleton with his father. he and his wife Toni Walters moved the business in 1992 to 220 s.W. 12th st. where See Dave’s, Page A8 Cellphone surcharge may pay for rural broadband statewide usage fee would pay for high- speed internet expansion By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Oregon Capital Bureau saLeM — Oregonians could see their cell phone bills go up to raise money for expanding rural high-speed internet. Legislators are considering a sur- charge on wireless calls to raise $10 million a year that utilities could use for internet projects in rural Oregon. The average cell phone user could see an increase of $4 to $8 a year. The surcharge would apply only to calls within the state and also cover voice-over internet protocols. The state created a special fund in 1999 to push telecommunica- tions technology into rural areas. The idea is that all customers would help pay for services that are more expensive to provide in sparsely populated rural communities. The critical telecom service used to be landlines. Now, it’s the internet. according to a december report from the u.s. Census bureau, rural areas of the country trail in their access to broadband. In 2016, 64 percent of rural Ore- gonians lived in areas where they could access broadband speeds, while 98 percent of Oregonians in urban areas could, according to the Federal Communications Commission. In rural areas of sherman, Gil- liam and harney counties, the share of residents who have access to broadband was in the single dig- its. No rural residents in Wheeler County had access to broadband, according to the FCC data. a greater share of rural Orego- nians — about 95 percent — had high-speed internet access through cellphones, although that access varies widely between counties as well. some say the gap in accessibility to fixed broadband — high-speed internet you can access on a com- puter or multiple computers at home, school or at work — cuts off rural areas from economic opportunities. See Broadband, Page A8 “WE HAVE MORE COWS THAN WE DO PEOPLE IN THE COUNTY. COWS, FORTUNATELY, DON’T USE THE INTERNET, BUT OUR SCHOOLS, AND HOSPITALS AND BUSINESSES ABSOLUTELY DO.” David Yamamoto, a Tillamook County commissioner