HERMISTON GEARS UP FOR CINCO DE MAYO, PAGE A3 HermistonHerald.com WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2019 $1.00 INSIDE FOOD POD THE GIFT OF PLANT SALE LIFE Hermiston’s new food truck pod will have a grand opening celebration Wednesday. PAGE A3 FFA plant sales in Herm- iston, Echo and Irrigon bloom this week PAGE A6 FOLLOW-UP New information shows an informant was paid $27,000 for drug buys that led to the arrest of dozens during Operation Wildfi re. PAGE A7 BY THE WAY Post Malone to headline Pendleton Whisky Fest Umatilla County will play host to hip hop art- ist Post Malone during this summer’s Pendleton Whisky Fest. The concert will be held on July 13 at the Pendle- ton Round-Up Grounds, preceded by other yet- to-be-announced artists throughout the afternoon. Born Austin Rich- ard Post and known for his distinctive facial tat- toos, Post Malone rose to fame when his debut album, “Stoney,” was cer- tifi ed platinum. His sec- ond album, “Beerbongs & Bentleys,” debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard top 200 chart. His success continued when he charted nine songs in the top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100, breaking a record. He has received four Grammy nominations and 17 Bill- board Music Award nominations. Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. on May 3 and are available through www. pendletonwhiskymu- sicfest.com. Organizers are aiming to sell 20,000 tick- ets for the show. • • • The Hermiston Her- ald is spotlighting Herm- iston schools this year, and Hermiston High School See BTW, Page A2 Staff photo by Kathy Aney Heart recipient Phil Weitz, of Umatilla, chats with Autumn Toelle-Jackson, the mother of a little girl who lives on in the three people who received her organs. The pair stands by the Threads of Life quilt unveiled Saturday at the Pendleton Center for the Arts. By KATHY ANEY STAFF WRITER E ach square on the quilt tells a differ- ent story. On the top row, several squares in from the right, 3-month-old Rylee Jackson smiles out, surrounded by her favor- ite color purple and eight butterfl ies. The baby enchanted her parents and two older brothers with her trademark smile until she died on Nov. 4 after coming down with a cold that progressed and fi nally ended in cardiac arrest. She was revived and declared brain dead a few days later. “Our daughter, Rylee, was a gift from the beginning,” said Autumn Toelle-Jackson, of Burns. “When she was born, she was perfect. Her brothers, Cody, 6, and Wade, 3, couldn’t get enough of her. She would grab their fi n- gers and they would light up. She was the fi rst person to whom her oldest brother showed off his newly won mutton-bustin’ buckle.” Toelle-Jackson spoke Saturday at the unveiling of the 2019 Threads of Life Quilt, which contains squares honoring specifi c organ donors and recipients. Hermiston-area residents who have received a life-giv- ing donation also spoke at the ceremony in Pendleton. In Rylee’s short life, she drank in the fam- ily moments, her mom said. The little girl watched her brothers fi sh and fl y kites. She experienced camping in the Eagle Cap Wil- derness and the waves and sand of the Ore- gon coast. Her parents and brothers soaked See LIFE, Page A14 Staff photo by Kathy Aney Three-month-old Rylee Marie Jackson smiles from a quilt square on the Threads of Life quilt unveiled Saturday at the Pendleton Center for the Arts. . Fiesta Foods closing in Hermiston By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR 8 08805 93294 2 Fiesta Foods is closing in Hermiston. The closure process starts Wednesday, with reduced hours (10 a.m. to 7 p.m.) and sales on all remaining mer- chandise. Assistant store man- ager Norma Mitchell said the store will probably take about three weeks to close its doors, depending on how quickly its remaining merchandise is sold. “We are all bummed out,” she said. “We’re going to miss our customers.” The store is Hermiston’s third-largest grocery store, behind Walmart and Safe- way. It opened in 2009 and frequently provides sponsor- ship and donations to commu- nity events such as Cinco de Mayo. It is part of a small chain of stores that also includes Pasco, Yakima and Sunnyside, Washington. Mitchell said store employ- ees were “heartbroken” at hav- ing to close, but sales numbers did not support continued oper- ations in Hermiston. She said Grocery Outlet is planning to open in the build- ing, located at 1875 N. First St. Grocery Outlet confi rmed that they are coming to Hermiston sometime in 2020 but did not have further information for now. Staff photo by Jade McDowell Fiesta Foods is going out of business in Hermiston.