Author: Chris Hayes

The flip of a switch

Electric reliability depends on big plans and small fixes 

Next time you flip a switch and the light comes on, think about the time it didn’t in a spectacular way for nearly 4,000 Kentucky electric co-op members.

Around 1 a.m. on a day in May 2011, a snake slithered into a Berea-area substation—that’s one of those fenced-in areas full of wires and transformers where high voltage gets stepped down for use in your home.

A snake is shaped a bit like a wire, and the last act for this reptile connected a couple of conductors not meant to be connected. Metering equipment shorted out, rupturing the voltage regulator and sparking a fire that destroyed most of the equipment in the substation.

Lights came back on for the co-op members less than 24 hours later. But the snake and the substation tell a larger tale of what it takes to keep electricity flowing. That larger story is that while building and maintaining a reliable electric grid calls for billions of dollars and thousands of miles of power lines, you also have to sweat the small stuff.

To find out what it takes to make sure you have electricity whenever you want it, we went to the source of the power.

For co-op members in Kentucky, that power comes from one of three large organizations, called generation and transmission cooperatives (G&Ts), because, of course, they make sure that electricity gets generated, then transmitted to your local electric cooperative. Your local co-op is called a distribution co-op because it distributes that power to the homes and businesses in your area.


East Kentucky Power Cooperative, which is based in Winchester, supplies 16 distribution co-ops in primarily the eastern half of the state; Big Rivers Electric Corporation is the Henderson-based G&T for the three distribution co-ops along the northwest Kentucky border; and the Tennessee Valley Authority, which technically is not a cooperative G&T, but instead is a federal corporation, provides electricity to 154 local power companies in seven states, including five distribution co-ops in southwest Kentucky.

Representatives from all three tell similar stories about the enormous job of keeping the electricity flowing 24/7. And they all talk about critters—woodpeckers for Big Rivers and buzzards for TVA.

“Woodpeckers love our poles; they’re apparently delicious,” says Mike Chambliss, Big Rivers’ vice president of system operations. Big Rivers developed a mesh covering to prevent the woodpeckers from weakening the poles. TVA installs buzzard shields to keep the birds off its power lines and transmission towers.

Nick Comer, the external affairs manager with East Kentucky Power, says it began using an attachment to go around the base of a substation fence, with a lip sticking out at the top so snakes can’t crawl up, over and in.

Planning and security

Preventing interference from varmints is just part of running the electric grid, which the National Academy of Engineering calls the most important engineering achievement of the 20th century. Comer, Chambliss and Ernie Peterson, the Kentucky general manager for TVA customer delivery, all describe
their mission as providing reliable, affordable and safe electricity—and they say each of those is critically important.

“You start with the fuel source,” says Peterson, which in Kentucky is mostly coal and natural gas, as well as some hydroelectricity, nuclear power and, increasingly, solar energy and other renewable power sources. “You’ve got to get that fuel to the power plant and then the plant’s got to be able to reliably convert that fuel into electricity, and then you’ve got to have all the proper transmission equipment in place so you can get the electricity to the distribution cooperative where they have all the right transformers and wires and communications equipment to get those electrons to the individual homes, businesses and industry.”

One key to getting all that done is planning. Massive, detailed planning. Every few years the three G&Ts produce a document of more than 200 pages called an integrated resource plan. In between are annual planning sessions.

East Kentucky Power is in the middle of its several-monthlong strategic planning session, involving dozens of staff and board members. They’ll analyze and talk through markets and finances for the different fuels they use, the future of renewable energy, environmental and other regulations, the status of their power plants and what the future cost of electricity might be.

All that planning results in power being off for only about two hours a year for the average utility customer in the United States. And the trend is improving. According to one standardized measure (a measure that excludes both extremely short outages and especially long and widespread outages), the average American was without power for just 127 minutes in 2016, down from 144 minutes 10 years earlier. The number of outages per consumer declined slightly as well, from 1.33 a year in 2007 to 1.3 in 2016. The length of each of those outages declined from 109 minutes in 2007 to 99 minutes 10 years later.

That reliability doesn’t happen without a lot of work. At Big Rivers, quarterly meetings of maintenance, engineering and operations staff review and find solutions for any problems.

Richard Easton is a maintenance leadman with Grayson RECC and part of the all-important team that keeps the lights on. Photo by Tim Webb

And they make up practice problems to solve.

“You have to anticipate that things are going to go wrong,” says Chambliss. “If a car hits a pole you have to have a plan and you have to revise that plan frequently and you have to drill on that plan. You have to create scenarios and put your people to grueling exercises.”

How do they get the ideas for the grueling scenarios?

“We come up with scenarios like you have this huge rain event where the roads are flooded and closed, then just as the rain stops, you have a major windstorm,” says Chambliss. “We blow everything down and now tell people to figure out how to get the lights back on. Last year we used an earthquake.”

Physical security and cybersecurity add another ingredient to reliability. The G&Ts talk about installing cameras to prevent theft of copper wire from substations. They describe protections from the thousands of electronic threats every day to the electricity network. Reliability involves working with state, regional and federal groups, especially the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, which develops and enforces standards to keep the lights on.

So electric utility reliability requires steps as big as building firewalls against internet hackers to as small as developing barriers for snakes. Entire departments are tasked with keeping trees and other vegetation away from where they can interfere with power lines.

For TVA’s Ernie Peterson, that broad and varied work and expertise is worth the attention it gets.

“I’ve spent some time on mission trips in other countries where having electric power, if you had it at all, is certainly not reliable,” says Peterson. “We’re blessed here to have electric power available to us anytime we want, truly at the flip of a switch. That doesn’t just happen.”

By Paul Wesslund, from Kentucky Living, October 2018.

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Toasty tips to stay warm

We’ve added insulation to our home, but what else can we do to make the house more comfortable this winter?—Emily

There’s more to a comfortable temperature than where the thermostat is set. Radiant heat is an important piece of the comfort puzzle. It transfers heat from a warm surface to a colder one. Even long after the walls warm, a person sitting in a room that’s 70 degrees can still feel chilly if there’s a cold surface nearby, like a single-pane window, a hardwood floor or an exterior wall. Try covering these cold surfaces with area rugs, wall quilts or tapestries, bookcases and heavy curtains to help prevent heat loss.

Keep in mind, radiant heat also can work in your favor. A dark-colored tile floor that receives several hours of direct sun can retain heat during the day and radiate it into the room during the evening.

Take a look at your home’s heating system. Is it distributing heat evenly and efficiently? If your house has a forced-air system with ducts and registers, check to see whether some supply registers are blowing too much warm air and others too little. Ideally, every room should have return air registers. You may need to get help from a certified contractor who knows how to improve ductwork.

Schedule an annual inspection to be sure your furnace is running at peak efficiency. Check your filter monthly and replace or clean it as needed. If you heat your home with radiators, bleed them (release trapped air) at the beginning of the season so they flow more efficiently.

Plug those leaks

On average, a typical home loses about half its air every hour, and that amount can increase when it’s cold and windy outside. In this case, the best way to keep your home toasty is to minimize air leaks. You can easily locate air leaks in your home with a blower door test, which can be done by an energy auditor.

Some common sources of leaks are cracks around windows and doors, plumbing and wiring penetrations, and mail slots and pet doors. Products like caulk, weather stripping, outlet cover gaskets and dryer vent covers can be used to seal these leaks.

PAT KEEGAN and BRAD THIESSEN write on energy efficiency for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.

Kentucky’s electric co-ops focus on safety of elderly community

 

With the elderly community expected to grow to one in five Americans by the year 2050, Kentucky’s electric cooperatives are looking to decrease the deaths in those 64 and older due to electrical dangers. The U.S. Fire Administration statistics note that approximately 1,000 seniors die each year in fires.  

“Our older members are especially vulnerable when they’re cooking or if they aren’t using auxiliary heaters correctly,” says Chris Perry, president and CEO of the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives.  

A number of factors increase their risk for danger, including slower reflexes, which may also be impacted by medication, thinner skin and other health issues.  

“One of the easiest ways to improve your chances of surviving a fire is to make sure the smoke alarm in your home is working,” Perry says. “Change the alarm’s batteries twice a year—once in the spring and once in the fall.” 

Some other quick tips to remember are never leave pots and pans unattended to avoid creating a fire hazard, and never open the oven door if something catches on fire. If the fire does not go down on its own, leave the house and call 911. When handling electrical cords, they shouldn’t be secured on walls or floors with nails, staples or tacks because it could risk damaging the cords. Following these at-home tips can decrease electrical dangers. 

Electric co-ops urge Kentuckians to vote

By Chris Perry
President & CEO
Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives

“Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.”

That quote, attributed to President Abraham Lincoln, is tinged with the regret of someone on the short end of a vote tally. Though Lincoln’s election sentiments are as relevant today as in the 19thcentury, let’s remember that the consequences of elections can also be positive.

Chris Perry, KAEC President and CEO, KAEC. Photo by Brian Bohannon

The recognition of the consequences of elections is the motivation behind Co-ops Vote, an initiative led by electric cooperatives here in Kentucky and across the nation, to remind rural Kentuckians that the best way for your interests and concerns to be represented in government is to express them at the ballot box.

Co-ops Vote is non-partisan; it does not advocate or endorse a particular party or candidate. Instead, Co-ops Votetaps into the democratic DNA of rural electric cooperatives that serve their consumer-members in 117 of Kentucky’s 120 counties. A cooperative is uniquely suited to understand and serve a community because it literally belongs to the people it serves and was built by people in that community.

When Co-ops Vote was launched two years ago, it aimed to reverse a downward trend in rural voting. And, this effort appears to have had a positive effect. Compared to the previous national election cycle in 2012, 500,000 more rural voters went to the polls in 2016.

According to an analysis of voter turnout by the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives, rural voter turnout in Kentucky accounted for an increase of about 85,000 voters between 2012 and 2016.

Despite the increase in voters, Kentucky’s turnout as a percentage of registered voters slightly decreased in 2016, down from about 60 percent in 2012 to 59 percent.

We now face another opportunity. On November 6, all 100 Kentucky state representative seats and all six of the Commonwealth’s U.S. House seats are on the ballot, as well as half of Kentucky’s state senators, in addition to local races.

Elections matter, and the communities we serve are facing challenges that require attention and respect. To ensure that these issues remain part of the discussion, I encourage you to join me in making the commitment to vote.

Anyone who can vote, no matter where you live or whether you are a co-op member, can participate in Co-ops Vote and take advantage of its resources. Just visit www.vote.coopand take the pledge to vote in this year’s elections. Once you’ve registered, you’ll have access to information on registering to vote, where to vote, and background on all the candidates.

As Lincoln suggested, it’s up to you. It’s your decision. That’s the beauty of the vote.

 

 

Volunteer role models

All’s fair

BRANDENBURG

Each July children in Meade County hop in three-legged raises, shoot basketballs and get delightfully muddy in an array of games. It’s the favorite part of the Meade County Fair for David Pace.

“I have been helping with the fair since 1982,” recalls Pace. “I joined the board in 1984, became manager in 1994, and am still manager.”

The fair is a year-round project. Pace negotiates vendor contracts, looks for new acts, oversees publicity, coordinates volunteers and deals with thousands of details to run a modern fair with a half-million dollar budget. 

Pace also chaired the Meade County Industrial Authority, which attracts new businesses, and was mayor of Brandenburg for eight years. He savors his years coaching Little League football.

Community involvement is part of his job as vice president of Marketing and Member Services for Meade County RECC where he has worked for 24 years.

Behind all his work, Pace has a single goal, which fits nicely with his role as a husband to wife, Sharon, and father to grown children, Bric, Morgan and Braden.

“I like to see the community be as good as it can be so our kids can be the best they can be.”

Emily Pyle and son Will with two of the residents at Max’s Hope, Emily, the gray cat, and Precious. Max’s Hope is just one of the organizations Pyle and her son volunteer for on a regular basis. Photo: Jim Pyle

Blessed

HOPKINSVILLE

“To a child in Africa, a pencil is as valuable as $100 here,” the preacher explained one Sunday morning at the Hopkinsville Church of Christ.

Five-year-old Will Pyle listened intently, then immediately went into action when he got home, collecting all the pencils he could find and designating them for African children. 

Will had seen his mom, Emily Pyle, care for others like this many times before. Emily, who works for Pennyrile Electric, volunteers with an array of organizations including Partners for Africa, a missionary organization the church supports by sending clothes, shoes, medical supplies, blankets, song books—to Zimbabwe and other areas in need. She also volunteers for 4-H, her church’s youth group, Back to Back, Inc., and an animal rescue called Max’s Hope. 

“My parents would always visit the shut-ins from our church,” Emily says. “I was a Girl Scout myself. God has blessed me in so many ways. I have always tried to be a positive influence and help others.”

EKPC named a top 100 co-op

Each year,  the National Cooperative Bank announces the NCB Co-op 100®, highlighting the business activity and economic power of these member-owned, member-controlled businesses. The only annual report of its kind, the NCB Co-op 100®is an important indicator of cooperative business activity across the country.

East Kentucky Power Cooperative was ranked 67th. See the full list here.

Co-ops big part of Beautify the Bluegrass project

When visitors converged on the annual Mt. Sterling October Court Days this year, they saw a major improvement to the city’s downtown. A once-neglected park is now a social hub for the revitalized community about 25 miles east of Lexington.

The 15-month project to rejuvenate Mt. Sterling is the winner of the Governor’s Award in the second annual Beautify the Bluegrass initiative, a partnership of Governor Matt Bevin and Kentucky Living to encourage Kentuckians to work together to repair, enhance or beautify an area in their community.

From 23 submissions, the governor selected three winners from finalists voted by Kentucky Living readers. Winners were announced on August 23 at Kentucky Living’s Best in Kentucky awards at the Kentucky State Fair.

“I’m really excited to see how this project has begun to grow in popularity and participation,” Bevin says. “I want to give a personal thanks to the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives and their publication, Kentucky Living magazine, that has adopted this.”

Mt. Sterling’s project wins them a barbecue for 200 with Governor Bevin and Lt. Governor Jenean Hampton.

Interested in being part of the 2019Beautify the Bluegrass contest? Email us at webmaster@kentuckyliving.com.

Mt. Sterling Governor’s Award

When Dr. Danielle King moved to Mt. Sterling in 2002 to join a private medical practice, she loved the city’s historic buildings and charm, and quickly began caring for the community and its people.

Yet, the physician also made an important diagnosis.

“Our downtown was sort of dried up,” she recalls.

In 2010, King purchased a charming old jewelry store that had closed in 1997 and was dilapidated. With the help of her father and friends, she renovated the building, and then partnered with a good friend to open a bakery there one day a week on King’s day off from the health clinic.

“We baked Wednesday night and opened Thursday mornings and would sell out,” King says. It was enough to break even.

“I realized more that the downtown could only survive if we tried to make it user-friendly and get more pedestrian traffic,” King says. “A few businesses started popping up once we opened the bakery.”

A downtown business group, dormant for 10 years, began to meet again and King was elected to the city council.

In what King describes as a “total inclusive community effort,” volunteers partnered with city government, city workers, the local chamber of commerce and businesses to design and execute the transformation of the downtown park.

Dedicated in April, the park is now a popular lunch hangout and hosts concerts and other events.

“It’s helped the local economy and businesses because it’s given people a place to be,” King says, “It’s made a tremendous difference.”

Commonwealth’s Award – London

Photo: Minks outdoor professionals

At the end of a residential street near one of London’s main cemeteries sits another small graveyard. Until recently, the plots were overgrown and some headstones overturned. The African Americans buried there were largely forgotten.

The London Downtown Board partnered with City of London Tourism, Minks Outdoor Professionals and volunteers to clear brush, erect a sign, provide bench seating, reset headstones, and plant trees and flowers.

Governor Bevin selected the project as the recipient of the Beautify the Bluegrass Commonwealth’s Award.

“We enjoyed working together as a team toward the common goal of cleaning the area, learning about the soldiers buried there, and honoring them for their service so long ago,” says Brittany Riley, who chairs the design committee of the London Downtown Board.

Cooperative Award – Fleming-Mason Energy

Photo: Lori Ulrich

 

The director at Blue Licks Battlefield State Resort Park near Mt. Olivet feared he would have to close the park’s four playgrounds because of a lack of mulch and the funds to buy more. The Beautify the Bluegrass team from Fleming-Mason Energy Cooperative not only replenished the mulch, but also repaired the playground equipment. With the help of employees, co-op directors, families and friends, the team revived the pollinator garden with plantings and installed benches for visitors to enjoy.

“One of the core cooperative principles is commitment to community,” says Fleming-Mason’s Lori Ulrich, director of Community & Economic Development. “This project gave us a chance to work together as a team to help with a need in our community.”

 

See the other entries from this year’s contest.

Behind the storm

Lineworkers deal with heat, fatigue and flying pests to help restore power after Hurricane Michael

It was hours after dark when the first crew made its way into the grainy glow of the generator-powered lights of the tent city. The dimness of the light coupled with crewmembers’ slow, lumbering gait, resembled a scene from a zombie movie.

For many of these workers, they were well into at least their second week of working to help restore power in southern Georgia, a land ravaged in the wake of Hurricane Michael. Within hours, they would soon be up to start another 16-hour day.

More than 100 lineworkers representing 16 co-ops from Kentucky are part of a massive restoration effort in several southeastern states.  Most of the Bluegrass contingency is working for Mitchell and Grady electric cooperatives in Georgia. This area is nearly three hours inland, but the damage has left thousands of people without power.

Hurricane Michael was one of the most powerful storms to hit the southeast. A 50-year employee of Mitchell EMC said it was the worst he had ever seen.

The damage in the area spared few. Stretches of houses with at least one downed tree each. Some homes spared when trees fell safely into the front lawn; others were not so lucky. Along the byways, there were fields where pecan trees were blown over at the root and thousands of less hearty, although no less mature, pine trees were snapped like twigs.

Mobilizing the thousands of workers to help with the restoration is no small task.  In the Bluegrass, it starts when the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives gets the call that help is needed.

Each co-op decides whether it has the workers to share because the first commitment is to its own consumer-members. If a co-op has the available labor, it “releases” the workers who then essentially become temporary employees of the co-ops they are traveling to help.  The workers are compensated by that co-op and will work for it as long as requested unless they need to come home to help with issues in Kentucky or for personal reasons.

“Kentucky crews are typically a hot-commodity,” said Robert Thornton, storm coordinator for the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives. “Geographically speaking, Kentucky crews can be to most affected areas in twelve hours or less.  A hurricane or other tropical storm that affects the Southeast usually does not affect Kentucky co-ops.  Crews can also respond quickly to the Midwest during tornado outbreaks or ice-storms.

“I have had several states and co-ops specifically request help from us. When I travel and meet CEOs and other co-op officials from other states, they always mention how impressed they were with the aid they received. Kentucky linemen are known for getting the job done in a safe, efficient, and timely manner.”

Determining where the crews, usually teams of four, will spend their days is also a complicated process. Each crew is assigned a “birddog” –  an employee of the local co-op who understands the grid and can help navigate the crew through the backroads.

The goal is to work on areas that will have the most impact, that will restore power to the most people. Once the “birddog” finds a location where the crew can repair damage, he goes to find the next location.

And every location can have its challenges.  Often, the crews will come across a downed line that has had more debris pile on top from homeowners anxious to remove limbs from their property.

“We understand that people want to get stuff out of their yard,” says Michael Insley crew foreman for Warren RECC. “But this does make it difficult for us, to have to remove all the debris before we can start to repair the lines.”

And while each morning crews load up on poles and other supplies, there is no easy way to predict what will be needed during the day.

“Yesterday, we ran out of supplies, so we had to rely on our ‘birddog’ to help us find places where we could do work like cleaning up debris and other tasks where we didn’t need new poles or line,” says Insley.

Along with fatigue and the unfamiliarity of the territory, the workers are dealing with heat—temperatures are still in the upper 80s in southern Georgia—along with fire ants and gnats.

Oh, the gnats. Although the locals joke that they are much worse in mid-summer, that is little consolation to the workers who are dealing with these pests constantly flying around their heads, and often into their noses and ears.

“These things are the worst,” says Shane Vickers of Jackson Energy. “Bug spray doesn’t work, and you just can’t get rid of them.”

One thing that has provided comfort has been the support of the local communities.  Companies and individuals have donated everything from drinks to socks to help. Those living in the tent city are provided with portable showers along with hot meals.

Still, the long days away from home begin to wear on the crews and staying upbeat is a constant challenge.

“We just try to keep cutting up, trying to make the most of it,” says Insley. “We are a team and when one gets down, we have to be there for them.”

And while it looks like there may be weeks more work before this area of Georgia has power fully restored, the folks back home can be proud of how these workers have personified the spirit of cooperatives.

“These guys from Kentucky have been great,” said one of the Mitchell EMC lineman working alongside the Kentucky contingency. “They have been out here every day giving 100 percent, and we are so grateful they’re here.”

Nolin RECC selects new president and CEO

Greg Lee will replace Mickey Miller, who is retiring in January 2019

The Board of Directors of Nolin RECC has selected Gregory R. “Greg” Lee as the cooperative’s next President and Chief Executive Officer.  Lee, currently Nolin’s Vice President – System Operations, will replace retiring CEO Mickey Miller who will retire on Jan. 4, 2019.

Lee holds a Bachelor’s of Science Degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Kentucky. He is a licensed Professional Engineer.  He is a graduate of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association’s Robert I. Kabat Management Internship Program located at the University of Wisconsin.

Lee is an experienced utility professional with a wide array of skills in the electric utility industry and government contracting. Lee has served as Nolin’s Vice President – Ft. Knox Operations, its Operations Engineer and its Special Projects Manager. While attending college, Mr. Lee worked at Nolin as a Student Engineer and an Operations Intern.

His transition into his new role will begin in January. In his role as President and CEO, Lee will be Nolin’s representative in business and political settings, accomplish strategic initiatives established by the Board and direct overall operations of Nolin RECC.

Retiring CEO Miller said, “I’m very pleased with the selection of Greg to lead our cooperative. I’ve known Greg for many years and have seen him grow professionally. His ethics, business knowledge and professional behavior will be an asset to our members and our employees.”

“Nolin RECC is fortunate to have someone of Greg’s caliber and experience as our next President and CEO. He brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to the job that will serve the coop and its membership well in the years ahead,” said Chairman David Brown.

Lee, a resident of Elizabethtown, Kentucky, is married to Erin Larkin Lee and they have two children, Avery, age four and Harrison, age two. In accepting the new appointment, he stated, “I am honored and excited to be selected to lead Nolin RECC as its next President and CEO.  I want to thank the Board of Directors for affording me such a tremendous opportunity. Nolin’s mission is to provide safe, reliable and cost-effective energy solutions.  I look forward to continuing that mission in the future and working in the best interest of our members.”

EKPC investing $262 million in Spurlock Station

MAYSVILLE — East Kentucky Power Cooperative (EKPC) is beginning work on a series of projects at Spurlock Station to ensure the power plant remains in compliance with more stringent environmental rules for years to come. Totaling over $262 million, these projects are aimed at ensuring future compliance with federal regulations related to handling and storage of coal ash and related materials, as well as handling and discharge of water at the plant.

“These projects will ensure Spurlock Station remains compliant with federal regulations and is viable for many years to come,” said Anthony “Tony” Campbell, EKPC’s President & CEO. “Spurlock Station is EKPC’s flagship power plant and it is critical for providing reliable, affordable power for more than 1 million Kentucky residents served by the 16 co-ops that own EKPC.” Among the projects:

  • The systems for removing bottom ash from Units #1 and #2 will be converted to eliminate handling of ash with water. New dry handling systems for bottom ash will be installed, along with redundant dry handling systems for fly ash.
  •  A new wastewater treatment plant will be constructed to treat water from scrubbers on Units #1 and #2.
  • The existing 67-acre ash pond will be closed and approximately 1.75 million cubic yards of material will be removed and placed in Spurlock Station’s ash landfill.
  • A 17-acre water mass balance pond will be established, along with a chemical treatment plant, to process water from various plant process flows.
  • New ash storage silos will be constructed.
Work will begin in early 2019 and continue until 2024. During most of the construction phase, several hundred contractors are expected to be on the plant site. “I commend EKPC on its commitment to the environment and clean coal,” said Maysville Mayor David Cartmell. “These projects help to ensure Spurlock Station’s presence on the power grid and in the community for years to come. Investments like this one are the lifeblood of the local economy.”

“It is great news that EKPC is investing in Spurlock Station to remain a reliable and compliant electric generating facility for years to come,” said Mason County Judge-Executive Joe Pfeffer. “EKPC has certainly been an integral part of our local economy and with this announcement will continue to have a very positive economic impact for our area in the future.”

“These upgrades not only speak to the Spurlock Station’s continued viability but also underscores the importance of our interconnected economy here in Maysville,” said Owen McNeill, Economic Development Director for the Maysville-Mason County Industrial Development Authority.

“The confidence to invest here spreads to additional industrial partners, such as International Paper and others who already rely on EKPC’s reliable and reasonably priced electricity. Investments such as this are noticed state-wide and nationally, as a vote of confidence in our local economy and highlight Maysville as a great place to do business.”

In addition to these projects, EKPC recently completed work to refurbish equipment that allows Spurlock Station to efficiently provide steam to the neighboring International Paper plant, which uses the steam in its production of paper products.

Spurlock Station features four generating units with capacity to produce more than 1,300 megawatts of electric power. It is EKPC’s largest power plant. The first generating unit began operation in 1977. EKPC has about 230 employees at Spurlock Station.