A Day In The Life Of A Lineworker

Mike Mason’s day as a lineworkerfor Shelby Energy Cooperative actually started the night before. He was getting ready for bed when a woman reported her power out. It was Mason’s turn to be on call overnight for the Shelbyville-based utility. He drove to the woman’s house, identified a problem in the base of the meter, installed a temporary fix until an electrician could get out the next day and returned home two hours later. He reported to the co-op office at 7:30 the next morning.

“I like hunting down problems,” says Mason. “I know I’m doing something the members can’t do themselves. They depend on us.”

I meet Mason and his co-workers to write this story about a day in the life of a lineworker. I discover a group of people who carefully follow the rules of an elaborate system that lets the rest of us make magic by flipping a switch. It’s a system of little pieces of hardware, big trucks and a warehouse full of tools.

While every day is different, the same is true of the 713 lineworkers who work for Kentucky’s 26 electric co-ops providing power to more than 1.5 million co-op members.

Lineworkers are quick to credit other jobs at the utility—accountants who process their paychecks or the member services reps who talk to unhappy callers with power outages.

Still, we’re all fascinated by this unique profession involving high voltages and climbing poles in the snow and cold. That’s often what the lineworkers like best about the job.

“I like being outside and not at a desk all day. I get to meet a lot of different people,” Benji Bohannon says. “I like being at the top of a 40-foot pole and watching the sun come up over a beautiful countryside. A lot of people don’t get to see that.”

Today, Mason starts his day in a room with the rest of the lineworkers, each planning their day around stacks of paper—checklists, maps and work orders.

In addition to coordinating plans, these guys (there are a few women among the more than 15,000 co-op lineworkers around the country) need to keep track of a lot of equipment. They need to be wearing safety gear or have it close at hand—hard hat, safety glasses, fire-retardant uniforms, steel-toed shoes, regular work gloves, hot-line safety gloves.

Electric work is unforgiving

But before driving to their jobs, they turn their attention to the weekly safety meeting.

Safety coordinator Sarah Newton announces that while catastrophic contact with electric current is always a top concern, today’s meeting would focus on “slips, trips and falls that can cause very big issues.”

They then hear from Tony Dempsey, a member of the statewide safety team at the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives.

“Working on electric lines isn’t dangerous,” says Dempsey, seeming to contradict every other safety message. But then he makes his point: “It’s unforgiving and it’s hazardous, but accidents don’t have to be a part of our work. We have the tools, we have the rules, the employees and the knowledge that can keep it from being dangerous.”

That safety emphasis seems to be working. From 2006 to 2015, co-op lineworkers across the country reported 53 injuries from falls, including falling off poles. In 2016, that number was zero.

By midmorning, the convoys are ready. I follow three lineworkers driving three trucks: a service truck, a bucket truck pulling a trailer with a large spool of wire, and a digger truck with a huge auger on top and pulling a trailer with a backhoe. They head across the county to relocate a ground-mounted transformer, moving it 500 feet uphill, near an underground connection at a new barn.

“It’s going to be muddy out there after the rain we’ve had,” says Rick Shaw, the crew leader who is a revered lineman among co-workers, with 41 years’ experience at Shelby Energy. “When you’re working on underground connections, mud is not your friend.”

Safety takes time

At the driveway into the worksite the crew faces the first of several time-consuming obstacles: managing a right turn without ripping out the mailbox. They drive to where they can turn around, allowing a left turn onto the property.

The trucks ease up the crushed-rock driveway, avoiding the soft ground on either side. Once there, the crew members change into rubber boots.

The men gather for a routine job briefing. They open a metal-clad clipboard, reading through a stack of forms, noting the address, cross street and account number—should they have to report an accident, location info would be quickly available. All three sign the form.

They break their huddle and de-energize the lines they will be working on, and let the office know the power has been cut. For the next two hours, they use the backhoe to dig out the transformer and carry it up the hill for rewiring into its new location. When they finish, they pack up and top off the gas tanks on the way back to the office, where they check paperwork and equipment for the next day’s jobs.

Everything the lineworkers did that day seemed to take a long time.

When asked about it later, Jason Ginn, Shelby’s manager of Operations, says “We don’t think this is taking a long time. We just think, this is how you do it. We don’t say, ‘hurry up.’ We look out for each other.”

From the June 2018 issue of Kentucky Living

Kentucky’s Electric Cooperatives Tracking Winter Weather

Crews from Kentucky’s electric cooperatives are preparing for the potential impact of winter weather moving through the commonwealth on Friday and Saturday.

As of 10am (EST), about 100 power outages were reported by co-ops in central and western Kentucky. Co-ops serve about 1.5 million Kentuckians in 117 of 120 counties.

“Right now, co-op electric crews are loading and checking their trucks and restoration equipment to function correctly in the next few days of freezing rain, sleet and several inches of snow with wind and freezing temperatures we are expecting to see in Kentucky,” said Clarence Greene, director of safety and loss prevention at the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives, the statewide association providing services to each electric cooperative in the state.

“Some problems restoration crews face are slick, slippery roads and walking surfaces,” Greene continued, “trees and downed power lines across roadways and possible back-feed from consumer generators and cold wet working conditions.”

Preparations with out of state crews have also been made if more help is needed, Greene added.

Kentucky’s electric cooperatives are stressing safety as the winter weather hits. Remember the following tips to stay safe and warm should you find yourself in the dark after a severe winter event:

  • Never touch a fallen power line, and assume all wires on the ground are electrically charged. Call your electric co-op to report it immediately. Avoid contact with overhead lines during cleanup and other activities.
  • In the event of an outage, an alternate heating source—such as a fireplace, propane space heater, or wood stove—may be used. Extreme caution should be taken.
  • Plan to stay in an area of the home where the alternate heat source is located.
  • Fuel- and wood-burning heating sources should be vented. Be sure to follow manufacturer’s directions.
  • Make sure carbon monoxide detectors and smoke detectors are working properly.
  • Do not use a gas-powered oven for heating. A gas oven may go out or burn inefficiently, leading to carbon monoxide poisoning.
  • Do not use a gas or charcoal grill inside the home. Do not use charcoal briquettes in the fireplace.
  • If you use a portable generator to power a heating source, be sure the generator is located outside your house for proper ventilation. Do not use a generator in an attached garage. Follow manufacturer’s directions for operating the generator.
  • Take special care not to overload a generator. Use appropriately sized extension cords to carry the electric load. Make sure the cords have a grounded, three-pronged plug and are in good condition.
  • Never run cords under rugs or carpets.
  • Never connect generators to power lines. The reverse flow of electricity can electrocute an unsuspecting utility worker.

Ideally, your family will stay warm until the power comes back on. But keep an eye on family members for signs of hypothermia, which include shivering, drowsiness, and mental and physical slowness. The elderly and young children are particularly vulnerable to hypothermia. Call 911 immediately if you notice these symptoms. At least one telephone in the house that does not depend on electricity should be available in the case of a power outage.

 

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Kentucky electric cooperatives serve more than 1.5 million people—about 35% of the state’s population—in 117 of Kentucky’s 120 counties. The Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives provides representation before the Legislature, Congress, and regulatory bodies; safety training; coordination of management training; and public relations support including publication of Kentucky Living magazine. KAEC is governed by a board consisting of one manager and one director from each of its 26 member systems, and is headquartered in Louisville.

Kentucky Strong | 71st Annual Meeting Lives Up To Theme

A high-caliber line-up of the 71st Annual Meeting of the Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives lived up to the meeting’s “Kentucky Strong” theme, as top industry leaders joined Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin and Kentucky Hall of Fame journalist Byron Crawford addressing co-op leaders from across Kentucky.

More than 250 co-op leaders attended the meeting, Saturday, November 18 – Tuesday, November 21 at the Marriott Louisville Downtown. The meeting included director training and meetings for cooperative attorneys.

The speakers also included:

  • Jim Matheson – CEO of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA).
  • Sheldon Petersen – CEO of the National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation (CFC).
  • Dave Adkisson – CEO of the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce.
  • Oscar “Oz” Sanchez – Champion Paralympian and founder of “Know No Limits”
  • RunSwitch Public Relations – Communications Awareness presentation.
  • Economic Development professionals from across the state.

In his remarks at the closing breakfast, Governor Bevin likened his rural roots to those of co-op members, encouraging Kentucky’s electric cooperatives to be part of an economic transformation of Kentucky.

“Even as a kid I saw that opportunity came when people were incentivized to invest. So, what can we do as a state, what can I do now as a governor to help create an environment in which people will come here and invest? That’s essentially what I’m challenged with doing every day.”

Photo by Tim Webb

KAEC President Chris Perry updated attendees on the association’s progress in 2017. Describing his strategy leading KAEC for the last three years, Perry suggested co-op leaders identify goals and raise their game to achieve them.

“Evaluate, elevate and execute,” Perry said, recalling his preparation and dedication to win a golf tournament in his home county.  Ball markers with the KAEC logo were distributed to attendees as a keepsake of the event.

Perry reflected on the priorities of KAEC’s Board of Directors:

  1. Legislative and Regulatory engagement
  2. Financial performance
  3. Board governance and relations
  4. Safety
  5. Member Communications and Relations

“Member engagement is critically important,” Perry said. “Whatever strategy you employ, please don’t stop communicating. Cooperative strength comes from the relationship with our members.”

“I must stress the importance of our coordinated engagement,” Perry said. “Our strength and success comes from the relationships you have and the consistent message that our team delivers to our congressional delegation.”

Saying that safety is a foundation for an electric utility, Perry complimented the performance of KAEC’s Safety and Loss Prevention team, stressing that all co-ops need to recommit themselves to a safety culture.

Perry highlighted the transformation of KAEC in every department, including the success of transitioning from a manufacturing model to a distribution model with KAEC’s United Utility Supply Cooperative reporting significant cost savings and business for its members and customers.

Finally, Perry updated co-op leaders on KAEC’s upcoming move to new headquarters.

“This new facility will improve our financial condition,” Perry said. “It will boost morale, improve our image and provide a location to train and educate board members and cooperative employees.”

Underscoring the importance of communications awareness, RunSwitch PR joined KAEC Vice President of Strategic Communications, Joe Arnold, to brief co-op leaders on communications challenges and KAEC’s ongoing crisis communications workshops across Kentucky.

A silent auction benefitted the Kentucky WIRE scholarship fund, and Kentucky Living offered sample magazines and promoted KentuckyLiving.com.

The meeting welcomed new co-op managers, directors and attorneys: Earl Rogers, Attorney, Fleming Mason Energy; Dennis Holt, Manager, South Kentucky RECC; Jeffrey Joyce, Director, Shelby Energy; Robert Crawford, Director, Warren RECC; Richard Basham, Director, Kenergy; Mark Linkous, Director, Tri- County Electric; Jonathan Travis Stacy, Director, Licking Valley RECC;        Craig Roberts, Director, Kenergy; Kevin Howard, Director, Licking Valley RECC.

Also recognized were co-op leaders marking milestones of service.

15-Years: Randy Sexton, Director Farmers RECC; Stephen Barr, Director Meade County RECC; Richard Skiles, Director Gibson EMC.

20-Years: Brad Marshall, Director, Blue Grass Energy; Neil Pendygraft, Director, Farmers RECC; Jerry Graham, Director Gibson EMC; Christopher Mitchell, Director Kenergy; Terry Garmon, Director Warren RECC.

25-Years: Michael Williams, Manager, Blue Grass Energy; O.H. Caudill, Director, Clark Energy; Freddie Button, Director, Farmers RECC; Paul Hawkins, Director, Farmers RECC; William Reid, Director, Kenergy; Robert True, Director, Owen Electric; David Smart Manager West Kentucky RECC.

30-Years: Gary Keller, Director, Blue Grass Energy; Lawrence Ireland, Director, Nolin RECC; George Brown, Director, Pennyrile Electric; Wayne Stratton, Director, Shelby Energy.

35-Years: Ralph Combs, Director, Blue Grass Energy; Ken Witcher, Director, Tri-County EMC.

40-Years: James Riley, Director, Pennyrile Electric.

The Annual Membership Meeting was conducted by the KAEC board of directors, Chairman, David Kimbell. Mark Stallons, Vice Chairman of the KAEC Board, conducted a roll call of the voting delegates, and the 2018 KAEC Board of Directors were instated. They are as follows:

COOPERATIVE

DIRECTORS

BIG RIVERS EC

WAYNE ELLIOTT

BOB BERRY

BIG SANDY RECC

BOBBY SEXTON

WILLIAM MAXEY

BLUE GRASS ENERGY

MICHAEL WILLIAMS

PAUL TUCKER

CLARK ENERGY

STEVEN HALE

CHRIS BREWER

CUMBERLAND VALLEY

TED HAMPTON

VERNON SHELLEY

EAST KY POWER

ALAN AHRMAN

TONY CAMPBELL

FARMERS RECC

FREDDIE BUTTON

BILL PRATHER

FLEMING-MASON ENERGY

JOHN ROE

JONI HAZELRIGG

GRAYSON RECC

CAROL HALL FRALEY

JIMMY WHITT

GIBSON EMC

DAVID KIMBELL

DAN RODAMAKER

INTER-COUNTY ENERGY

JASON TODD

JIM JACOBUS

JACKSON ENERGY

CAROL WRIGHT

PHIL THOMPSON

JACKSON PURCHASE ENERGY

ERICK HARRIS

DENNIS CANNON

KENERGY CORP

JEFF HOHN

CHRIS MITCHELL

LICKING VALLEY

KERRY HOWARD

TOMMY HILL

MEADE COUNTY

MARTY LITTREL

DARLA SIPES

NOLIN RECC

MICKEY MILLER

LINDA GRIMES

OWEN EC

MARK STALLONS

ROBERT TRUE

PENNYRILE RECC

GREG GRISSOM

JIMMY FUTRELL

SALT RIVER ELECTRIC

TIM SHARP

LINDA WEST

SHELBY ENERGY

PAT HARGADON

DEBBIE MARTIN

SOUTH KENTUCKY

RICK HALLORAN

DENNIS HOLT

TAYLOR COUNTY

CHRISTOPHER TUCKER

BARRY MYERS

TRI-COUNTY EMC

PAUL THOMPSON

VEACHEL HARLAN

WARREN RECC

MIKE MCGUIRK

SCOTT RAMSEY

WEST KENTUCKY RECC

EDDY WRIGHT

DAVID E. SMART

 

Inter-County President Jim Jacobus remains a KAEC Board member until his retirement. The KAEC Board anticipates instating incoming Inter-County President Jerry Carter on the KAEC Board in January, 2018.

The official KAEC board meeting was also conducted by the KAEC Board of Directors, led by Chairman David Kimbell. Regional Power Supply reports were given by Lindsay Durbin, Big Rivers Electric, Mike McNalley, East Kentucky Power and Ernie Peterson, TVA.

Among dinner guests at the annual meeting banquet on Monday night were Kentucky’s Agriculture Commissioner, Ryan Quarles, and  the Secretary of the Kentucky Energy and Environment Cabinet, Charles Snavely.

Photo by Tim Webb

In his remarks following a tribute video recognizing him as the 2017 Distinguished Rural Kentuckian, legendary writer and broadcaster Byron Crawford expressed gratitude.

“What an honor it is for you to have presented me with this award, and to know some of the people whom you have selected for that award since giving it to Jesse Stuart (in its first year of existence),” Crawford said. “I’m reminded of something Jesse Stuart said that I’ve always loved. He said, ‘If the United States is a body, surely Kentucky is its heart.’ What a pleasure, we’re so fortunate to live in the heart of the U.S.”

Let’s Rodeo

More than 86 linemen from 15 of Kentucky’s electric co-ops traveled to London, Kentucky last week to compete in the 13th annual Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives Lineman’s Rodeo.  The two-day event gave the lineman the opportunity to show off their skills in hopes of bringing home the main trophy.

In the end, it was the host Jackson Energy that took home the big prize.  A full list of winners is below.

“This was our first time hosting the rodeo,” said Carol Wright, President & CEO of Jackson Energy. “We were so pleased to see so many of our co-ops come out for this event.”

The competition featured both team and individual events.

“It’s a good working tool for keeping safe,” said Michael Ramsey, a lineman from South Kentucky RECC. “Speed matters, but it’s not the main thing. Safety’s an issue, and the more we concentrate on that, the more people who are going to go home safe every day. And that’s the best part of the rodeo.”

Here are highlights from the event:

FINAL RESULTS FOR AWARDS CEREMONY
SENIOR EVENTS
HURTMAN
CO-OP NAME SCORE TIME
FIRST PLACE Owen Electric Orman Glass 100 02:09:006
SECOND PLACE Owen Electric Tony Dempsey 100 02:16:088
THIRD PLACE South Kentucky Michael Ramsey 100 02:40:066
MYSTERY 1 – Security Light Change
FIRST PLACE Shelby Energy Michael Nethery 100 06:29:075
SECOND PLACE Owen Electric Tony Dempsey 100 06:32:025
THIRD PLACE Clark Energy Barney Toy 100 06:49:069
MYSTERY 2 – Lineman Assembly
FIRST PLACE Shelby Energy Michael Nethery 100 04:57:003
SECOND PLACE Owen Electric Orman Glass 100 06:05:066
THIRD PLACE Clark Energy Barney Toy 100 08:06:081
MYSTERY 3 – Skills Climb
FIRST PLACE Shelby Energy Michael Nethery 100 08:33:062
SECOND PLACE Owen Electric Orman Glass 100 08:46:097
THIRD PLACE Clark Energy Barney Toy 98 10:25:056
INDIVIDUAL JOURNEYMEN EVENTS
HURTMAN
CO-OP NAME SCORE TIME
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy Gerard Lakes 100 01:28:050
SECOND PLACE Jackson Energy Royce Baker 100 01:29:069
THIRD PLACE Jackson Energy Jon Tillery 100 01:30:056
MYSTERY 1 – Light Change
FIRST PLACE Owen Electric Tony Bach 100 04:44:043
SECOND PLACE Jackson Energy Royce Baker 100 05:23:094
THIRD PLACE Clark Energy Kevin Vance 100 05:29:003
MYSTERY 2 – Lineman Assembly
FIRST PLACE Clark Energy Christopher Keyton 100 04:11:098
SECOND PLACE West Kentucky Zachary Underhill 100 04:29:024
THIRD PLACE Clark Energy Kevin Vance 100 04:43:006
MYSTERY 3 – Skills Climb
FIRST PLACE Clark Energy Richard Steele 100 05:49:036
SECOND PLACE Blue Grass Energy Tim Hembree 100 06:04:056
THIRD PLACE Owen Electric Tony Bach 100 06:20:054
APPRENTICE EVENTS
HURTMAN
CO-OP NAME SCORE TIME
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy Daniel Henson 100 01:47:081
SECOND PLACE Jackson Energy Tyler Riley 100 02:10:003
THIRD PLACE Warren Jake Hall 100 02:28:088
MYSTERY 1 – Light Change
FIRST PLACE Fleming Mason Tommy Parks 100 06:12:087
SECOND PLACE Warren Jake Hall 100 06:45:002
THIRD PLACE Jackson Energy Daniel Henson 100 06:46:066
MYSTERY 2 – Lineman Assembly
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy Daniel Henson 100 05:01:003
SECOND PLACE Clark Energy Ben Combs 100 05:09:065
THIRD PLACE Kenergy Lucas Smith 100 05:23:040
MYSTERY 3 – Skills Climb
FIRST PLACE Clark Energy Ben Combs 100 07:40:066
SECOND PLACE Grayson RECC Tony Brewer 100 08:41:087
THIRD PLACE Jackson Energy Daniel Henson 100 08:42:010
FINAL RESULTS – PAGE TWO
TEAM EVENTS
HURTMAN
FINISHING PLACE CO-OP NAMES SCORE TIME
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy 3 Brent Johnson, Royce Baker, Kris Cunigan 100 01:36.92
SECOND PLACE Fleming Mason Anthony Marshall, Kevin McCarty, Colt McKenzie 100 01:45.53
THIRD PLACE Jackson Energy 2 Jon Tillery, Marlon Coffey, Daniel Henson 100 01:45.78
MYSTERY 1 – Cross Arm Change
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy 2 Jon Tillery, Marlon Coffey, Daniel Henson 100 07:17.32
SECOND PLACE Owen Electric 3 Tony Bach, James Juett, Charlie Colligan 100 07:34.12
THIRD PLACE West Kentucky Geoffrey Beck, Zachary Underhill, Jeremy Swift 100 07:37.56
MYSTERY 2 – Crew Medley
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy 1 Gererd Lakes, Andy Bales, Tyler Riley 100 07:59.72
SECOND PLACE Jackson Energy 2 Jon Tillery, Marlon Coffey, Daniel Henson 100 08:17.29
THIRD PLACE Shelby Energy 1 Tyler Workman, Benji Bohannon, Brandon Keyton 100 09:23.56
MYSTERY 3 – Wire Down
FIRST PLACE Fleming Mason Anthony Marshall, Kevin McCarty, Colt McKenzie 100 08:27.77
SECOND PLACE Jackson Energy 1 Gererd Lakes, Andy Bales, Tyler Riley 100 08:35.14
THIRD PLACE Owen Electric 3 Tony Bach, James Juett, Charlie Colligan 100 08:47.78
OVERALL
SENIOR
FIRST PLACE Shelby Energy Michael Nethery 400 22:45.40
SECOND PLACE Owen Electric Orman Glass 400 24:37.48
THIRD PLACE Owen Electric Tony Dempsey 398 28:31.04
INDIVIDUAL JOURNEYMEN
FIRST PLACE Clark Energy Christopher Keyton 400 18:31.56
SECOND PLACE Jackson Energy Marlon Coffey 400 19:51.40
THIRD PLACE Blue Grass Energy Tim Hembree 400 20:30.61
 APPRENTICE
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy Daniel Henson 400 22:17.60
SECOND PLACE Blue Grasss Dewayne Holcomb 400 26:34.82
THIRD PLACE Kenergy Lucas Smith 400 26:56.83
TEAM
FIRST PLACE Jackson Energy 2 Jon Tillery, Marlon Coffey, Daniel Henson 400 27:06.99
SECOND PLACE Jackson Energy 1 Gererd Lakes, Andy Bales, Tyler Riley 400 27:21.23
THIRD PLACE West Kentucky Geoffrey Beck, Zachary Underhill, Jeremy Swift 400 30:35.27

NRECA Annual Meeting Begins

The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association’s annual meeting began today in San Diego, CA. NRECA, the national service organization that represents the nation’s more than 900 not-for-profit, consumer-owned electric cooperatives, is celebrating its 75th anniversary during this year’s annual meeting. The national organization is reflecting upon the last 75 years as it looks back upon its legacy and surpassed challenges while also looking to the future and how NRECA can prepare for challenges still ahead.

NRECA CEO Jim Matheson’s opening remarks celebrate the electric cooperative spirit:

“…I’m proud to be part of this family. And I’m proud to be part of the same mission that drives everyone in this room. It’s an honor to stand on this stage for the first time as CEO.

I’d like to thank the team at NRECA that has worked so hard to make this meeting a celebration of our members.  Please, help me give them a hand.

If you attended one of the regional meetings, you heard me talk about my journey to NRECA.  About my appreciation for the difference you make – in politics, in the energy industry, and – most important – the difference you make back home in your communities.

And today I want to talk about the experience I’ve had so far – leading this organization – and my sense of our journey ahead.

It’s said that wisdom has a thousand fathers, and I‘ve had many teachers throughout the co-op community.

It goes without saying that the men and women who have provided me with counsel and encouragement have confirmed all the reasons I accepted this job.

NRECA is special because we benefit first and foremost from a membership that fosters this very real sense of community.  We’re deeply invested in one another’s success.  And that matters to me.

I mentioned the great team that put this meeting together.  Did you know we support nearly a thousand meetings and events every year?  All over the country,  co-op leaders are gathering – to network, to share knowledge, and to talk about how they’re approaching the future.

I’ve seen how your informed perspective and your strong voices bring clarity to matters of policy and politics alike.  Today, we’re communicating with a new Congress and a new Administration to act on our agreed-upon priorities.  Together, we’re telling the world who we are and what we stand for.

I’ve sat down with NRECA’s engineers and scientists.  I’ve dug into the many lines of our business that support you – consulting, marketing, financial services, insurance and benefits.

It sounds like a lot – and I can assure you this makes us unique among trade associations – but the common thread is that these are all things electric cooperatives decided to do together.  We offer all these products and services because there is a special way to serve this community – through seven cooperative principles we hold in common.

And right now, so much is changing for our members.  And NRECA has got to change right along with you.

NRECA’s mandate comes directly from our membership.  America’s electric cooperatives are not simply businesses; they are interested in their consumer members and they are directly invested in their communities.

Taken one at a time, each co-op is uniquely situated to respond to the circumstances in the community it serves. But taken together, electric co-ops can define the terms of engagement for an entire industry.  Together we constitute a movement.  And NRECA is the national representative of that movement – a movement that now and forever belongs to its members.

It’s always important to remember that NRECA is a cooperative, established by you, with a unique responsibility to both listen to you and to challenge you.  This – matters to me, as well.

Our resolutions – our policy guidelines – come from you.

We depend on your feedback to adapt and improve.

There’s no daylight between us.  Your challenges are the same as our challenges.

Your vision of the future is our vision.

Your community is our community.

It’s because we’re all co-ops.  The cooperative advantage is our advantage, and we must deploy it to maximum effect.

It used to be simple:  Provide the electricity.  Bill the member.  Collect the payment.

We all know it’s not that simple anymore.

We are still the electric cooperatives of FDR and Clyde Ellis, and yet we are very different.Today, it’s much more complex.

Think about those classic posters designed by Lester Beall for the REA – a light bulb, a washing machine, a radio.

Today it’s a solar array.  A geothermal heat pump.  A smart thermostat.  A demand-responsive water heater.  An on-bill energy efficiency loan.  Seven devices connected to the Internet.  And if you have two boys like I do, it’s definitely more than that.

Computers. Phones. Light switches. Doorbells. Smart plugs. Refrigerators. Coffee makers. Sprinkler systems.Watches. Automobiles.Lock sets.Security cameras.Baby toys and bathroom scales.

And it’s all on the other side of the meter.

And this means we need more information than ever before to be successful in the energy business, among a range of new competitors.  We have to build on our relationships with consumers.  We need the tools, resources, partnerships and plans to reach consumers with: Relevant data.  Flexibility.  New value propositions.

And this unique direction in which our industry is heading – it plays right to our strengths.  We are much more than poles and wire companies.  We are in the relationship business.  We always have been. And now is the time to capitalize on that.

***

On my visits to co-ops, I’ve seen your commitment to the members at the end of the line. Your work ethic has no equal.  You see the promise of innovation to better serve your members, and you use a team approach among your co-op employees. That sense of shared responsibility – and shared ownership among those who work in the co-op family – it tells me we are all working for something bigger than ourselves.

At one co-op annual meeting I attended, the co-op arranged for health screenings for its member-owners – another example of helping the community.

I’ve listened to the question and answer portion of annual meetings, where our co-op principle of democratic member control emerges in ways that for-profit businesses couldn’t even imagine…

You take some tough questions from your members.  But you respond with a sense of accountability that’s long since fallen out of favor in corporate America.

The special relationship we have with member-consumers is the foundation for our success, as we take on a rapidly changing marketplace.

***

NRECA has accomplished so many great things in its 75 year history – all of it based on the trust you’ve built through examples just like these.  And now it’s time to do even more – to put that trust to work.

Because we know: the wellspring of our credibility isn’t in Washington.  Our credibility – as advocates, as communicators, as technologists, as benefits providers, as partners in electrification around the world – our credibility in all of that work comes from you, our members.

Over the course of the last year, just look at what this membership has done.  You’ve rallied behind a central idea of our democracy and a central component of the co-op, through the Co-ops Vote program.

In this election, voter turnout in rural areas captured real intensity even as turnout waned in cities and suburbs.  Our programs were always non-partisan and non-political — but the outcome is inarguable: Coop votes are important, and Coop issues matter.

We have the attention of elected officials who now know one thing they perhaps did not know before: ignore the voters in rural communities at your own risk.  The people in power, and anyone who wants to be, must hear you.

We are not through with voting.  We are not through with political action.  And we are not through with using our strength in politics.

You know the needs of your communities better than anyone.  And you’re not afraid to roll up your sleeves to help meet those needs.

The same sense of urgency that led cooperatives to form NRECA in the first place must compel us to move forward into that kind of relevance in the new politics of today.

Because the change in leadership in Washington isn’t the only change happening.  For some time now, we’ve been watching as our entire political system has changed.

You’ve seen it too – a grassroots movement away from transactional relationships and the gravitational pull of DC that’s made some elected officials more “creatures of the beltway” than citizens of the people.

I know this:  There is a grassroots, populist movement across the country that wants change from business as usual in Washington.

This new energy – and this new approach — play to our strengths, because we are a grassroots movement as well.

Right now, the Trump Administration is taking a hard look at regulations that have a real cost in the real world – returning decision-making to responsible people in their communities.  We want co-ops to have the freedom to innovate and the flexibility to respond to members.

And all over Washington, the new focus on rural America plays to our strengths best of all.  We want to make it clear that the good of the co-op and the good of the community are one and the same.

These aren’t partisan issues, and this isn’t necessarily what makes the headlines these days, but this administration has already shown it is willing to listen to us… and the people in the communities we serve.

Now, I can’t tell you how history is going to remember President Trump – but I can tell you how history is going to remember us:  As leaders.  As innovators.  Uniquely focused on consumers and communities.

No one else can tell the story we can tell, and there’s no time like now to tell it.

We understand the urgency to respond to changes in the political environment.  And we need that same urgency to respond to changes in our industry, as well.

We will need to answer the challenge of third parties who want to bypass the co-op to reach our consumers.  There are a bunch of companies looking to insert themselves into our consumer relationships.  Their goal is to move between you and your member-consumers with new products and services.

I’ve seen what happens when a solar company comes in and convinces people to sign up.  My neighbor in Utah actually has panels on two sides of the roof.  You can’t tell me the solar provider had my neighbor’s best interests in mind when they made THAT deal.

But I have also seen what happens when co-ops get involved in the consumer’s decision to put solar panels on a rooftop.  Our members step in and arm consumers with facts about up-front costs and amortization and tax advantages and energy savings.  They offer alternatives like community solar projects.

Then, if the customer still goes with rooftop, some co-ops will help install it.  We want to make sure it’s done right and done safely.  And even if we lose a little bit of the load, we strive to keep the relationship with the member as strong as possible.

Because one word comes up again and again when consumers describe electric co-ops: trust.

They trust you to provide solutions and to work with them.

And I’ll say another thing about that trust.  We are so much better prepared for the future than the investor owned utilities.

We don’t measure success through the enrichment of shareholders – we measure it in the enrichment of our communities and our capacity to make a difference in their quality of life.

We understand – you understand – the importance of that strong consumer focus – the strong member relationship.

That part of our cooperative model is only going to get better.  It’s only going to become more important.

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As we look to the future, a single question guides us:  How can we harness the cooperative advantage to expand the range of solutions for everyone who participates in the co-op?

We all care about the same thing:  It’s the members. It’s their community. It’s their cooperative. It’s their legacy. We have to get it right.

When we do, something amazing happens. We move markets. We shift the dynamics of competition.  We transform what’s possible.  We change people’s lives.

That’s where this journey started.  It began in a movement that changed people’s lives.

People who carried lanterns through darkness formed a cooperative. And so they brought electric light to their homes, and their neighbors’, until they reached the end of the line – where no one would go before.

So much is changing, and yet one thing remains constant. It’s our steadfast confidence that cooperatives make a better future possible for the people who form them.

Seventy five years ago, you formed NRECA to fight for your mutual interests. You formed a cooperative to make a better future possible.  We’re still fighting.

The challenges are different now, and they will be different a year from now. They will be different 75 years from now. But we will still be fighting, and we will always fight for you.”