July / 2001
From The Editor

Serious fun

I've spent several days of the past two months traveling east and west, north and south in Kentucky, rediscovering the difference between electric cooperatives and other businesses.
Summer is electric co-op annual meeting season in Kentucky. From Hickman to Prestonsburg, from Tompkinsville to Dry Ridge, thousands of people attend these summer celebrations at the 25 electric distribution co-ops around the state.
There's a business meeting at these events, but to tell you the truth, that's not why most people come. They come for a pleasant evening that's different in each community.
There's often food available and door prizes for attending. They might be held in an auditorium, a school gym, or outside under a big tent. There might be a gospel or bluegrass band. Some have exhibits to check your blood pressure or show you how to be safe around electricity. For the kids there might be a clown, magician, or face painting.
There's a business session that's the reason for the annual meeting, but that doesn't mean it dominates the gathering. The business sessions are important, reporting on the essential nuts and bolts of the cooperative. The point of the business session is really that the meeting is held in public, in front of a group of people who, because they buy electricity from the co-op, are members and owners of the business.
I can't think of many other businesses that do that, and that's the symbolism that always strikes me as I visit these community gatherings. Annual meetings for most businesses are exclusive affairs of the few largest shareholders. Customers are not invited.
Co-op annual meetings emphasize that these businesses are local, and that they have a special relationship with their members and the community. They are a way to congratulate the members for a successful year of being a part of a unique and important business. Co-op annual meetings are serious ways to have some neighborly summer fun.

Paul Wesslund
Editor