BEDFORD REC, INC. Bedford,PA 814-623-5101 Serving Bedford, Fulton and Somerset Counties “bSmiISc 41 TR.-COUNTY CENTRAL COOPERATIVE ELECTRIC ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE COOPERATIVE “ Mansfield, PA Partcer, PA 724-3494800 570-662-2175 724-399-2931 Supplying electric service to Service to Tioga, Potter, Serving Armstrong, members in Indiana, Cambria, Bradford, Lycoming, Butler, Clarion, 3SCSft%i SSSS Cameron, Clinton and Fore** Venago counties for 62 years. McKean Counties counties NORTHWESTERN ENTERPRISE •"SHE* 1 REC ASSOC., INC. RURAL COOPERATIVE Cambridge Spring, PA __ Your Touchstone Energy Cooperative 1 -800-472-791 0 tLECTRICj INC. Huntingdon, PA Venango, Warren & 814-766-3221 800-432-0680 Mercer Count Providing Rural Electric Serving Bedford, Blair. Centre, Needs for Bedford, Fulton Franklin. Fulton, Huntingdon, and Huntingdon Counties Juniata, and Mifflin Counties Delivering reliable electric power to 26,000 homes, Adams Electric farms and businesses in south-central Pennsylvania. Cooperative Inc 1-888-232-6732 www.adamscc.com SOMERSET RURAL ELECTRIC, INC. Your Touchstone Energy Cooperative Somerset, PA 814-445-4106 Serving Somerset, Bedford, Westmoreland, Fayette and Garrett, Md. Counties . %r * 11 1 A t ; UNITED ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC. Du Bois, PA 814-371-8570 888-581-8969 Serving Armstrong, Cambria, Centre, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, Elk, Forest, Indiana, M and Jefferson Counties Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 30, 2000-A4l Pennsylvania Rural Electric Association Serves 600,000 The Pennsylvania Rural Electric Association (PREA), based in Harrisburg, Pa., is the service organization for the non profit consumer-owned rural electric cooperatives in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Currently, the 13 co-ops in Pennsylvania and one in New Jersey provide electric service to more than 600,000 rural resi dents, businesses and indus tries. Pennsylvania’s co-ops own and maintain about 12.5 percent of the electric distribution lines in the state, covering nearly one third of the Commonwealth’s land area in 41 counties. These lines represent one of the largest non-governmental investments in rural infrastructure in the state and are an essential com ponent of business and industry. PREA’s 14-member board of directors one director elected from each of its member cooper atives conducts the associa tion’s business to best serve the consumers members of the co ops. PREA works jointly with the Allegheny Electric Cooperative Inc., a generation and transmis sion cooperative that provides wholesale power to the 14 co ops. HISTORY As late as the 19305, only six out of every 100 rural Pennsylvanians knew the mira cle of electric light bulb in their homes, The reason - establish ing power companies in Pennsylvania and New Jersey had decided that running elec tric lines into rural areas would not make them a profit. As a rule, power companies charged farmers $2,000 to $3,000 per mile to build lines to their homes and then charged electric rates higher than those in the cities. Since the average gross income of a farm family of the period was just $l,BOO per year, most couldn’t afford elec tric service. In many areas, power was not available at any cost, for a time it seemed profit needs greed of stockholder-controlled pri vate power companies would condemn most of Pennsylvania’s and New Jersey’s rural popula tion to live forever with kerosene lamps and hand pumps. But rural leader and a hand ful of politicians were not ready to accept the status quo. They began working to demonstrate that electric power could be pro vided to rural areas at a reason able cost and began developing a business structure to make that delivery possible. In 1931, New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt estab lished the Power Authority of the State of New York (PASNY) to develop water power on the St. Lawrence River, PASNY pro duced the first study on the actual costs of electric distribu tion and helped demonstrate the practicality of providing electric ity to rural areas. In 1935, armed with studies showing both the economic fea sibility and the benefits of pro viding electricity to rural areas, then-President Roosevelt signed an executive order forming the Electrification Rural Residents Administration (REA). The REA program was ini tially intended as an induce ment to the private power com panies to begin serving rural areas. But even with the incen tives provided by 2 percent REA loans, the private power suppli ers showed, little interest in building the necessary lines. By the end of 1935, it was clear that the private power companies weren’t serious about acting on the government’s offer to electri fy the countryside. Most of the loan applications and inquiries REA received came from farm co-ops. REA now realized that farmers and their rural neigh bors were willing to take electri fication into their own hands on a cooperative basis. Farmers had long experience with cooperatives. In fact, the co op was the business structural rural people adopted when con fronted with a task too large foi any family to handle itself. It was natural then that rural leaders chose to form another kind of co-op to provide them selves and their neighbors with electricity. Since extending cen tral station electric service required very specialized engi neering skills, many in Congress were convinced rural electrifica tion would never be accom plished without REA receiving regular appropriations and full status. So in 1936, one year and 20 days after REA had been cre ated, Congress passed legisla tion making REA a permanent government agency. In 1939, REA became part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. On October 20, 1994, a sweeping reorganization of the Ag Department took place. As a result, after 59 years of exis tence, REA was officially dis banded. Most REA functions were transferred to a new Rural Utilities Service (RUS). But the mission of rural elec trification continues. Today, about 1,000 electric cooperatives across the United States provide power to more than 25 million consumer members. Each co-op is a locally owned, taxpaying business incorporated under the laws of its individual state. Rural electric cooperatives have been delivering low-cost electric service to Pennsylvania and New Jersey rural residents since 1936, when the Steamburg Electric Cooperative Association (later consolidated into Northwestern Rural Electric Cooperative) was established in Erie and Crawford counties. The 14 rural electric coopera tives that today comprise PREA were organized between 1936 and 1941. By the time the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7,1941, all of them had gone through the pangs of becoming organized, of getting their first loans, of making arrangements for power supply at least on a short-term basis and had begun construction of lines to reach their unserved neighbors. With the outbreak of WWII, the co-ops realized they need a statewide organization to speak for them as one voice on legisla tive issues. The co-ops created PREA in February 1942.