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About Cullman EC

About Cullman Electric Cooperative

There’s a vibrant new energy taking shape across America; members like you are transforming rural and small communities.  

Cullman Electric Cooperative is an electric cooperative, built by the communities we serve to deliver reliable, sustainable and affordable energy. Because we answer to local members like you, rather than out-of-town shareholders, our electric cooperative has a unique understanding of our local needs. In fact, our leaders and employees live right here in the community.  

Cullman Electric Cooperative is a community-focused organization, providing jobs and investing in the community through programs like Operation Share, Home Utility Gift Program and giving back to the community through College Scholarships, Operation Round-up, and a Youth Leadership Tour to Washington, D.C.  

Being a member of a cooperative distinguishes you from other electric utility consumers, as well as other business relationships, in important ways.

  • • Co-op leaders are members of our local community. Our nine board members live right here in our local area and are elected by co-op members just like you. Board members serve three-year terms and elections are held at our annual meeting each September.  

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  • • We belong to the communities we serve. Since we are a cooperative, any excess revenue is used improve the quality of our electric service and keep rates low.  

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  • • We follow the same seven cooperative principles that all cooperative businesses follow.  

Though we are local and cover over 44,000 member accounts in Cullman, Winston, Morgan and Lawrence counties, we’re also part of something bigger. Across the country, electric cooperatives work together to restore power during major outages, develop new technologies and build infrastructure that benefits us all.  

In addition to our Sprout Fiber Internet, we’re always looking for new ways to help our members save energy, save money and take advantage of the technology that’s changing the way we live and work.  

The opportunity to create something new here, while embracing traditional community values, has never been greater. It’s a passion we share with you, our members, for making our community a place we’re all proud to call home.  

That’s the source of our new energy at Cullman Electric Cooperative.

What is an electric cooperative?

Cooperatives are not-for-profit, consumer-owned businesses. Electric utility cooperatives build and maintain three times the miles of power line of other utilities and do so at comparable rates despite fewer customers. They do this by operating on a not-for-profit, cost-of-service basis.

Once a member pays the membership fee, they become a part owner of the cooperative. They have a voice in how the cooperative is operated and influence this process through casting their vote at the annual meeting. It is also at the annual meeting that the members elect Cullman EC’s nine-member board of trustees from the membership. Three board positions are voted on at each annual meeting.

Because the members of the cooperative are also the owners this means the cooperative is locally owned and operated. Employees of the cooperative are also local residents who are familiar with the needs of the communities they serve.

The 7 Cooperative Principles

 

Voluntary and Open Membership
Cooperatives are voluntary organizations, open to all persons able to use their services and willing to accept the responsibilities of membership, without gender, social, racial, political, or religious discrimination.

Democratic Member Control
Cooperatives are democratic organizations controlled by their members, who actively participate in setting policies and making decisions. The elected representatives are accountable to the membership. In primary cooperatives, members have equal voting rights (one member, one vote) and cooperatives at other levels are organized in a democratic manner.

Members’ Economic Participation
Members contribute equitably to, and democratically control, the capital of their cooperative. At least part of that capital is usually the common property of the cooperative. Members usually receive limited compensation, if any, on capital subscribed as a condition of membership. Members allocate surpluses for any or all of the following purposes: developing the cooperative, possibly by setting up reserves, part of which at least would be indivisible; benefiting members in proportion to their transactions with the cooperative, and supporting other activities approved by the membership.

Autonomy and Independence
Cooperatives are autonomous, self-help organizations controlled by their members. If they enter into agreements with other organizations, including governments, or raise capital from external sources, they do so on terms that ensure democratic control by their members and maintain their cooperative autonomy.

Education, Training, and Information
Cooperatives provide education and training for their members, elected representatives, managers, and employees so they can contribute effectively to the development of their cooperatives. They inform the general public, particularly young people and opinion leaders, about the nature and benefits of cooperation.

Cooperation Among Cooperatives
Cooperatives serve their members most effectively and strengthen the cooperative movement by working together through local, national, regional, and international structures.

Concern for Community
While focusing on member needs, cooperatives work for the sustainable development of their communities through policies accepted by their members.

Cullman EC's History

President Franklin D. Roosevelt visited Georgia for polio therapy, where he noticed his electric bill was over three times higher than it was in New York. He commissioned the help of four Congressmen, including Lister Hill and John Sparkman of Alabama. They helped create the Tennessee Valley Authority in 1933 and Rural Electrification Administration in 1935. In 1935, the Alabama Cooperative Act of 1935 made it legal for farmers to organize non-profit cooperatives. The relief was coming to a nation where people who lived outside of bustling cities had to endure life without electricity.


Fourteen Cullman County farmers were turned down for electricity. These farmers spearheaded the effort to electrify rural Cullman County. Refusing to give up, the 14 farmers drove their own wagons and Ford Model As house to house over the countryside, collecting the $5 membership fees from other farmers.


Word spread of the farmers’ efforts, and Alabama Power sued the 14 organizers of Cullman EC to stop its organization. Attorney William E. James defended Cullman EC, allowing the co-op to become a reality. Cullman EC’s first loan for $105,000 was approved, and the 14 men met in Mr. James’ office on May 25, 1936, to make the formation of Cullman EC official. 


The 14 farmers, now the co-op’s first board of directors, decided to hire their first employee, Gladys Graham, who took care of all the inside duties from secretarial to cashiering. Later the co-op hired M.C. Lovvorn to hang transformers, install meters, and take care of power outages.


Cullman EC energized its first lines just east of the city of Cullman on Aug. 4, 1936, picking up 350 customers with 30 miles of line. Cullman EC was the second co-op in the state to incorporate but was the first one to energize its lines.

Date of Organization: May 25, 1936

Incorporators

· H.E. Heck

· Charlie Fehrentz

· J.S. Bland

· Emmett S. Oden

· C.N. Ruehl

· O.A. Ellard

· H.R. Lowry

· R. Lem Bates

· W.L. Bowling

· W.T. Clemons

· W.F. Dahlke

· W.E. Humphries

· W.E. Rainwater

· W.E. Ballard

Date Energized First Lines: August 4, 1936 – 30 miles, 350 members

Incorporated Towns Served

· Hanceville

· Garden City

· Holly Pond

· Fairview

· Colony

· Vinemont

· Good Hope

· Addison

· Arley

· Baileyton

· West Point

· Dodge City

Number of Member Accounts Served: 43,143

Member Accounts Served by County

· Cullman – 36,206

· Lawrence – 129

· Morgan – 827

· Winston – 5,981

(Account total reflect Cullman EC membership statistics as of July 2018)

Source of Wholesale Power: Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)

Cullman EC's By Laws
Click here to download

Cullman EC's Partner Organizations

National Rural Electric Cooperative Association

Cullman Electric Cooperative is a member of NRECA, the national service organization for more than 900 not-for-profit rural electric cooperatives and public power districts providing retail electric service to more than 42 million consumers in 47 states and whose retail sales account for approximately 12 percent of total electricity sales in the United States.

NRECA’s members include consumer-owned local distribution systems — the vast majority — and 66 generation and transmission (G&T) cooperatives that supply wholesale power to their distribution cooperative owner-members. Distribution and G&T cooperatives share an obligation to serve their members by providing safe, reliable, and affordable electric service.

Touchstone Energy

Cullman Electric Cooperative is a member of the Touchstone Energy Cooperatives brand, which represents a nationwide alliance made of 750 local, consumer-owned electric cooperatives in 46 states. Touchstone Energy co-ops collectively deliver power and energy solutions to more than 30 million members every day. Electric cooperatives distribute power for 75 percent of the U.S. land mass over 2.4 million miles of power lines.

Electric cooperatives were established to provide electricity to rural America, and now make up the largest electric utility network in the nation. Touchstone Energy is the national brand identity for that network.

Alabama Rural Electric Association

Cullman Electric Cooperative is a member of AREA, the statewide trade association serving Alabama’s 22 electric distribution cooperatives, the Tennessee Valley Authority and PowerSouth Energy Cooperative.

Through AREA, all of Alabama’s electric cooperatives pool their resources to gain strength and efficiency on issues common to electric cooperatives. Services offered by AREA include legislative representation at the state and national levels, safety and training programs, environmental compliance consulting, worker compensation, health benefits plan, printing and design, youth and community programs, media relations and a monthly magazine for Alabama electric cooperative consumers.

AREA’s headquarters, which contains inside and outside training facilities, is in Montgomery.

Tennessee Valley Authority

Cullman Electric Cooperative purchases all of its wholesale electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority. TVA is a corporation owned by the U.S. government and provides electricity for 9 million people in parts of seven southeastern states at prices below the national average. TVA, which receives no taxpayer money and makes no profits, also provides flood control, navigation, and land management for the Tennessee River system and assists utilities and state and local governments with economic development.

TVA Complaint Resolution Process — TVA provides regulatory oversight for your local power company’s rates and service practice policies. If you have an issue or complaint that you have not been able to resolve with your local power company, TVA’s Complaint Resolution Process may be able to help. There are three ways to begin the process:

  • Online at www.tva.com/complaintresolution

  • E-mail complaintresolution@tva.gov

  • Call the TVA Regulatory hotline at 1-888-289-8409

2022 Annual Report

2022 Annual Report in January 2023 Alabama Living

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31132 US Hwy 278
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1 p.m. – 4 p.m.

 

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