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About Us
Community Electric Cooperative
is "owned by those we serve." Our electricity is purchased from Old
Dominion Electric Cooperative, an electric generation and transmission
cooperative. The power is delivered from 10 substations over 1,445 miles of
distribution line owned by Community Electric.
Board of Directors
Community Electric Cooperative is governed by a nine-member board of directors. The
directors, who are all member-consumers of the Cooperative, are elected by the
membership at the annual meeting and serve three year terms. Director elections
are held each year at the annual meeting in August.
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City of Suffolk |
Southampton County |
Isle of Wight County |
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Chad N. Fowler
1965 Pittmantown Rd.
Suffolk, VA 23438 |
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Jeannette S. Everett
17413 Everett Rd
Capron, VA 23829 |
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Diana F. Beale
26451 River Run Tr
Zuni, VA 23898 |
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Carey M. Copeland
2880 Greenway Rd
Suffolk, VA 23438 |
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Rosser E. Bryant
34442 Sandy Ridge Rd
Franklin, VA 23851 |
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John T. Butler, Jr.
15654 Woodland Dr
Windsor, VA 23487 |
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Douglas A. Wiggins
6008 Holy Neck Rd
Suffolk, VA 23437 |
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H. Garland Lowe, Jr.
14710 Appleton Rd
Ivor, VA 23866 |
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Paul E. Owen
106 Chrisfield Cir
Smithfield, VA 23430 |
Our Management Staff
President -
J. M. Reynolds, P.E.
Administrative Assistant - Annette M. Dickey, CPS/CAP
Vice President of Administration and Finance - Gregory S. Cook
Member Services Supervisor - Brenda H. Mansfield
Accounting Supervisor - W. Michael Beale, CPA
Vice President of Operations and Engineering - Jean J. Thrasher
Service Supervisor - Arthur C. Forrester
Construction Supervisor - T. Bracy Smith
Engineering Supervisor - Jonathan D. Thompson
Director of Business Development & Special Projects - Kenneth M. Bunch
Statistics
Community Electric Cooperative
was incorporated in 1938 and provides electric distribution service to the rural
parts of the City of Suffolk, Isle of Wight and Southampton Counties, along with
portions of Sussex and Surry Counties. The following statistics apply to the
Cooperative's distribution operations within its certificated service territory
(as of December 31, 2001):
| Services in place |
10,653 |
| Overhead distribution line (12.5KV) |
1,265 miles |
| Overhead distribution line (34.5KV) |
2 miles |
| Underground distribution line (12.5KV) |
178 miles |
| Total distribution line |
1,445 miles |
| Delivery points |
10 |
| 115KV to 12.5KV substations |
3 |
| 34.5KV to 12.5KV substations |
1 |
| Non-coincidental peak demand (prior 12 months) |
41,096KW |
| Energy purchases |
163,508,172KWH |
Our History
Founded in 1938, Community Electric
Cooperative was created through the efforts of the Holland Ruritan
Club and other community leaders to provide electrical service in
Southeastern Virginia’s rural areas.
The late Paul L. Everett, prominent
attorney from Suffolk and a Holland Ruritan, led the effort to form
the electric utility that today serves more than 9,500 families and
businesses.
The first board of directors
consisted of Louise F. Davidson of Holland, Frank H. Johnson of Zuni,
Gretchen C. Ellis of Whaleyville, Bettie C. Gwaltney of Windsor, E. W.
Beale of Zuni, Thomas S. Braband of Smithfield, Ruth C. Parker of
Whaleyville, Roy Brinkley of Suffolk, and J. K. Jones of Holland.
This first board was unique. Of the
hundreds of electric cooperatives being formed across the United
States, Community's founding board had more women than any other in
the country.
The Cooperative elected officers
immediately after the Virginia State Corporation Commission granted
its charter on December 23, 1938. The Co-op's first president was
Louise F. Davidson.
The Rural Electrification
Administration granted Community Electric Cooperative a $220,000 loan
in October of 1939. A month later, construction was underway on the
utility's first 220 miles of line, running from Windsor into Nansemond
County, which has since merged into the City of Suffolk.
Some 1,543 member-consumers turned
out at the Co-op's first outdoor annual meeting in Suffolk's Peanut
Park in 1949. Enthusiasm was high. With the post-war construction
boom, Community Electric Cooperative rang in the New Year of 1950 with
2,451 meters, all having gone online within a decade, and most after
the war. Construction continued to accelerate into the mid-1950s, with
the number of services increasing by more than one-third, to 3,637, by
1955.
The Cooperative reached a major
financial milestone in 1955. For the first time, the utility achieved
a year of operational margins. Capital credits totaling $26,705 were
assigned to members, and in 1959 the members received their first
capital-credit refund checks.
In 1971, the
Cooperative passed
1,000,000 man-hours without a lost-time accident. The record
represented one of the best in the nation at the time.
By January of 1975, Community
Electric Cooperative had installed some 5,875 meters and 1,111 miles
of line.
James M. Reynolds, P.E., was hired
in 1976 by the Co-op board of directors to succeed Jean Woodward as
manager. Reynolds continues today as manager.
In 1979, Community Electric
Cooperative executed a wholesale power contract with Old Dominion
Electric Cooperative, a generation-and-transmission cooperative. Old
Dominion negotiates rates on behalf of Community Electric Cooperative
and its other member systems.
During the 1980s and 1990s, Old
Dominion procured ownership of electric-generation facilities to
support Community Electric Cooperative and the 11 other cooperatives
which own Old Dominion. In 1983, Old Dominion acquired an 11.6 percent
interest in the North Anna Nuclear Power Station. Old Dominion also owns a
50 percent interest in the Clover Power Station, which it built, and which
went on-line in 1995. In addition to North Anna and Clover, Old
Dominion is developing three peaking electric generation facilities to further
support Community and the other 11 member cooperatives.
Over the last ten years, the Co-op
has recorded a growth rate of roughly 1.5 percent in the number of
meters connected. The Cooperative currently serves more than 9,500
accounts over its 1,445 miles of distribution line.
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