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Cooperatives and Their Communities

Harrison RECC
More than a Memory
May 1997

After the flood, a lesson about good neighbors

The flood of 1997 will long be more than a memory for those Kentuckians in the water’s way this spring. Physical scars on buildings and land will last for some time. Many say it will affect rebuilding patterns. As history, it will be preserved in the writing and retelling of a thousand stories. It’s not just memories that linger after the rivers recede, but the way those memories visit our hearts and emotions, replaying stories of sadness, courage, and in some cases, the worst kind of human disasters.

Harrison Rural Electric Cooperative, the consumer-owned, Cynthiana-based utility that serves more than 11,000 consumers in eight counties in northern Kentucky, found itself literally in the middle of all that in March.

Several electric co-ops around the state were reminded that a flood doesn’t necessarily affect an electric utility as much as, say, an ice storm that can knock down poles and leave people without power. In a flood, people ask the utility to turn off their electricity.

Instead, as Harrison found, the best thing an electric co-op can do is what everyone else in the community is doing--be a good neighbor. In this case, that meant the co-op employees pitching in to help in ways that made the most sense to each of them.

For Frankie Taylor, Harrison’s meter specialist and radio technician, that meant first focusing on his other role as commissioner of public works for the city of Cynthiana. As the water rose that Saturday, March 1, he helped move equipment from the water plant, then returned to his Harrison duties, putting his personal cellular phone number on the radio to take calls on electrical problems while the phone system was out, and testing damaged meters. For Herb Vongruenigen, Harrison member services adviser, it meant working with local churches to buy clothes for flood victims, coordinating the delivery of a truckload of beds from another Kentucky town, and finding hundreds of plastic buckets for cleaning.

Harrison Interim Manager Jack Goodman praises the work of all the co-op employees. He says that what they did was a natural result of the involvement they have always had with a variety of community groups.

The naturalness of that tendency for helping neighbors made this a hard column to write. Everyone I talked to didn’t want to talk about themselves. They would say, “Oh, I didn’t do anything, but Larry...,” or “You need to talk to Mitchell,” or “It was some of the employees’ wives who went door to door to check on people.”

One of the reactions to disasters like the 1997 flood is to try to figure out what it all means. It’s an unanswerable question, of course, but one of the memories we ought to allow ourselves is about how important it is to have good neighbors.-Paul Wesslund


Kentucky Association of Electric Cooperatives, Inc.
4515 Bishop Lane * Louisville, KY  40218
502-451-2430 * FAX: 502-459-3209
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