2
FEBRUARY 2019
from the editor
Power to the people What a difference 16 days can make. In just a little over two weeks, 14 Indiana electric cooperative lineworkers and two project leaders brought electricity to an east central Guatemalan village. Ninety homes, a school, two churches and a pump house were electrified, and villagers suddenly looked forward to opportunities they’d only dreamed about. Through Project Indiana, an initiative created by Indiana’s electric cooperatives to empower underdeveloped countries, lives are changed forever. Not only do the villagers — especially the children — look forward to brighter futures; the linemen, after helping change countless lives now and in the future, come home with new perspectives as well. This month’s issue highlights the latest Project Indiana trip to San Jacinto, Las Conchas, Guatemala, early this spring. Indiana Connection Senior Editor Richard G. Biever accompanied the Project Indiana crew and documents the experience through words and pictures. Visit the Project Indiana website, projectindiana.org, to learn more about the trip, Project Indiana itself, and how to donate to this important cause. Now, I invite you to turn to page 20 and take a virtual journey to San Jacinto. Because hardworking, skilled, caring lineworkers from right here in the Hoosier state shared their time and talents, sustainable global changes are happening. How exciting is that?
EMILY SCHILLING Editor eschilling@indianaec.org
On the menu: October issue: Pork recipes, deadline Aug. 2.
November issue: Olive oil recipes, deadline Aug. 2. If we publish your recipe on our food pages, we’ll send you a $10 gift card.
Exclusive discount! Indiana Connection readers can
receive $1 off each train ride ticket purchased in June by using code “CONNECTION” at hoosiervalley.org.
Three ways to contact us: To send us recipes, photos, event
listings, letters and entries for gift drawings, please use the forms on our website indianaconnection.org; email info@indianaconnection.org; or send to Indiana Connection, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606.
VOLUME 68 • NUMBER 12 ISSN 0745-4651 • USPS 262-340 Published monthly by:
Indiana Connection is for and about members of Indiana’s locally-owned, not-for-profit electric cooperatives. It helps consumers use electricity safely and efficiently; understand energy issues; connect with their co-op; and celebrate life in Indiana. Over 292,000 residents and businesses receive the magazine as part of their electric co-op membership. CONTACT US: 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600 Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606 317-487-2220 info@indianaconnection.org IndianaConnection.org INDIANA ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES OFFICERS: Gary Gerlach President Walter Hunter Vice President Randy Kleaving Secretary/Treasurer John Gasstrom CEO EDITORIAL STAFF: Emily Schilling Editor Richard George Biever Senior Editor Holly Huffman Member Relations/ Advertising Manager Ellie Schuler Senior Communication Specialist ADVERTISING: American MainStreet Publications, 512-441-5200; amp.coop Crosshair Media, 502-216-8537; crosshairmedia.net Paid advertisements are not endorsements by any electric cooperative or this publication. UNSOLICITED MATERIAL: Indiana Connection does not use unsolicited freelance manuscripts or photographs and assumes no responsibility for the safe‑keeping or return of unsolicited material. SUBSCRIPTIONS: $12 for individuals not subscribing through participating REMCs/RECs. CHANGE OF ADDRESS: Readers who receive Indiana Connection through their electric co-op membership should report address changes to their local co-op. POSTAGE: Periodicals postage paid at Indianapolis, Ind., and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to: Indiana Connection, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606. Include key number. No portion of Indiana Connection may be reproduced without permission of the editor.
JUNE 2019
3
contents
JUNE
12
17
insights 03 FROM THE EDITOR 05 CO-OP NEWS What’s happening at your local electric cooperative.
food
16 INDIANA EATS American fare paired with American tradition: Bonge’s Tavern.
10 ENERGY Making cents of
17 FOOD
electricity demand.
20 COVER STORY Changing the world: Project Indiana provides tools to help rural Guatemalans better lives.
12 INSIGHTS 14 COUNTY OF THE MONTH Spotlighting Boone County.
30
Amazing avocado.
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA
Indiana Connection
33
pets
26 EVENTS CALENDAR 28 DIY A new way to light your outdoor space.
travel
31 LEGISLATIVE SESSION RECAP 32 H OOSIER ENERGY/ WABASH VALLEY NEWS
Water recreation safety.
33 TRAVEL Explore Southern Indiana’s caves.
30 PETS
34 PROFILE
29 SAFETY
Do your homework before boarding your pets. (Not in all versions)
Jeremy Miller: Clark County REMC.
On the cover Ethan DeWitt, a lineman at Northeastern REMC, right, shows a Guatemalan worker how guy wires for a pole will be attached to anchors as a Project Indiana crew of lineworkers begins securing power lines to a pole during the project in San Jacinto, Guatemala, in March. PHOTO BY RICHARD G. BIEVER
4
JUNE 2019
co-op news
Broadband: We heard you, www.hcremc.com CONTACT US 800-248-8413 Fax: 765-529-1667
and we’re responding
OFFICE HOURS 7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m., Monday – Friday STREET ADDRESS 3400 S. State Road 3 New Castle, IN 47362 MAILING ADDRESS P.O. Box D New Castle, IN 47362 A night deposit box is available 24 hours a day.
In a past survey,
to assist with getting high-speed internet
our consumer-own-
to some of the most difficult areas in the
ers told us that
state. We are closely monitoring and
affordable, high-
considering any grant possibilities from
speed broadband is
state and/or federal programs to see
a necessity of mod-
what makes sense for HCREMC.
ern life that many of them are lacking today. We listened and are responding.
This grant, if awarded, will continue the fiber from Fair Oaks up to the Ridgewood and Greensboro area. This could
Over the past months, HCREMC has
provide funding for approximately 73
EMAIL hcremc@hcremc.com
conducted extensive feasibility evalua-
more members at a cost of just over
tions to deliver rural broadband to the
$700,000. The fiber design will also
SERVICE INTERRUPTIONS To report a power outage, please call 800-248-8413, day or night.
underserved areas within the HCREMC
make service available to an additional
territory. It’s important to us that we
199 residents that are not in eligible
MISSION STATEMENT The mission of Henry County REMC is to provide reliable, safe and cost-competitive electrical service to enhance the lives of our members and the communities we serve.
provide reliable service, while keeping it
funding areas.
affordable.
BILL DUE DATES Bills mailed July 9 are due July 28. Bills mailed July 15 are due Aug. 4. Bills mailed July 31 are due Aug. 18.y.
Know what’s below. Call 811 before you dig!
The HCREMC board has also agreed
With that said, we are currently in
to partner with New Lisbon Telephone
progress of a pilot project with NineStar
Company on a Next Level grant applica-
Connect in the Fair Oaks subdivision.
tion to serve 25 members north and east
This project will serve 89 members and
of State Road 3 in the Johnstown area.
cost roughly $250,000. Construction will begin soon.
Broadband is on the minds of lawmakers around the country. We expect there
In addition, we are applying for the
will be a lot more news to come on this
Next Level Connections Broadband
topic.
grant, along with NineStar. This grant is funded by $100 million in state dollars
SHANNON THOM CEO
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK www.facebook.com/ HenryCountyREMC FOLLOW US ON TWITTER www.twitter.com/ HenryCountyREMC
Your electric cooperative values your feedback! Please consider helping us by participating in our member satisfaction survey. Survey calls will begin soon!
JUNE 2019
5
co-op news
Overhead vs. Underground Power Lines There are two different methods of installing power lines carrying electricity to your home — either overhead lines attached to poles or lines buried underground. HCREMC members sometimes ask why we use one method over the other, or why all power lines are not installed underground.
extremely wet, underground options may not be an option. Next, wires are laid in the trench directly or placed in conduits for protection. The trench is filled in, and the surface restored to its original condition. Padmount transformers and additional equipment are installed as needed. Now the system is ready to deliver electricity.
This question is often brought up at times when storms, whether they be snow, ice, wind or lightning, affect reliability. Wouldn’t it be better to put all power lines underground?
Determining if power lines should be overhead or underground boils down to what is best for the situation. Underground lines might be ideal in situations where there is a desire to keep the poles and wires out of sight, such as a residential neighborhood, park or historical area. There are many cities and towns that construct only underground lines for a variety of reasons. The number of utilities buried underground, like gas, sewer, phone lines, and broadband, makes for an extremely busy network.
OVERHEAD LINES Overhead line construction starts with the setting of utility poles. Poles can be set in nearly any type of terrain, even wet and boggy. If poles need to be placed in rocky or wet terrain, we use several techniques to set the poles securely. Normally, a six-foot hole is dug and backfilled with stone to keep the pole straight. Once the poles are in place, wires can be strung and then equipment — like transformers, fuses and reclosers — are installed. Power can then flow to your home or business.
UNDERGROUND LINES Underground line construction requires digging a trench deep enough to keep the lines well away from surface activities. Where the terrain is
2019 HCREMC UNPL ANNE D OUTAGE HOUR S BY CAU SE
6
Underground lines in a neighborhood could pose many safety risks if someone does not call before they dig. This is why it is so important to call 8-1-1 before digging to protect yourself and others from unintentionally hitting underground utility lines, causing injury to yourself or your family, causing damage to your property or causing utility service outages to the entire neighborhood and potential fines and repair costs.
LEDs for
school supplies The 2019-2020 school year is just around the corner. HCREMC is collecting school supplies for the upcoming year for youngsters in need. We hope you will help us aid our youth by donating tools for school. Members are encouraged to drop off school supply donations to the REMC office between 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, until July 12. HCREMC members may choose from one selection below to donate. In return, donors will receive an REMC energy efficiency kit. Kits include various LED bulbs and an energy savings tip booklet. Donations need to be unopened and unused. Supplies will be divided among area schools. Thank you in advance for your donations!
SUGGESTED LIST: • Backpacks (1 bag) • Packs of #2 pencils (2 boxes) • Glue sticks (2 packs) • Crayola crayons (2 boxes, 24 count) • Fiskar scissors (2 pairs) • Rulers (2 items, inches and centimeters) • Colored pencils (2 boxes) • Plastic school boxes (2 boxes) • Folders with pockets and prongs (5 folders) • Wide rule spiral notebooks (2 notebooks) • Washable markers (2 boxes, 10 count)
53% transmission outage
• Erasers (3 items, rectangular)
42% trees
• Pencil top erasers (2 packages)
• Black and blue pens (2 packs)
3% design/equipment failure
• Wide ruled filler paper (4 items)
2% public
• Highlighters (2 packs)
JUNE 2019
• Index cards (2 packs)
co-op news
Continuing to make a difference • Family Services and Preven-
When HCREMC was founded in 1936,
Recently, the Operation Round Up
farmers banned together to build their
board met to discuss grant requests.
tion Programs: $2,000 matching
own electric system because private
The following grants were awarded:
donation for Baby Bucks program
power companies did not serve the rural areas. Neighbors were willing to help neighbors in order to provide the communities with a much needed resource. Operation Round Up is a program that continues this principle of working together. This program is designed to
for needy families with infants and/
• Blue River Valley Volleyball
or toddlers
Program: $1,000 now and up to $2,000 matching donation for a
• Westminster Community Center:
working pole, net and ball system for
$2,000 for Blue Air three-door freez-
all grades
er for food pantry
• Christian Love Help Center/
• 2019 4-H Livestock Auction:
help our members reach out to worthy
Shelter: $500 for food pantry and
$7,500 divided among four counties
causes in their communities. Visit www.
hot meal program
— Henry ($3,000), Madison ($1,500),
hcremc.com for details.
Delaware ($1,500), Fayette ($1,500)
APPLY FOR AN HCREMC SCHOLARSHIP Non-traditional students: HCREMC is offering a one-time $5,000 scholarship award to a non-traditional adult student who is heading to college for the first time, or returning to complete an interrupted education. The HCREMC Operation Round Up board is excited to support our member-students who are continuing their education. Scholarship deadline is June 28. Applicant must be member of HCREMC and have a high school diploma, GED or HSE/TASC certification. Open to adult students 25 years of age or older who are headed to college for the first time or are returning to complete an interrupted education. Applicant must be enrolled in an accredited vocational school or a two-year college and looking to obtain a technical certificate or associates degree. Applicant cannot be a son, daughter or grandchild of an existing employee or director of the HCREMC board or the HCREMC Operation Round Up board.
Visit hcremc.com for more information.
CO-OPS SUPPORT INDIANA TOURISM For nearly 45 years, HCREMC along with other member cooperatives have supported Indiana tourism by sponsoring the Indiana Festival Guide. A popular and comprehensive tourism publication which includes more than 600 festivals, craft fairs, holiday shows, historical re-enactments and community celebrations is available free of charge from HCREMC. Indiana’s Touchstone Energy cooperatives are committed to the communities they serve. That is why HCREMC is pleased to help highlight some of the best and exciting events coming to communities throughout the state. Drop by our office to get your free copy today.
JUNE 2019
7
co-op news
Members stopped by information booths at the annual meeting.
Annual Meeting recap HCREMC hosted its 82nd annual meeting held on April 25 at the First Baptist Church in New Castle. Members and their immediate families enjoyed dinner by Rihm’s Catering, entertainment by Zach Dubois, prizes, youth activities and more. Annual meeting is a special time for co-op members to gather, share experiences, hear from co-op leadership and, perhaps most importantly, vote to elect members to the HCREMC board. This year, board districts 2, 5 and 8 were up for election. Three incumbent directors were re-elected to the HCREMC board. They were Shane Young, district 2; Wayne Jester, district 5; and Randy Maloyed, district 8. As a part of the business meeting, HCREMC Lineman Joe Stevens was awarded the Richard Bromagem Lineman Appreciation Award. Also recognized were
Zach Dubois (right) performed at HCREMC’s 82nd annual meeting.
HCREMC Director Ron Chew and employees Debbie Poor and Tyler Powell for 10 years of service to the electric cooperative and Anita Irvin for 30 years of service to HCREMC. In addition, six $1,000 scholarships were awarded to high school seniors with a parent or guardian living in the REMC service territory. Scholarship recipients included Hannah McKellar, Tri-High; Elizabeth Moore, Knightstown High; Kaitlin Scott, The Indiana Academy for Science, Mathematics & Humanities; Benjamin Brock, New Castle High; James Thompson, New Castle High; and Lucas Wuestefeld, Shenandoah. We congratulate everyone on their accomplishments! Operation Round Up board member, Scott Lightfoot, discussed information about the Round Up program and outlined several approved grant donations in 2018. CEO Shannon Thom discussed reliability and industry trends, while REMC Board Chairman Wayne Jester outlined information regarding broadband opportunities and shared results of a recent cost of service analysis for electric service. We appreciate all who attend and look forward to a successful year.
8
JUNE 2019
HCREMC awarded six $1,000 scholarships to local high school seniors.
energy
Making cents of electricity demand Proper planning can help reduce energy costs now and in the future Nothing feels more wel-
or buy enough capacity
Your plans can save!
air conditioners and water
come on a hot summer
to fulfill everyone’s needs
You can easily reduce your
heater load management.
afternoon than the air
on that one hottest day (or
energy use during times
These shift energy use to
conditioner kicking on. But,
coldest night) of the year.
of peak demand, provid-
times when electricity is
while your house is cooling
Simple supply and demand
ing savings for you and
in less demand. By doing
your local electric co-op.
this, the distribution co-op
Even simple steps like
and its generation and
raising your thermostat a
transmission cooperative
few degrees and closing
can avoid building new
the shades against the hot
facilities which can lead to
summer sun can help re-
higher costs for the local
duce the energy your co-op
electric cooperative and
needs to provide.
its members. Everyone can
down, electricity generation plants are warmed up and running full tilt to reliably serve everyone’s needs.
Like with other products, the rules of supply and demand apply to electric-
Your local electric coop-
ity. When businesses are
erative is part of a com-
operating and everyone
plex system that must
is running their A/Cs on
be prepared to meet the
a hot summer afternoon,
highest power demands
electricity prices on the
Additional steps that
of the year. This is similar
markets can soar because
can save even more and
to the way a mall parking
everyone needs it. You
improve problem areas of
lot may seem larger than
may not see these price
your home include air seal-
needed. When you pass by
differences on your home’s
ing and adding insulation.
on most days, the majority
electric bill because your
Properly sized and tuned
of the spots are empty. Yet
electric co-op may average
high-efficiency HVAC
on the day after Thanks-
all of these costs into one
equipment can also reduce
giving, customarily the
amount per kilowatt-hour
demand during peak times.
busiest shopping day of the
(kWh) regardless of the
year, the parking lot may
time of day you use the
be crammed with cars —
power. Eventually, high
and more ready to pounce
demand days can lead to
when a spot opens. Your
higher average costs for
electric co-op has to build
everyone overall.
have a role in reducing long-term energy costs for the local co-op — which, in turn, can help minimize the costs you will have to pay in the future as well.
Co-op offers savings programs Many co-ops offer free advice and power-saving programs for devices like
by
Steve Hite
Energy Advisor
10
JUNE 2019
Hendricks Power Cooperative
insights
Cast your vote Tell us your favorites for the Best of Indiana Through the years, readers like you have shared your picks for our state’s best cup of coffee, best bed and breakfast, best flea market, and best community festival, among other things. In the September issue, our popular “Readers’ Choice Awards” for the Best of Indiana return and we need your help to select the winners. This year we have five categories as you’ll note on the ballot below. We’re also asking you to share the name of any “hometown heroes” who are doing good things in your community. Tell us why this person is your hero. We may feature your nominee in a future issue of Indiana Connection.
BEST OF
indiana Readers’ Choice Awards
Give us at least four of your picks for Indiana’s best by July 1 and your name will be added to a drawing for three randomly selected $50 prizes. We’d like to highlight the unique things that make us proud to call Indiana “home.” Therefore, we hope you will avoid national chains and franchises when answering questions. Instead, tell us about the places you can find only in Indiana. Mail your completed form to Indiana Connection, Best of Indiana, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240. Go to our website (indianaconnection.org) for an electronic form to fill out.
letter
to the editor TALKING TORNADOES Your article on page 33 in the April 2019 issue (Tornado Tips) is inaccurate. It says: “Never try to out run the storm. It moves at hundreds of miles an hour …” This is what I found on the internet. “The average forward speed of a tornado is 30 mph but it may vary from stationary to 70
READERS’ CHOICE AWARDS
Use a separate sheet of paper if necessary.
mph. Although tornadoes occur in many parts of the world, they are found most frequently in the
NOMINATE YOUR CHOICES FOR BEST OF INDIANA
United States east of the Rocky
BAKERY:
summer months.”
Mountains during the spring and
BARBECUE:
The wind speed can exceed
DRIVE-IN THEATER:
100 mph, but not normally over
INDIANA MUSICIANS/SINGERS:
200 mph. Two hundred is not hundreds of miles per hour in
WATER RECREATION SITES:
my book. It might not be smart
HOMETOWN HERO:
to try to outrun a tornado, but the
NAME:
reason given is incorrect.
ADDRESS:
Carl V. Covely Jr., Lafayette, Indiana
CITY, STATE AND ZIP:
Editor’s note: Thank you for letter
PHONE NUMBER OR EMAIL:
and for pointing out the error in
YOUR ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE:
the article.
12
JUNE 2019
county feature
Boone County BY NICK ROGERS From historical events and culinary delights to beautiful parks and trails, Boone County offers enjoyable activities for everyone. Founded in 1830 and named for legendary frontiersman Daniel Boone, the county is the site of Indiana’s first Rural Electric Membership Corporation. Today, it’s a day-trip destination from Indianapolis and surrounding counties. In Zionsville, you can view live animals in the Zion Nature Center, recall Depression-era history at the Maplelawn Farmstead, and breeze into the Antique Fan Museum,
y t n u o C acts F FOUNDED: 1830
NAMED FOR: Daniel Boone POPULATION: 68,875 (2017) COUNTY SEAT: Lebanon NOTED FOR: Boone County Courthouse Dome Zionsville Fall Festival Starkey Nature Park Antique Fan Museum
whose 2,000-plus collection dates back to the 19th century. Further on up the road, Lebanon boasts Indiana’s second-largest dome, atop the county courthouse. There’s no better time than summer to gaze upon sunlight spilling through its beautiful stained-glass rotunda. Headed out in the evening? Hit Mechanicsburg’s M.E.L.S. at the Starlite Drive-In Theatre. Since 1946, it’s been screening double features under starry skies. Fall visitors can enjoy Lebanon’s late-September reenactment of Civil War battles and President Abraham Lincoln’s 1861 visit en route to Washington, D.C.; the early-September Zionsville Fall Festival; or Dull’s Tree Farm in Thorntown to pick pumpkins and walk a corn maze.
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JUNE 2019
Boone County’s Courthouse in Lebanon
Whenever or wherever you travel, good eats await. In Lebanon, there’s Donaldson’s Finer Chocolates and Titus Bakery (whose maple-iced, cinnamon-infused Pershing donut is a must). Zionsville is home to Traders Point Creamery (Indiana’s first certified-organic dairy farm) and a Bub’s Burgers location, where finishing a one-pound Big Ugly gets your picture on the wall … if fortune and digestive fortitude favor you. And if you need to shed calories afterward, Boone County’s got you covered with more than a dozen parks and trails, including the 80acre Starkey Nature Park, the Big-4 Rail Trail (connected to a 20-mile network of paved pathways), and Creekside Nature Park, doubling as a kayak / canoe launch point onto Eagle Creek. Freelance writer Nick Rogers is a communications manager for Purdue Agricultural Communications.
JUNE 2019
15
Indiana eats
American fare paired with an American tradition Tailgate while you wait for a table You’ll literally need to travel
fresh in season and can
off the beaten path down a
change daily in the summer.
few winding roads to find Bonge’s Tavern. Located 30 minutes from Indianapolis, Bonge’s is the claim-to-fame of the small unincorporated area known as Perkinsville. And, it’s one of those mustvisit destinations for Hoosier foodies. Opened as a tavern in 1934, the building sat empty for a few years in the mid-’90s. That’s when Don Kroger happened upon the building, bought it and called his
Chef Tony’s favorite dish is the smoked salmon appetizer. But the most popular selection by far is the Perkinsville Pork. Huelster says that’s because of “all the love we give it. It’s a good quality, Indianaraised pork loin.” While the menu keeps foodies coming back, the experience of waiting for a table has made Bonge’s legendary.
buddy — current owner and
Billing itself as a “tailgating
chef Tony Huelster — to help
paradise worthy of an adult
him bring Bonge’s back to
field trip,” the restaurant
life.
takes reservations for
Both veterans in the restaurant world, Kroger and Huelster collaborated on Bonge’s menu ideas and recipes.
parties of 10 or more. If you don’t have a reservation, you’ll want to be in line by 4 p.m. on weekends to get your name on the list and then head back to the
The menu, which is posted
parking lot to pass the time
on a chalkboard above
tailgating. The restaurant
the bar, is ever-changing.
encourages you to bring
Everything is made fresh in-
your own beverages, snacks
house – from salad dressings
and tailgating supplies but
to desserts. Perkinsville Pork
asks you leave the cornhole
is the menu staple. Duck,
boards and Frisbees at home.
New York strip steaks, and apple-smoked prime rib can always be found on the weekends. The chicken dish rotates. Seafood is served
16
JUNE 2019
The restaurant also offers more tailgating tips with its “Bonge’s Tavern Summer Guide” available on its website.
BONGE’S TAVERN 9830 W. 280 N. Anderson, Indiana 765-734-1625 BongesTavern.com Tuesday–Thursday: 4:30–9 p.m. Friday–Saturday: 4:30–10 p.m. Reservations taken for groups of 10 or more. Must be 21 and older, 18 with a parent or guardian.
food
Amazing going beyond guac
food FO O D PREPARED BY I NDI ANA CO NNECT I O N S TA FF PHO TO S BY RI CHARD G . B I E V E R
Fava Bean and Avocado Dip Simon May, Fort Wayne, Indiana 10 oz. fava beans, shelled
Avocado Egg Salad Kathi Tooley, Berne, Indiana 4 large hard boiled eggs 2 avocados, peeled and pitted ½ t. salt
2 ripe avocados, peeled and pitted
Black pepper to taste
2 cloves of garlic, minced
¼ cup mayonnaise or plain Greek yogurt
A big handful of fresh mint, chopped 3 sprigs fresh thyme, chopped
1 T. lime juice
Juice of 1 lemon
1 t. sugar
Zest of ½ lemon
½ t. mustard
½ t. sea salt
Toast
1 large pinch of black pepper 2 T. olive oil
Mash and mix eggs, avocado, salt and pepper together. Add remaining
Cook the shelled fava beans in salted
ingredients and stir to mix. Serve
boiling water for 5 minutes. Drain well
open-faced on toast.
and cool. Place all ingredients except the olive oil into a food processor and turn it on. Drizzle in the oil while continuing the process. Serve with long dippers like pretzel rods or Avocado Egg Salad
crisp breadsticks.
Mexican Chicken Soup
In a slow cooker, layer carrots,
Patricia Piekarski, Harvey, Illinois
garlic, onion, and half the
2 large carrots, peeled and cut into chunks
Worcestershire sauce and 2
4 garlic cloves, peeled and halved
with 1 t. salt. Cover and turn on
1 white onion, sliced ¼ inch thick
“High;” cook for 4-6 hours. About
Small handful of cilantro 4 large bone-in chicken thighs 1 T. Worcestershire sauce 1 t. salt ⅔ cup rice
Mexican Chicken Soup
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JUNE 2019
cilantro. Top with chicken. Pour quarts of water on top. Sprinkle
1½ hours before serving, add rice. Cook until rice is tender. Pull out chicken, remove skin and shred meat. Put meat back in. Discard cilantro. Scoop out inside of avocado and cut into
3 chiles, finely chopped (optional)
½-inch pieces. Serve soup with
1 ripe avocado, pitted
chiles, avocado pieces and lime.
1 lime, cut in pieces, for serving
Makes 6 servings. Editor’s note: Add more water if necessary.
Changing the
WORLD
Indiana electric cooperative linemen, Jason Morrison, atop pole, and Clay Smith, prepare to hoist service line into place as a young Guatemalan woman walks her pigs to a field across the road from her home.
20
JUNE 2019
Project Indiana provides the tools to help rural Guatemalans help themselves to better lives STORY AND PHOTOS BY RICHARD G. BIEVER
Chad Miller and Ethan DeWitt lead a group of local villagers pulling a stretch of wire past the San Jacinto village school.
T
he last morning 14 Indiana
power on in the tiny village of San
electric cooperative linemen
Jacinto, a dusty half-hour’s ride north
would spend at their worksite
on bumpy gravel roads from their
in rural Guatemala, Clay Smith was
hotel. Two weeks earlier: San Jacinto’s
handed a guitar at the hotel that had
electric system was just 50 bare poles.
been their home for two weeks. The
They had been set but were awaiting
33-year-old line foreman at Whitewater
the wires, transformers and hardware,
Valley REMC sat down in one of the
and the arrival of the Hoosiers. In the
worn armchairs in the entryway and
two weeks, Indiana linemen built 4.3
started squeezing a few notes from the
miles of power lines and wired almost
instrument’s dull nylon strings.
90 homes, two churches and a school.
Then, he started into the Top 40 hit from
“… But I don’t know what to do…”
1971 — “I’d Love to Change the World.”
A day earlier: The crew turned the wa-
“If I’m sitting around a campfire, that’s
ter back on at San Jacinto’s neglected
always my ‘go to’ song,” Clay said later.
pumping station. Months earlier: The
“It was the very first song my stepdad
2-year-old diesel generator and electric
ever taught me how to play. It’s the one
pump stopped working. A question
I took the time to learn from beginning
arose over who was responsible for re-
to end.”
pairs: the village or the municipality of
Marshall County REMC lineman Doug MacLain recognized the tune, looked up the lyrics on his cell phone, and both he and Clay started singing. “We were just in the moment, not even paying attention to what the song actually was saying,” Clay recalled. “Then one of the guys said ‘are you listening to the words?’”
Chahal, so nothing was done. Villagers resorted to making the long slog with containers to the stream that flows past the village to collect water, wash clothes and bathe. The Indiana crew took it upon themselves to fix it, and did.
project managers and support staff, traveled to Guatemala March 24 as part of the continuing initiative — “Project Indiana: Empowering Global Communities for a Better Tomorrow.” In cooperation with NRECA International, Project Indiana’s mission is to bring electricity to developing rural areas of Guatemala, and provide the necessary knowhow the nascent utilities need to sustain themselves and
“… So I’ll leave it up to you …”
grow. The group returned to India-
The Indiana line crews had already
napolis April 9.
changed the world in San Jacinto.
San Jacinto is a village of about 150
That’s when the lyrics connected with
And they shared what they knew with
families tucked amid rolling hollows
the crew’s accomplishments in Guate-
thankful villagers eager to continue
and perched along steep hillsides of
mala.
what the Hoosiers started.
knobby karst landscape in eastern Gua-
“I’d love to change the world …”
A BETTER TOMORROW
temala. The villagers there live mostly
Two days earlier: The crew turned the
The 14 lineworkers, along with four
through subsistence agriculture. They
JUNE 2019
21
A girl walking home from school leaps clear of a power line that was soon to be raised into place. Watching the work from the local market are adults and kids from San Jacinto. The market is a popular gathering spot, situated where the hilly and rocky dirt road to school connects with the main road through the village.
About
Guatemala The Republic of Guatemala is located south and east of Mexico’s southern border and is the largest of the seven Central American countries. Size: Guatemala encompasses about 42,043 square miles, a bit bigger than the state of Ohio. Population: 16,581,273 (2018 est.) More than half of its population lives below the poverty line. Capital: Guatemala City Government divisions: Guatemala is divided into 22 departments (akin to states in the U.S.) which are sub-divided into about 335 municipalities (akin to U.S. counties). Besides Guatemala itself, the Guatemalan national anthem includes the name of only one other political state … Indiana!
grow corn in small fields and in any
stay there. With it, they’ll have better
patch of soil between craggy outcrops
health, better schools, just an all-around
The eighth and final stanza of the anthem, written in Spanish and adopted in 1896, begins with “Ave Indiana,” which is translated to “Native Bird.” The line continues with “that lives in your seal, the protector of your soil…”
of rocks up the steep hillsides where it’s
better way of life.”
planted by hand. They produce beans,
LONG TIME COMING
The “native bird” to which the stanza refers is the resplendent quetzal, a colorful Central American rainforest bird that has a long tail. As the anthem says, the bird figures prominently in Guatemala’s national seal, on its flag, and on its currency as a symbol of liberty. In Mayan culture, the quetzal’s tail feathers were traded as currency, and Guatemala’s currency today is the quetzal, named after the bird.
This was the fourth excursion Indiana
worked with Japan to build three small
co-ops made to Guatemala since Au-
hydroelectric generating stations along
gust 2012. Since Project Indiana began
with distribution systems in three
putting boots on the ground and up the
different areas. Service was built to 12
poles and into the clouds, 70 Indiana
small communities in the area, but the
lineworkers have now brought power
power line stopped just short of San
to over 500 rural homes, four schools,
Jacinto.
SOURCES: INDIANA CONNECTION, WIKIPEDIA AND OTHER VARIOUS INTERNET SITES
cardamom, chili, cacao (from where cocoa comes), bananas and other fruits, and raise chickens, pigs, and cattle.
and five churches.
Electricity came to the Las Conchas area near San Jacinto in 2009. That’s when the Guatemalan government
Enrique Rax Yat, 45, a community leader
“Words and pictures don’t do it justice,”
in San Jacinto, began asking the electric
said Jamie Bell of the harsh life the
utility to extend service six years ago.
crews find in Guatemala’s countryside.
When Indiana turned the lights on April
“You see how hard they work for the
2, he and his wife were home. “It was
little they have.”
beautiful,” he said. “I prayed, ‘Thank you,
This was the second Project Indiana
God, for this achievement.’”
trip for Jamie, a lineman from NineStar
Through an interpreter, Enrique said
Connect, who served as a coordinator
he hopes electricity will encourage
on this trip. “Electricity,” he added,
more younger folk, including his own
“gives them a powerful tool to better
four children, to stay there. “Maybe
themselves — to make them want to
people will not need to leave,” he said.
“
We’re trying to help
A MODEL COMMUNITY
Development Association Las Con-
Unlike previous project trips, Project
chas — attended along with interested
Indiana included an agreement that
consumers and past representatives.
every home that it wired in San Jacinto
these people have
In the course of the three-hour class,
was to have a cooking stove installed.
slowed by the translation from English
better opportunities.
While the simple stoves will burn the
into Spanish and the Mayan dialect
area’s abundant wood, they will have
called q’eqchí, which is the main lan-
stove pipes to ventilate the kitchen and
guage spoken in the area, Ron dis-
living quarters.
cussed how electric cooperatives work
“We’re excited to help you bring elec-
in the U.S. He noted running a utility
tricity to your homes,” Project Indiana’s
is a capital-intensive job that requires
board president Ron Holcomb told San
securing financing, growing the num-
Jacinto’s residents at a town meeting
ber of consumers, and setting rates
the day the crew arrived, “and we’re also
appropriate to maintain the assets and
very excited that you are going to have
infrastructure.
Electricity is an opportunity to have a better life here.
”
ERICK BERGANZA, NRECA International “They will be looking for better opportunities here.”
stoves in your homes.” Ron, Jamie, and Hugo Arriaza, a Project Indiana contractor from Guatemala, attended a Chahal
“Some people will go to different states
municipality council meeting the
here in Guatemala,” said Erick Berganza,
evening after the lights were turned
the Guatemalan engineer with NRECA
on. They were invited to discuss
International who designed the electric
how Project Indiana, the local
system for San Jacinto. Erick also
government, and the electric
worked alongside the Indiana crew for
utility could cooperate on
the two weeks. “But a lot will go to the
providing the stoves and other
United States. They know that if they go
improvements to the village, such
to work hard in the U.S., they will make
as converting the diesel gener-
a lot more money than they will here.
ator-powered water pumping
“We’re trying to help these people have
station to total electric.
better opportunities,” Erick added. “Elec-
“San Jacinto will be a model com-
tricity is an opportunity to have a better
munity for others,” said Hugo.
life here.” A girl washes potatoes as women prepare chicken soup for lunch at the school’s kitchen. Typical of those found in rural Guatemalan homes, the kitchen has a packed-dirt floor, an open wood-fire pit for cooking, and only openings in the sides of the walls to provide ventilation.
One Saturday morning during the project, Ron and Hugo held an informal seminar at a nearby school on sustainable electric utility management. Community representatives that make up the electric utility — Farmer’s Matt Bassett works atop a pole on a hillside in San Jacinto. Just as linemen did before bucket trucks became standard, linemen on the project had to climb each of the 55 poles and mount the hardware and power lines while perched on top.
JUNE 2019
23
A family gives thumbs up when the lights came on.
2019 Project Indiana crew: Making the trip to Guatemala were: • Matt Bassett, Carroll White REMC • Kevin Bay, Johnson County REMC • Michael Bowman, Boone REMC • Brent Buckles, Northeastern REMC • Ethan DeWitt, Northeastern REMC • Jason Gates, Tipmont REMC • Travis Goffinet, Southern Indiana Power • Chad Griffin, South Central Indiana REMC • Matt Huck, NineStar Connect • Doug MacLain, Marshall County REMC • Jason Morrison, Jackson County REMC • Tyler Powell, Henry County REMC • Josh Sawyers, South Central Indiana REMC • Clay Smith, Whitewater Valley REMC
“Someday, we want to come to Gua-
gathering when
temala to drink cervezas with you. We
invited up for
don’t want to keep coming to build
some com-
power lines,” he quipped.
ments. “And
“Building poles and wire is just the beginning. They have to run a sustainable utility,” Ron said later. While in Guatemala, Ron and Hugo also met with utility leaders from the three other utilities with which Project Indiana has worked to begin planning a multi-day conference to delve deeper into sustainable management practices for the directors and officials.
now, we are also part of your family.” On the eight-hour
While waiting for the power to come on during a minor delay, mala City for the flight a San Jacinto family home, Travis Goffinet, a gathers around Kevin Bay as he shares lineman with Southern videos of his family in Indiana Power on his Johnson County on his cell phone. second trip, reflected:
drive back to Guate-
“The hardest thing
PART OF A FAMILY
about the project is you don’t get to see
The final day in San Jacinto, the Project
the fruit of your labor. We built the pow-
Indiana crew was celebrated like the
er line, which was the goal, but it wasn’t
heroes they were — surrounded by
the main goal. The main goal is to try to
hundreds of folks, young and old, who
change their lives, and you don’t get to
gathered and watched from the sparse
see that.”
midday shade along the walls of the Catholic church and other buildings. Incense and Mayan dancing preceded the procession of the crew to a makeshift stage in front of the building that
“I would be interested to see what that place does in the next 10-15 years,” added Clay, “to see how they move forward.”
served as the utility warehouse. The
In other words, Clay and his co-op
The crew also included project
Guatemalan and U.S. national anthems
cohorts want to see just how they
coordinators and support staff:
were played and a prayer was said. Lo-
changed the world — or at least
• Joe Banfield, Indiana Electric
cal officials praised and thanked them.
changed San Jacinto.
“San Jacinto, you are now part of the
Richard Biever is senior editor of Indiana Connection.
Cooperatives • Jamie Bell, NineStar Connect
Project Indiana family,” Ron told the
• Richard G. Biever, senior editor of Indiana Connection • Ron Holcomb, Project Indiana board president/president and CEO of Tipmont REMC
SUPPORT PROJECT INDIANA AT PROJECTINDIANA.ORG Project Indiana is a 501c3 organization formed by Indiana’s electric cooperatives with the vision of helping developing global communities advance by adopting villages, bring them electric power and support them as they form electric cooperatives that enable them to enjoy a better way of life. Electrification projects are completed in partnership with NRECA International.
Visit ProjectIndiana.org to learn more and contribute.
24
JUNE 2019
JUNE 2019
25
calendar NORTHWEST
8
REMINGTON WATER TOWER DAYS, Remington (Jasper), Downtown. 5K walk/run, parade, kids’ area, kiddie tractor pull, vendors, free entertainment, dinners, breakfast, petting zoo, beer and wine garden. Free. 219-863-0999. remingtonindiana.com/remington-water-tower-days.aspx
1416
FULTON COUNTY HISTORICAL POWER SHOW, Rochester (Fulton), Fulton County Historical Society. Show features antique tractors, garden tractors, hit-nmiss engines, equipment, and antique trucks. Vendors, crafts, contests, toy show, tractor pulls and food. Breakfast buffet until 11 am, then lunch until 2 pm. fultoncountyhistory.org/ historical-power-show
29
VALPARAISO/PORTER COUNTY GARDEN WALK, Valparaiso (Porter). Sponsored by Porter County Master Gardeners Association and Purdue Extension. Master gardeners answer questions and explain plantings at numerous select private gardens. 9 am-4 pm CT. Cost: $8 presale; $10 day of the walk. 219-465-3555. pcgarden.info/gardenwalk-2019
CENTRAL
1-2
13TH ANNUAL MIAMI INDIANS ALL NATIONS GATHERING, Rockville (Parke), 11515 E. U.S. 36. Native drumming, singing, dancing, storytelling, and flutists. Over 20 native craft vendors and foods. Miami Living Village. Admission charge. 765-473-9631. miamiindians.org/pow-wowgathering
PORTER FESTIVAL, 6-9 COLE Peru (Miami), Townwide. Music, theatre, tours, food, events, film and multimedia presentations. Free. Charge for some activities. 765-472-7655. coleporterfestival.org
2830
INDIANA FIDDLERS’ GATHERING, Battle Ground (Tippecanoe), Tippecanoe Battlefield Park. Three-day acoustic music festival featuring old time, folk, swing, bluegrass and Celtic music. Admission charge. 765-588-1376. indianafiddlersgathering.org
SOUTHWEST
7-9
MEROM BLUFF CHAUTAUQUA FESTIVAL, Merom (Sullivan), Merom Bluff Park. Parade, BBQ/pork chop/chicken dinners, craft/flea market, free entertainment, kids’ games, living history area, bingo, and more! Admission charge. 812-356-4517.
2022
HAUBSTADT SOMMERFEST, Haubstadt (Gibson), Old Haubstadt Gym. Three days of rides, live music, food and Southern Indiana’s finest Bierstube! Laufenfest 5k Run, Walk and Lil’ Dutch Run on Saturday. Free. haubstadtsommerfest.com
26
JUNE 2019
22
CIRCUS DAY, French Lick (Orange), Downtown. Acrobats, fire eaters, clowns, games a live circus band and more. 10 am-4 pm. flwbmuseum.com
JUNE NORTHEAST
7-8
LAFONTAINE “ASHLAND DAYS” FESTIVAL, LaFontaine (Wabash), Branson Street and Wabash Avenue. Seth Zahalka Memorial Car & Motorcycle Show, lawnmower poker run, corn hole contest, live music, parade and more. Free. 260-330-0742
22
WINE IN THE PINES, Albion (Noble), Black Pine Animal Sanctuary. Wine tastings, hors d’oeuvres, music, animal art silent auction, and animals. Must be 21 or over. 6-9 pm. Reservations recommended. Park Pal members eligible for early-bird reservations. 260636-7383. lori@blackpine.org. bpsanctuary.org/wine-in-thepines
27
FORT WAYNE PHILHARMONIC PATRIOTIC POPS CONCERT, Angola (Steuben), Pokagon State Park. Bring a lawn chair or blanket. Free. Regular park entrance fees apply. In the case of rain or extreme heat, the concert will be held at the Angola High School Gymnasium. 260-833-2012. niball@dnr.in.gov
SOUTHEAST
1011
METAMORA STRAWBERRY DAYS, Metamora (Franklin), Historic downtown. Strawberry shortcake and live music. Visit specialty shops and Metamora Grist Mill. Train and buggy rides. Free. 765-647-1212. metamoraindiana.com/index.php/events
22
RISING SUN’S BLUES & BBQ, Rising Sun (Ohio), Downtown. BBQ cook-off, live blues music, hillbilly fashion show, arts, crafts, food vendors, and games. BBQ competition (charge). Noon-10 pm. Free. 812-4384933.
29
BROOKVILLE CANOEFEST, Brookville (Franklin), Franklin County Fairgrounds. Indiana’s largest canoe and kayak races. Car show, princess contest, kids’ area, beer, music, wine tasting and fireworks. Free. 765-5471028. brookvillecanoefest.com
This calendar is published as a service to readers and the communities electric cooperatives serve. Indiana Connection publishes events free of charge as space allows, giving preference to free community festival and events in and around areas served by subscribing REMCs/RECs. While Indiana Connection strives for accuracy, please note that events, dates and time may change without notice. Indiana Connection advises using contact phone numbers or internet sites to check times and dates of events before making plans. To add events to Calendar, please use the “Submit and Event” form under the “Talk to Us” or “Calendar” buttons at indianaconnection.org; or mail your info to: Calendar, Indiana Connection, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240. Please submit info two months before the date of the event.
JUNE 2019
27
do-it-yourself
A
dding strings of decorative lighting outdoors can add ambiance for dining and entertaining, as well as a degree of safety and security to darkened pathways. It’s become quite a popular and fashionable way to enhance a space, and your lighting choices are many. What’s old is new again, as one type of lighting gaining popularity are old-style Edison bulbs — with a twist. Their visible filaments add a vintage, yet modern flair to your backyard spaces thanks to LED technology.
STEP 1 – PLAN IT OUT: Sketch out your desired overall lighting design. This will help determine how many strings and fasteners you’ll need to achieve your look and make sure your setup is safe. Measure the precise lengths of stringed lights and supportive cable guide wires (recommended) you’ll need to span your patio or yard. Allow enough extra length for slacked lines, access to an electrical source, and to double up the cable guide wire for extra stability at mounting points. Using twine as a stand-in will help you visualize how it will look and give you more accurate measurements.
STEP 2 – GO SHOPPING: Invest in commercial grade lights rated for outdoor use, which are more durable and waterproof. If you’re using several strings or criss-crossing Edison-style bulbs, remove the bulbs first so they’re easier to connect and drape, and they won’t get tangled. One advantage of LED lights is their energy efficiency. The manufacturer’s recommendations on how many strings you can connect together may be given in total wattage, not footage, so more strings and lights are OK with LED bulbs. But it’s still a good idea to check their recommendations on the number of strands you can safely connect end to end. If the strings you choose don’t already come with bulbs, be sure to choose bulbs with bases that are compatible with the sockets. If you don’t have an outlet nearby, get a heavy-duty
28
JUNE 2019
A new way to light your outdoor space outdoor extension cord long enough to reach one. You may need more than one to handle multiple groupings of strands.
STEP 3 – GATHER FASTENERS AND TOOLS: If you’re stringing your lights over a large expanse, you’ll need to pick up some hardware to securely fasten your strings to the cable guide wires and also the guide wires to the mounting points. Turnbuckles, snap hooks, lock clamps, and pad eyes with screws are a good start. Cable clips and zip ties are a must when using a cable wire suspension kit, preferably in a color that matches the light string. Lastly, have wire cutters and a drill on standby, along with a sturdy ladder.
STEP 4 – INSTALL THE HARDWARE: Screw hooks work well in trees, fences, porches, pergola roofs, or the eaves of your house. The more hooks you install, the less burden you’ll put on your cable wires and strings. If you don’t have existing natural supports, a common solution is to install posts with hooks on top into sturdy planters filled with gravel or buckets filled with concrete.
STEP 5 – START HANGING: The way you string your lights comes down to personal preference. Sometimes
straight rows look best, while a zigzag pattern can put a little more pizzazz into your patio. Have someone help eyeball the strings while you’re hanging them, making sure they’re well-spaced and have the right amount of slack. Plus, it’s always smart to have a spotter while you’re using a ladder. Plug in your extension cords then sit back and enjoy the magical glow of your handiwork. Visit your local Do it Best store or doitbest.com for thousands of the best home improvement products, including varieties of stringed lights and fastening essentials to create a beautifully lit space, indoors or out.
BRIAN HOWENSTINE is the owner of Decatur Do it Best Hardware and Wabash Do it Best Hardware and is a memberowner of Do it Best Corp., a Fort Waynebased cooperative of thousands of hardware stores, home centers and lumberyards throughout the US and around the world.
(This article is for informational purposes only. Indiana Connection and Do it Best Corp. assume no liability for the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein, or for injuries, property damage, or the outcome of any project.)
POOLS AND LAKES AND ELECTRICAL SAFETY...
oh my! Throughout the dreary winter, you
fun activities abound. But safety risks go
waited to open your pool, bring out the
hand-in-hand with the fun.
boats and soak up the sun. But before you dive into all the summer fun, remind yourself and your family of the dangers lurking inside pools and lakes. Remember: water and electricity don’t mix.
Avoid swimming or going in the water near boats plugged into shore power or docks with electrical services. If you
HOW TO SPOT
Electric Shock Drowning
are in the water and feel electricity, stay calm and swim to shore if you can but
SAFETY IN OR AROUND POOLS
WHAT IT IS:
do not touch a metal ladder or any other
It’s easy to hop out of the pool and not
metal objects.
think about turning up the radio or
If someone is in the water and is
jumping in and making a huge splash all
shocked, do not jump in. Turn off the
Occurs when marina or onboard electrical systems leak electric current into the water. The current then passes through the body, causing paralysis and drowning.
over electrical appliances. But doing so
power source and use an insulated
can be dangerous. Instead, use bat-
device to attempt to remove him/her
tery-operated appliances or waterproof
from the water. Electrical shock can
covers for items near the pool when pos-
cause paralysis and the victim will need
sible. This way, you and your family can
assistance immediately.
enjoy the day without worry of electrical shock.
When fishing on a dock, boat or just simply steering a boat, keep a distance of
If someone in the pool feels electricity
at least 10 feet between your fishing pole
(almost like a stinging feeling) or appears
or boat and nearby power lines. If your
to have been shocked, do not dive in
boat comes in contact with a line, stay
– you could be shocked, too. Instead,
in the boat and avoid touching anything
turn off the power and use a non-metal
metal until the boat drifts away or help
shepherd’s hook to pull him or her out of
arrives.
the water to safety.
SAFETY IN OR AROUND LAKES/RIVERS
Staying safe while near the water is simple but these tips can be easily forgotten. So, create a checklist for your family and
Indiana has an abundance of lakes
friends to review before jumping in the
and rivers. From playing by the beach,
deep end.
fishing or taking the boat out for the day,
HOW TO AVOID: • Locate and label all power switches to pool, hot tub and spa equipment and lighting. • Make sure all pools are 25 feet away from power lines. • All wiring and repairs should be performed by an electrician. • Install ground fault circuit interrupters. • Maintain 10 feet between boats and power lines when in the water.
WHAT TO DO IF YOU SEE ELECTRIC SHOCK DROWNING: • Do not enter the water. • Turn off the power source. • Use an insulated device to attempt to remove the person from the water. • Call 911 immediately. JUNE 2019
29
pets
Animal House
Do your homework before boarding your pet B Y B R IA N D . S MITH
internist Tracey Gillespie of IndyVet,
and your veterinarian. Check websites,
a 24-hour emergency hospital in
consult ratings services such as Angie’s
Indianapolis. Older pets, particularly
List and the Better Business Bureau, and
those that require regular medication,
don’t necessarily trust online reviews.
may be best left in the care of a trusted housesitter,
Call and ask questions: Is the facility
she says.
staffed 24 hours? Is anyone with veterinary training on site? How are
The dog days of summer can mean days without your dog – or cat, for that matter. It’s not easy to take pet
“And in general, cats do better in their
emergencies handled? If you’re happy
home environment,” Gillespie says.
with the answers, request a tour of the
“They’re pretty low-maintenance and
place. Go elsewhere if you can’t get one,
can be cared for once a day.”
says Dr. Suma M. Rao, clinical assistant professor at Purdue University’s
passengers on a vacation trip, which
Department of Veterinary Clinical
explains the burgeoning popularity of
Sciences.
boarding. Carmen Rustenbeck, CEO and founder of the International Boarding & Pet Services Association, recalls that when she entered the industry in 2005, about 10,000 pet care facilities existed in the United States compared to 32,000 today. Clearly, our pets are no longer backyard beasts; they’re four-footed family. “We’ve moved from ‘doghouse outside’ to ‘bed inside,’” Rustenbeck says. “It’s a cultural shift.” Accordingly, many vacationing pet owners would prefer not to leave their cherished companions home alone – but boarding facilities require vetting, no pun intended. “This industry, for
Notice whether the staff seems to enjoy interacting with the animals.
the most part, is totally unregulated,” Rustenbeck says. “So you shouldn’t
If boarding sounds like your best
assume it’s like a veterinarian’s office or
option, it’s time to research pet
a child care center.”
lodgings. Don’t wait till the week before your departure – start a month or two
And you shouldn’t assume that every
in advance. Get referrals from trusted
pet enjoys boarding, says veterinary
sources, such as friends, your groomer
30
JUNE 2019
Once inside, look for cages with full water bowls that are free of pet waste on the floor, Rao says. Notice whether the staff seems to enjoy interacting with the animals. Make sure the facility requires vaccinations for contagious diseases. Observe whether the animals look anxious or the dogs are constantly barking. Check that dogs and cats are not housed near each other, which can stress out felines. Like what you see? Then gradually introduce your pet to the new digs, says Rustenbeck: “First, go there by yourself. Then bring your pet for a meet-andgreet. Then try an overnight boarding.” If all else fails, there’s always the back seat of the car – and one of the thousands of pet-friendly hotels scattered across America. Brian D. Smith is a freelance journalist from Greenwood, Indiana.
2019 legislative
session recap
Since they were formed in the 1930s, Indiana’s electric cooperatives have maintained an active political presence to ensure policymakers have a good understanding of the unique needs of modern electric cooperatives and the communities they serve. Because cooperatives provide electricity at cost, decisions made in Washington, D.C., and in the Indiana Statehouse can impact how we deliver that essential service, and ultimately your pocketbook. Electric cooperatives accomplished a number of things during the 2019 Indiana legislative session.
Accomplishments HEA 1405 Data center taxation
HEA 1278 energy task force
SEA 460 Broadband Grants
Data centers are often the precursor to
Establishes a 15-seat task force to study
Affordable and reliable high-speed
larger economic development projects
the resiliency and reliability of Indiana’s
internet access means life-altering im-
that can bring quality jobs to our state
electric generation sources.
provements for rural Hoosiers. Because
and can spur additional investment in an area. Indiana did not provide sales
Effective upon passage
consideration for such projects. This establishes tax exemptions on certain IT equipment and energy used with a
the quality of life in the communities they serve, many are finding ways
tax exemption on equipment or energy use, which eliminated our state from
cooperatives have a vested interest in
SEA 240 employee intimidation
to use their existing infrastructure to deliver the essential service. This streamlines the state grant program that will eventually aware $100 million to
tiered investment approached based on
Utility workers often find themselves
rural broadband projects.
a county’s population.
working in extreme conditions. In
Effective upon passage
Effective July 1, 2019
addition to weather-induced conditions, it’s not uncommon for them to be threatened or intimidated while in the
HEA 1001: State Biennial Budget
course of their daily work. This enhanc-
Permits the Indiana Department of
es the criminal penalty for threatening
Transportation to transfer up to $100
a person while working in the course of
million into the rural broadband fund
their occupation.
established in SEA 460 for the purpose
Effective July 1, 2019
of awarding broadband grants for rural areas.
defeat SB 472 Generation Moratorium Indiana’s electric cooperatives support a responsible energy policy that balances Hoosiers’ energy needs with environmental concerns. Cooperatives continue invest in projects that make sense for their consumers while emphasizing energy efficiency and adding renewable energy generation sources. This would have established a moratorium on new electric generation projects with capacities larger than 250 MW.
JUNE 2019
31
Member satisfaction survey
Your electric co-op values your feedback Images Šwww.gettyimages.com/leylaynr, muchomor
Survey calls will begin soon, and your opinion matters!
Feedback from the surveys helps your co-op better serve your needs.
Questions? Please contact your electric co-op.
travel
Explore
Southern Indiana’s Caves PHO TO CO URTESY O F I NDI ANA CAVERNS
BY NICK ROGERS
Indiana Caverns
Squire Boone Caverns
Satisfy your sense of adventure by exploring southern Indiana’s cave
Corydon, Indiana indianacaverns.com
Mauckport, Indiana squireboonecaverns.com
systems! Formed several million years
Indiana’s longest cave system offers
Visitors to these caverns (named for
ago as water dissolved limestone, these
regular tours or the Deep Darkness
Daniel Boone’s brother) can cover the
systems feature underground streams,
tour, a four-hour kayak excursion on a
system in about an hour. Be sure to
bountiful biodiversity and awe-inspir-
stream 200 feet underground! Want an
take in the underground waterfalls, the
ing formations. They’re a preservation
all-new above-ground thrill? The Bat
40-foot tall Rock of Ages, and massive
of Indiana history, a presentation of na-
Chaser, which combines a zipline, roller
stalactites (rock descending from the
ture’s splendor and a perfect road trip!
coaster and hang-gliding. Launching
ceiling) or stalagmites (rock ascend-
Below are details for four sites on the
from a 50-foot tower overlooking the
ing from the floor). The grounds also
Indiana Cave Trail (indianacavetrail.
caverns, it twists and turns across 603
include a grist mill, candy shop, country
com), as well as Wyandotte Caves.
feet at over 20 miles per hour.
store and zipline adventure.
Marengo Cave
Wyandotte Caves
Marengo, Indiana marengocave.com
Corydon, Indiana www.in.gov/dnr/parklake/2976.htm
Bedford, Indiana bluespringcaverns.com
With the largest room of any Indiana
One of America’s oldest cave systems,
cave, this system has been open since
this attraction recently reopened after
You can ride down one of America’s
a pair of schoolchildren discovered
a seven-year shutdown. The site offers
longest known subterranean rivers
it in 1883. The Marengo Cave is filled
visitors the choice of Little (short, flat
here in Indiana, and perhaps spot some
with wonderful mineral formations
and easy) or Big (steep and stair-filled).
sightless Northern Cavefish. These
untouched by man since the cave’s
Big is home to Monument Mountain,
caverns include 21 miles of surveyed
discovery. Visitors can choose the
purportedly the world’s largest un-
passages, and the grounds feature a
Dripstone Trail (1 mile) or the Crystal
derground mountain, and you may
half-mile nature trail and 15 acre-wide
Palace (⅓ mile) — each covering unique
glimpse salamanders, crayfish or crick-
sinkhole.
sections of the system.
ets in either segment.
Remember to always bring layered clothing and sturdy shoes!
Bluespring Caverns
Freelance writer Nick Rogers is a communications manager for Purdue Agricultural Communications. JUNE 2019
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career profile
Motivated when serving members Top 3 responsibilities in a day: • Monitor the overall financial condition of the electric cooperative. • Provide financial information to help with the decisionmaking process for various projects throughout the co-op. • Complete any other duties as assigned by the general manager. What’s a typical day like? I wouldn’t say there really ever is a “typical day.” Each day involves managing various tasks, which makes every day unique. What education and training was needed for this position? I have a bachelor’s degree in accounting and am a certified public accountant. What part of your job do you find the most fulfilling? Serving our consumer-members. Everyone at the electric cooperative has a duty to serve our members the best we can, and that’s what motivates me. What’s the most challenging part of your job? The biggest challenge is effectively managing costs in today’s world. We have experienced significant cost pressures over the last several
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JUNE 2019
Jeremy Miller Manager of Finance and Administration Clark County REMC
years, but we’re always trying to provide the best service to our consumers at the lowest possible cost. Because of this, we’re constantly looking at ways to be as efficient as we can. How would you describe working for an electric cooperative? I really do believe there is a “cooperative difference.” We strive
very hard to treat our members as more than just customers. There’s a connection we try to make that we hope makes us different.
INTERESTED IN AN ELECTRIC CO-OP CAREER? Visit WePowerIndiana.org to learn about available careers or tell us about yourself.
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FEBRUARY 2019