Oklahoma Electric Co-op News February 2020

Page 2

Board of Trustees Percy Moreu, President District2Trustee@okcoop.org

District 2

Rusty Grissom, Vice President

3

Ronnie Tharp, Sec. Treasurer

9

Bob Usry, Asst. Sec. Treas.

8

Mike Argo

1

Ronnie Grover

4

Shirley Idleman

5

John Jensen

6

Danny Watters

7

District3Trustee@okcoop.org District9Trustee@okcoop.org District8Trustee@okcoop.org District1Trustee@okcoop.org District4Trustee@okcoop.org District5Trustee@okcoop.org District6Trustee@okcoop.org District7Trustee@okcoop.org

Oklahoma Electric Cooperative 242 24th Ave NW | PO Box 1208 Norman, OK, 73070 321-2024, FAX 405-217-6900 http://www.okcoop.org

Senior Management Co-op Manager...............................Patrick Grace Chief Financial Officer.........Preston O’Brien, CPA VP of Engineering...........................Thad Peterson VP of Operations...............................Marty Hayes VP of Administration...........................Jonna Buck VP of HR and Legal Services............Tracy Mowdy VP of Metering................................John Spencer VP of Information Technology.....David Goodspeed Oklahoma Electric Co-op News is published monthly by Oklahoma Electric Cooperative, 242 24th Ave. NW, Norman, OK 73069, (USPS865-700). Subscription rates: $6.00 per year for non-members, 50¢ per year for members. Periodical postage paid at Norman, OK and other additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Please send form 3579 to: Oklahoma Electric Co-op News, PO Box 1208, Norman, OK 73070.

Co-op News Editor Brianna Wall

Hidden Account Numbers Worth $150 Each month, OEC will pay $50 to the two co-op members who locate their hidden account numbers inside the Co-op News that month. The hidden account numbers will be placed at random within the text of each issue and not on the mailing label. The amounts will simultaneously increase in $50 increments until one or both account numbers are located by their respective owners or until the maximum of $500 is reached. 1. One of the hidden account numbers must be your own. 2. You must advise OEC by phone, mail or in person at the co-op’s office by the 15th of the month. If you find your account number call the Member Relations department at 217-6708.

FROM the

TOP Patrick Grace, CEO

You might have recently read about our partnership with Fowler Automotive to offer a free in-home charger to OEC members. If not, you can read more about it on page 8. I wanted to take a moment to explain more about why we are excited about the growing EV landscape and what exactly it means for our bottom line. Typically, when a company of our size promotes an idea to its customers or, in our case, member-consumers, it means something is in it for them. There's usually a catch. A 'hook' for the company to lure in unsuspecting customers, all in the name of financial gain. As a cooperative that is owned by the members it serves, the decisions we make must be in your best interest, or they hurt us all. We've had a keen eye on the EV industry for many years now, and it wasn't until recently when we began hearing interest from you, that we decided to dive in and learn how it could benefit our members. We purchased an EV of our own (a Chevy Bolt) so we could help those who are interested decide if it is the right decision for them and their families. We quickly learned that, yes, it most definitely could be. But, it might not be best for everyone. The potential of EVs being purchased by our membership in the coming years compelled us to involve them in the discussion of rate structure — the more electricity being consumed by EV charging could mean additional infrastructure would need to be constructed. To curb that potential increase, we incentivize any activity that can use electricity overnight rather than throughout the day. EV charging is one of those activities. If you have read many of my columns, you know that most of OEC's operational costs are the fixed costs of having the infrastructure in place, not the electricity itself. The pressure we put on the infrastructure to provide electricity at certain times of the day determines whether or not we need to expand it, which costs a lot of money that must be passed to consumers. If your electricity use helps us avoid the need to build more infrastructure or, better yet, reduce the current demand on the system, we can pass those savings on to you. This is precisely why we offer alternative rates. Anytime an opportunity presents itself to shift your electricity use to a less expensive time of day, we encourage you to take advantage to help keep money in your wallet.


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