[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 66 (Monday, May 5, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S2640]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE ANNIVERSARY
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I would like to call the Senate's attention
to the work of the Washington Electric Cooperative, which provides
power and electricity to thousands of Vermonters, including to Marcelle
and me at our home in Middlesex. This year the co-op, as it is better
known to Vermonters, celebrates its 75th anniversary. The co-op formed
in the midst of the rural electrification movement of the 1930s. On
December 2, 1939, my predecessor in the Senate, then-Vermont Governor
George Aiken, flipped the switch that brought electricity to 150 farms.
I doubt that anyone could have imagined back then that the co-op would
grow to serve the 11,000 members it serves today, covering about 2800
square miles in parts of 41 towns in north-central Vermont.
The Washington Electric Co-Op has indeed grown, from the setting of
the first poles on the McKnight Farm in East Montpelier, to operating
1200 miles of distribution lines with eight substations today. I am
proud of the Washington Electric Co-Op, both as a customer and as a
Vermonter.
In honor of this important occasion, I ask that the article ``How the
Washington Electric Co-op Began'' from the 1964 Washington Electric Co-
op annual meeting be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
How the Washington Electric Co-Op Began
(Reminiscence by a Co-op member printed in the 1964 WEC Annual Report)
One July day Harmon Kelly called on Lorie and Elizabeth
Tarshis to suggest their writing to Washington to ask about
rural electricity. Raymond Ebbett and Lyle Young met with
them. They decided to try to form an REA Co-op. Meetings
followed in people's living rooms. On July 14th the first
public meeting, conducted by Harmon Kelly, was held in the
Grange Hall, Maple Corner. It had been hard to get people to
come. Meetings had been held before about getting Green
Mountain Power and had always ended in disappointment. As Mr.
Kelly talked, people became optimistic and began to suggest
sources of water power. We even considered the radical idea
of a diesel engine. Several strangers sat listening in the
dark shadows at the back of the lamp lit hall. One made a
long rambling speech against socialistic schemes ending:
``And you'll have to admit I told you.''
We found out who our visitors were when they went to the
owners of the best farms and promised them Green Mountain
Power within three weeks if they would ``give up this
nonsense.'' Harmon Kelly was told to give it up or lose his
job. Neither bribes nor threats worked. On July 29th the REA
Co-op was formed with Harmon Kelly, Lyle Young, and Elizabeth
Kent Tarshis as incorporators.
My diary for October 7th 1939 reads: ``Autumn color
splendid. Electricity booming. Stakes set to mark where poles
will be.'' On October 12th, the first pole was set on the
McKnight farm in East Montpelier. I remember it, well braced,
standing black against a cold sky with bright leaves whirling
in the wind and a man from Washington saying: ``You folks
don't know what you've started. I wouldn't be surprised if
you had a thousand members some day.'' The first hundred
looked at each other in disbelief. No one imagined there
would be more than three thousand in 1964.
On a May night in 1940, for the first time since the power
was turned on, I drove along the County Road. In houses, dark
last year or with lamps dimly burning, every window was a
blaze of light. There was music everywhere--cows listening to
records, housewives to radios. I stopped, found one friend
happily running a new vacuum cleaner over an already
immaculate rug. I hurried on to my own dark house and turned
on every one of our new 100 watt bulbs. The miracle had come.
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