Ohio cooperative living may2017 washington

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Washington Electric of Cooperative Official publication your electric cooperative Official publication | www.weci.org www.ohioec.org

MAY 2017

Helping hooves Cuddle therapy at Seven Oaks Farm ALSO INSIDE Memorial Day poppies Fun & funny festivals Local cooperative pages


Electricity revolutionized the way we connect with the world. WHAT WILL IT DO NEXT? Electricity. Every day it brings us something new. Something to empower or simplify our lives. Clean. Efficient. Stable. You might call it the essential energy. Now, and for the future. Electricity. A world of possibilities.

To learn more about the cooperative difference, visit ohioec.org.


15 27

30

INSIDE HIGHLIGHT 30 HELPING HOOVES

The miniature horses — and other four-footed friends — of Seven Oaks Farm bring joy and comfort to those who could use some of both.

FEATURES 4 OUT OF THE ELEMENTS The Central Ohio Lineworker Training

IN THIS ISSUE

program’s new facility will allow yearround education.

15 FIESTA TIME! Ohio Cooperative Living’s recipe-contest winners refined their dishes at their families’ dinner tables.

19 LOCAL PAGES News and information from your electric cooperative.

24 PASSION FOR POPPIES Those ubiquitous paper flowers sold

by the American Legion Auxiliary are crafted with care by Ohio veterans.

27 FUN AND FUNNY FESTIVALS What do pythons, lavender, and Bigfoot have in common? All are the focus of celebrations in small-town Ohio.

Mount Gilead (Page 4) Dover (Page 8) Hamilton (Page 10) Sandusky (Page 24) Peninsula (Page 28) Bucyrus (Page 29)

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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UP FRONT

FIRST ALWAYS

SAFETY AND

S

afe, clean, affordable, and reliable — that’s what we strive for in delivering electricity to your home. It’s easy to take the “safe” part of this formula for granted, but electric cooperative employees keep electrical safety at the top of our minds every day. May is National Electrical Safety Month, a time for all of us to reexamine our surroundings and determine those steps that we can take to prevent the deaths, injuries, and economic losses that occur each year because of electrical hazards.

According to the National Fire Protection Association, nearly 50,000 fires in U.S. homes annually are caused by electrical failures or malfunctions. Statistics also tell us that vehicle Cooperative accidents hitting leaders are electrical poles have committed to a seen a sharp increase culture of safety in in recent years. Farm our workplaces. equipment coming into contact with electric lines continues to cause serious injuries and damages every year. Your local electric cooperative can help with safety tips and information — folks on staff are always willing and eager to help make your home or workplace safer. We’ve also put an increased emphasis on our own workplace safety. About a decade ago, we recognized that injuries and lost-time accidents

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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

among electric cooperative employees were occurring at a stubbornly high rate. Cooperative leaders came together to raise our awareness about safety issues and to commit to creating a culture of safety in our workplaces. The results have been dramatic: The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association reports a 30 Pat O’Loughlin percent decline in the number President & CEO, of co-op workplace accidents Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives over the past nine years. The brand-new Central Ohio Lineman Training (COLT) facility, featured on Page 4, not only is a state-of-the-art jobtraining facility, but also puts a focus on safe job performance at the core of each of its programs. We appreciate your help. As members of your electric co-op, if you see any potentially dangerous situations, please report what you see to your local office as soon as possible. We have seen that when we’re aware of our surroundings and vigilant about our safety, we can improve the safety culture in our organizations. The same is true for our families, our teams, and any groups to which we belong. Thanks for the help, and stay safe!


May 2017 • Volume 59, No. 8

OHIO

COOPERATIVE LIVING

Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives 6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757 memberinteract@ohioec.org www.ohioec.org

Patrick O’Loughlin President & CEO Patrick Higgins Director of Communications Jeff McCallister Managing Editor Samantha Rhodes Associate Editor Contributors: Brian Albright, Cheryl Bach, Celeste Baumgartner, Colleen Romick Clark, John Egan, W.H. "Chip" Gross, Patrick Keegan, Toni Leland, Wendy Pramik, Jamie Rhein, Brad Thiessen, Damaine Vonada, Margie Wuebker, and Diane Yoakam. OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Elec­tric Co­op­eratives, Inc. With a paid circulation of 294,359, it is the official com­mun­ication link be­tween the elec­­­­tric co­operatives in Ohio and West Virginia and their mem­bers. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved.

For all advertising inquiries, contact GLM COMMUNICATIONS 212-929-1300 sales@glmcommunications.com

ohioec.org

www.ohioec.org

Check out the mobilefriendly website and digital edition of Ohio Cooperative Living, as well as other timely information from Ohio’s electric cooperatives.

Periodicals postage paid at Colum­bus, OH, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101

COOPERATIVE MEMBERS: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes. Alliance for Audited Media Member

Official publication of your electric cooperative www.ohioec.org

MAY 2017

Helping hooves Cuddle therapy at Seven Oaks Farm ALSO INSIDE Memorial Day poppies Fun & funny festivals Local cooperative pages

Helping hooves Cuddle therapy at Seven Oaks Farm ALSO INSIDE Memorial Day poppies Fun & funny festivals Local cooperative pages

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We asked, you responded:

Thoughts about the magazine’s new look

“Love it!”

— Heidi McDaniel

“Nice magazine cover.”

— Mark A. Dyer

“My husband and I knew we had to express our gratitude and happiness in reading the new magazine that we received in March. Not only is it an attractive magazine, but it was lovely to see the lead-off article focusing on solar and alternative energy options.”

“We think it is a nice change and still has all the good articles and recipes.” — Duane Jeanette Frankart

The fact that a product is advertised in Ohio Cooperative Living should not be taken as an en­dorse­ment. If you find an advertisement mis­leading or a product unsatisfactory, please not­ify us or the Ohio Attorney General’s Of­fi ce, Consumer Protection Sec­tion, 30 E. Broad St., Col­um­bus, OH 43215, or call 1-800-282-0515.

MAY 2017

Official publication of your electric cooperative

— Theresa and Kevin Clark

DID YOU KNOW? The beauty of poppies in the Buckeye state has not gone unnoticed. Below is an excerpt from Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Carl Sandburg’s (1878-1967) poem, “Crossing Ohio when Poppies Bloom in Ashtabula.” Pick me poppies in Ohio, mother. Pick me poppies in the back yard in Ashtabula. May going, poppies coming, summer humming: make it a poppy summer, mother; the leaves sing in the silk, the leaves sing a tawny red gold; seven sunsets saved themselves to be here now.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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BY JOHN EGAN PHOTOS BY DWIGHT MILLER

POWER LINES

OUTSIDE-

INSIDE The Central Ohio Lineworker Training program's new building takes shape in advance of enclosing the structure. The finished building was scheduled to open this month.

Lineworker training comes indoors as COLT's new building to open in Mount Gilead

B

eing a lineworker is not a particularly easy job; besides the strenuous nature of the work that both keeps the lights on and restores power when there’s an outage, the folks on the poles need to have a knowledge base that ranges from basic knot-tying to electrical engineering. Not surprisingly, there’s a lot of training that goes into becoming (and remaining) a lineworker. Also not surprisingly, Ohio’s electric cooperatives are leaders in the field of lineworker training. Those efforts will get a further boost this month, with the opening of the Central Ohio Lineworker Training (COLT) program’s indoor training facility. The new building was constructed at the same Mount Gilead site where co-op line personnel have, for more than a decade, honed their physical and intellectual skills on a 16-acre outdoor training field. The 7,200-square-foot COLT indoor facility took eight months to build, and includes two classrooms and 10 work stations, where trainees get a hands-on learning experience. The indoor facility has 19 wooden utility poles that are 30-

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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

At COLT, lineworkers have the chance to make their mistakes, and learn from them, under controlled conditions.

35 feet high, where apprentice lineworkers can practice their climbing and rescue techniques and learn specifics of the transformers and voltage regulators on those poles. It also includes an area where students can learn underground construction and how to maintain an energized underground system.


It takes years to learn the trade

Lineworker training is a rigorous combination of classroom and field work. Candidates take 12 weeks of training over a four-year period. Between training sessions, apprentice lineworkers work at their electric coop, applying their new skills working alongside experienced journey-level lineworkers. Chris Napier was in the first COLT graduating class in 2007. “The instruction I received at COLT, combined with my on-the-job experience, helped me grow as a lineman and a leader,” says Napier, who now provides safety training for Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives. “I feel the skills I learned and the strong emphasis on performing the work safely allowed me to serve our members in the best way possible.”

Weather in Ohio does not always cooperate when lineworkers need hands-on training in pole safety and electrical connections.

The COLT program has trained and graduated more than 120 lineworkers. Currently, there are 68 students enrolled in the apprentice training program.

Indoor facility expands learning opportunities

Before the facility’s opening, Ohio’s widely varying weather limited hands-on outdoor training to about eight months a year. Now, it can go year-round. “Inclement weather really cut into the effectiveness of training,” says Dwight Miller, director of safety and loss control for Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives. “We only have these guys in training for short periods of time, and Taking it’s important that every weather out hour is maximized.”

of the equation maximizes learning.

Taking weather out of the equation also maximizes learning, according to COLT instructor Kyle Hoffman. “You can work outdoors when it’s 10 degrees, or when it’s raining, but getting students to focus on learning, rather than being in the elements, can be tough,” he says.

Experienced linemen need to 'sharpen their saws' too

Experienced linemen can hone their skills in COLT’s newly established Journeyman Refresher Program. While the basics of line work have remained relatively unchanged through the years, there have been many advancements in how the work is performed. These ever-changing aspects of line work require a continuous learning environment for everyone responsible for keeping the lights on. Most of that learning, along with the technical how-to aspects, involves safety. Safety is not a question of adding another requirement to a job — it’s an integral part of every job, Miller says. “Working safely comes down to knowing what you can do, and what you can’t. As an electrical lineworker, you have very little room for error.” Hoffman, who spent 10 years climbing poles as a lineman for Pioneer Electric Cooperative, takes that even further: “We tell our students, ‘If you’re going to make a mistake, make it here at COLT, where you will have the opportunity to learn from it. Out in the field, you may not get a second chance.’ ” JOHN EGAN is president of Egan Energy Communications (www.EganEnergy.com), a national energy communications firm.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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BY CRAIG LOVELACE

Courtesy Dayton VA Center

LEGACY OF H E L P

Dayton’s VA Medical Center was part of the first U.S. effort to care for veterans The hospital ward at the Dayton VA Medical Center in Dayton opened in 1870, to treat Civil War veterans

Yellow Springs resident Dave Neuhardt was surprised to find that his love of history would lead him to the grave marker of his great-great grandfather, who fought for the Union during the Civil War. Among those in the National Cemetery on the grounds of the Dayton VA Medical Center are the remains of Howard Bates, who served Ohio infantry and cavalry regiments. Why he is buried there is part of the historic narrative attached to the place. The center, which today has 356 beds, claims 150 years of history. In its early years, it demonstrated such a progressive approach toward veterans’ care that it became a model the At its peak, federal government used to build the Dayton VA Center a network of similar homes that evolved into the U.S. Veterans housed 7,000 patients. Administration in 1930.

Today it has 356 beds, always full.

Neuhardt says few are aware of its significance. He learned of it as a member of the American Veterans Heritage Center, a local preservation group. “I knew a little about it, but now I know a lot more,” he says. He tracked his ancestor through a genealogy website, which is how he discovered the VA cemetery marker. Bates spent eight years in the home, where he died in 1901. So how did the Dayton VA come to be? Toward the end of the war, Union leaders knew there would be a flood of disabled Union Army veterans without enough

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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

charities or hospitals to serve them — and indeed, 83 percent of the 204 hospitals open at the war’s end closed within eight months. In March 1865, a month before his assassination, President Lincoln created the National Military Asylum for the Relief of the Totally Disabled Officers and Men of the Volunteer Force, which became the country’s first foray into large-scale care of its veterans. The Central Branch at Dayton was the largest among the first three opened and at its peak accommodated some 7,000 veterans. The first residents — described as “homeless, penniless, and almost friendless” — sought admission to the site overlooking the lush Miami Valley. By this time, the name was shortened to National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, but it became known colloquially as the National Soldiers’ Home. Of the original branches, Dayton was the most progressive because of its focus on rehabilitation and training veterans in a trade — more than 100 were offered — so they could re-acclimate to civilian life. A hospital opened in 1870. Tessa Kalman, visiual information specialist at the Dayton VA, says the center’s relevance has never waned. “The enduring legacy of the National Homes, and now the many VA medical centers across the country, is to remind us how we as a nation still believe that to care for those who have ‘borne the battle’ is as important today as it was in the time of President Lincoln,” she says CRAIG LOVELACE is a freelance writer from Groveport.


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MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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STORY AND PHOTOS BY DAMAINE VONADA

OHIO ICON

BROAD RUN

Location: Eastern Amish Country between Sugarcreek and Dover. Provenance: Started in 1933, Broad Run Cheesehouse was a dairy farmers’ cooperative until 1977, when cheesemaker John “Hans” Schindler and his wife, Nancy, purchased the factory. The Schindlers kept the wellestablished Broad Run name, but gradually enlarged and improved their cheesehouse. In the 1980s, Nancy debuted an in-house shop featuring curtains and lace, and in 2003, their son, Chad, who had learned to craft cheese from his father, also became a winemaker when the family launched a new venture, Swiss Heritage Winery. Although Hans has passed away, Chad and Nancy continue to offer award-winning cheeses, a wide variety of wines, and eclectic gift and home décor items in one small, but inviting, chalet-style store. “Being a small operation is part of our charm,” Chad Schindler says. “People like the family atmosphere here.” Significance: With both a cheese factory and winery on site, the Schindlers have created a popular retail and tasting-room destination that

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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

Cheesehouse and Swiss Heritage Winery DOVER

uniquely embraces the classic pairing of wine and cheese. “I don’t know of any other place in the country that makes its own wine and its own cheese,” Schindler says. Currently: Specializing in artisan cheeses that range from varieties of Swiss and cheddar to Gruyère and Limburger, Broad Run produces about a million pounds of cheese every year. The milk it uses comes mostly from local Amish farms, and arrives at the factory in 10-gallon cans that have been cooled in spring water. Swiss Heritage Winery uses grape and fruit juices from Ohio, New York, and Canada to make some 10,000 gallons of wine per year. Many of the wines have names inspired by family members, whose photos are featured on the bottles. Coal Miner’s Daughter, for example, is a watermelon wine adorned with a girlhood photo of Nancy. It’s a little-known fact that: Mild Swiss is Broad Run’s best-selling cheese, while Victorian Lace, a Niagara and Catawba blend, is a customer favorite. Broad Run Cheesehouse and Swiss Heritage Winery, 6011 Old Rt. 39 NW, Dover, OH 44622. Open Mon.– Sat., 9 a.m.–6 p.m. For additional information, call 330-343-4108 or visit www.broadruncheese.com.


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MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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STORY AND PHOTO BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSS

WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE

THE HOUSE THAT

JACK

BUILT

Shooters young and old enjoy some time on the range at Cardinal Shooting center near Marengo.

Formerly a campground, the Cardinal Shooting Center, near Marengo, has built a national reputation among enthusiasts

O

ver the past decade, it has steadily grown to become the largest privately owned recreational shooting facility in the country. The numbers alone are impressive: Fifty-two trapshooting fields sit side by side, stretching a full mile, alongside 14 skeet fields, 14 pistol and rifle ranges, two sporting clays ranges, and an archery range. Owned by Jack Fishburn and his family, Cardinal Shooting Center — a member of Consolidated Electric Cooperative — is located on some 500 acres near Marengo. As large and successful as the facility has become, it almost didn’t happen. “My wife, Karen, and I first purchased a run-down campground along Interstate 71, thinking we would make it into a nice, family-friendly campground,” Fishburn says. “But no sooner had we started that undertaking, than a few members from the Ohio State Trapshooting Association (OSTA) approached me about putting in trapshooting fields. I told them I wasn’t interested.” But the OSTA folks were persistent, inviting Jack to attend a day at the annual Grand American, the largest competitive trapshoot in the country. “What I saw there really impressed me,” Fishburn says. “There were thousands of shooters, some of them carrying shotguns worth $20,000 or

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more. These men and women would come off the shooting line, place their expensive guns in a rack, and just walk off and leave them while they went to eat lunch. They knew their guns would not be disturbed. That was the kind of clientele I wanted to attract.” So in 2005, Fishburn went to work installing trapshooting fields and other amenities shooters might need. It was a hectic year, but they finished just in time for the 2006 summer shooting season. Last summer, Cardinal Shooting Center hosted three of the six largest trapshooting events in the country, as well as the Scholastic Clay Target Program (SCTP) and Scholastic Action Shooting Program (SASP) National Championships — with 3,000 young shooters, they’re the largest youth shooting competitions in America. At age 83, Fishburn is planning an additional pistol range, a rifle range, plus three more skeet fields, and an additional sporting clays course. He’s also planning a second lodge. CHIP GROSS is Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor. He can be reached at whchipgross@gmail.com or through www.chipgross.com.


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IN THE GARDEN

STORY AND PHOTOS BY TONI LELAND

SOMETHING

DIFFERENT

These not-so-familiar perennials will spice up your garden

G

ardening is definitely habit-forming! Not only do avid gardeners itch to get outside at the first sign of sun and warmer temperatures, we also tend to stay with tried-and-true perennials. After all, if our plants grow well and don’t require blood, sweat, and tears to maintain, why change anything?

Shady character

Yellow Archangel ‘Silver Frost’ — A beautiful ground cover for a shady spot, archangel has heart-shaped green leaves, veined with silver, that brighten a dull shade garden. Spring brings a profusion of bright-yellow blooms that rise several inches above the foliage, and, even after the bloom is finished, bring illumination to the shade.

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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

But then again, why not? It’s fun to be adventurous — picture something elegant and unusual among the familiar purple coneflowers, black-eyed Susans, daylilies, and hostas. With a little planning, gardeners can spice up their shade gardens with perennials that offer beautiful foliage year-round, with the out-of-the-ordinary texture and blooms as a beautiful bonus.


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4

7

2

5

8

3

6

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Sunny spots Genista ‘Bangle’ — This cheerful small mound of yellow flowers is a dwarf broom that blooms in May and June, reaching a height of just 24 inches. Not only pretty, this one also is low maintenance — it’s deer-resistant, grows in average soil, and tolerates dry conditions.

1

2 Sea Holly — Gorgeous blue

cone-shaped blooms rise above jagged green leaves and really pop when planted among warmer colors. The flowers begin as gray-white, then turn sapphire by mid-to-late summer. This spectacular perennial grows from 18 to 36 inches tall, prefers sandy soil and will tolerate dry conditions. Once established, it doesn’t need much upkeep. ‘Color Guard’ — This 3 Yucca gorgeous variegated evergreen

shrub is a good choice for a focal point. Easy to grow, tolerant of poor soil and drought, and resistant to deer, rabbits, and air pollution, this one could be the answer to that “problem spot.” Showy white flowers appear on 5-foot stalks in June and July, but the yellow and gold leaves entertain year-round.

Sunny or partial sun

Shade or partial shade

4 Spurge ‘Blackbird’ — This

nonstop performer flaunts gorgeous dark green and purple foliage that contrasts with lime-green flowers that emerge in early-to-late spring. Spurge grows to about 18 inches, is resistant to most diseases and pests, is unappetizing to deer and rabbits, tolerates drought, and is easy to maintain.

5 Dwarf Papyrus Sedge — Del-

icate and texturally interesting, this small plant is perfect for water gardens and ponds, as well as poorly draining areas of a garden. Fast-growing to 2 to 4 feet in height, it tolerates full sun to partial shade. Gooseneck Loosestrife — A

6 garden spot filled with these

adorable white “goose head” flowers, all pointing in the same direction, is always a conversation starter. Easy to grow and tolerant of most conditions, this variety of loosestrife grows fast and spreads quickly — something to consider when starting in your garden.

Rose — When you’ve just 7 Lenten about had it with winter, this

gorgeous performer comes on strong. Named Lenten Rose because of the mid-February bloom time, the delicate flowers will last until May. After that, the leathery dark-green leaves remain crisp and beautiful, right through summer. The plant tends to burn in hot, direct sun, though planting in dense shade inhibits its bloom. It’s deer-, pest-, and disease-resistant. Purchase when the plant is in bloom, to get the color you want.

8 Leopard Plant ‘Britt Marie

Crawford’ — Interesting large purple-black leaves showcase narrow spikes of yellow-to-orange flowers, making this perennial a must-have for the partial-shade garden. The attractive basal foliage mound grows to 24 inches tall, and then the June/July flower stems rise 36 to 40 inches. A good choice for beside shaded ponds, or any location where heavy water requirements can be met.

Shady character

Coral Bells ‘Black Currant’ — Spectacular dark-purple leaves with silver veining make this Coral Bells a smash hit among lighter-colored foliage. Growing to a clump about 16 inches tall, this beauty needs mostly shade, but will tolerate morning sun.

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TONI LELAND is a master gardener from Connecticut.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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! d r a h y a l p , d r a h k r o W s r e b m e m u a e r u B m r a F o i Oh ! r e m m u s s i h t will do both t JUNE ~ CedrdaayranPdoSuinnday)

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GOOD EATS

IT’S A

FIESTA! Readers nearly overwhelmed our judges with entries to our Cinco de Mayo recipe contest, but one rich and zesty — yet not overpowering — dish stood out from the rest.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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STORY BY MARGIE WUEBKER PHOTO BY JEFFRY KONCZAL

GOOD EATS

Our contest winner, Susan Muskopf of Wooster, honed her recipe to suit her family’s tastes

G

et ready to celebrate the Mexican holiday Cinco de Mayo with winning entrees from Ohio Cooperative Living’s Fiesta! recipe contest.

Susan Muskopf of Wooster, a member of Holmes-Wayne Cooperative, grabbed top honor, beating more than 200 other recipes with her Pork Chile Verde Stew. Runners-up were Katie Dippold of Maria Stein, a Midwest Rural Electric member, with Chimichangas, and Amy Zahner of Fresno, a Frontier Rural Electric member, with Quesadilla Casserole. “The contest announcement caught my eye, because the theme was Mexican food,” Muskopf says. “My husband and I go on mission trips to Mexico with our church. The stew is similar to the homecooking we enjoy while working there.” The retired medical laboratory technologist remembers eating a hearty stew years ago while vacationing in Arizona. She finally located a viable recipe in 2006, but set out to make some changes, adding oregano, cumin, black pepper, and potatoes. Contest judges enjoyed the hearty flavor, and noted the blend of spices is not overpowering. Muskopf serves the stew with rice and warmed tortillas.

She says she’ll use her prize — a KitchenAid stand mixer — to prepare special treats for her husband, John, their four children, and five grandchildren. 16

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

WINNING RECIPE Pork Chili Verde Stew 1 3-pound boneless pork sirloin roast, cut into 1-inch cubes 3 Tbsp. oil for sautéing plus more as needed 4 medium carrots, sliced 1 medium onion, thinly sliced ½ cup minced fresh cilantro or 2 tsp. dried cilantro 4 garlic cloves, minced 4 large potatoes, peeled and cut into cubes

2 4-oz. cans diced green chilies 1 28-oz. can green enchilada sauce 1 tsp. oregano ½ tsp. cumin 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. black pepper 1 Tbsp. cornstarch ¼ cup cold water Hot cooked rice for 8 Flour tortillas, warmed

Add oil to a large skillet and sauté pork in batches until browned. Add carrots, onion, cilantro, and garlic to last batch, sautéing until pork is browned. Add more oil as needed. Transfer to a 5-quart slow cooker. Add potatoes, green chilies, enchilada sauce and seasonings. Mix well. Cover and cook on low for 6 hours or until pork is tender. In a small bowl, combine cornstarch and cold water until smooth. Stir into pork mixture. Cover and cook on high for 30 minutes or until thickened. Serve warm with rice and tortillas. Serves 8.


RUNNER-UP Amy Zahner, an office manager for a veterinary practice, found the casserole recipe on the back of a McCormick’s spice package. She adjusted the amount of spices to satisfy the tastes of her husband and their two children. The result is a Mexican-style lasagna that calls for tortillas, instead of noodles.

Cheryl Bach

“I was attracted because all the ingredients were things I had in my pantry,” she says. “I didn’t have to go out and buy a lot of things.”

Quesadilla Casserole 11/2 pounds lean hamburger ½ cup chopped onion 1 15-oz. can tomato sauce 1 15-oz. can black beans, drained and rinsed 1 (8- to 10-oz.) can whole kernel corn (or Mexican corn blend) 1 10-oz. can diced tomatoes with green chilies 2 tsp. chili powder

1 tsp. ground cumin 1 tsp. minced garlic ¼ to ½ tsp. crushed red pepper (optional) 6 to 8 flour tortillas 2 cups shredded Cheddar or shredded Mexican-blend cheese Salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a 9 x 13-inch baking dish with nonstick cooking spray. Brown hamburger and

onion in large skillet. Drain and season with salt and pepper to taste. Add tomato sauce, beans, corn, and diced tomatoes; mix well. Stir in all spices except red pepper flakes. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and simmer for 5 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add red pepper flakes, if desired. Spread 1 cup of hamburger mixture on bottom of baking dish. Top with 3 to 4 tortillas, overlapping lengthwise to get even coverage. Then layer half of remaining meat mixture followed by half the cheese. Repeat with remaining tortillas, hamburger mixture and cheese. Bake uncovered 20 minutes or until casserole is heated through and cheese is melted and bubbly. Remove from oven and let stand 10 minutes before serving. Serves 8.

RUNNER-UP Katie Dippold found a basic Chimichanga recipe some years ago and made some revisions, adding beans and spices to the list of ingredients. Fillings feature ground beef or chicken. The tasty pockets are baked in a 475-degree oven and then served on a bed of lettuce along with sour cream and taco sauce.

Chimichangas

½ tsp. salt 1 pound lean ground beef or 1 28-oz. can chicken, drained 1 clove garlic, crushed ½ tsp. ground cumin ½ tsp. oregano ¼ cup canned green chilies, chopped ¼ cup taco sauce or salsa 1 cup refried or black beans

¼ cup sour cream Sliced green olives (optional) 2 Tbsp. apple cider vinegar ½ cup butter, melted 6 to 8 7-inch flour tortillas 4 oz. shredded Cheddar cheese ½ cup sour cream ½ cup taco sauce 11/2 cups shredded lettuce

For beef filling: Sprinkle salt in skillet. Over medium heat, add meat, garlic, and seasonings. Cook beef, crumbling with a fork until it loses pink color. Stir in chilies, taco sauce or salsa, beans, sour cream, olives if desired and vinegar. Cook until flavors combine, about 2 minutes. Remove from heat and cool.

Cheryl Bach

The retired nurse and her husband, Bob, have four children and 10 grandchildren. The family often requests the special treat at holiday meals.

For chicken filling: Shred chicken with a fork. In microwave, heat chicken with chilies, taco sauce or salsa, beans, sour cream, olives and vinegar. Cook until flavors combine, about 2 minutes. Remove from microwave and cool. To assemble Chimichangas: In an 8-inch skillet, melt butter over medium-low heat. Dip both sides of tortillas in butter; drain off excess. Place 1/3 cup of filling in center of each tortilla; fold envelope style. Place seam side down in a 9 x 14-inch baking dish (may be prepared ahead and refrigerated 24 hours.) Heat oven to 475 degrees and bake chimichangas until crispy, about 15 minutes. Sprinkle with Cheddar cheese and return to oven until cheese melts. Serve on a bed of lettuce and top with sour cream and taco sauce. Leftovers can be frozen and warmed in microwave oven. Serves 4.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

17


BY PAT KEEGAN AND BRAD THIESSEN

THE EFFICIENCY EXPERT

WINDOWS TO THE WORLD

An energy auditor uses an infrared camera to look for areas around the window that are leaky or poorly insulated.

Energy efficiency may not be the most important factor when deciding on replacement windows

H

omeowners looking to replace older, drafty windows to improve their home's energy efficiency should examine all their options. New windows are often the most costly and least cost-effective energy efficiency investment you can make. There are, of course, sound reasons besides energy efficiency to invest in new windows, such as comfort, resale value, aesthetics, and even need. An energy

audit by a qualified professional is the best way to compare options.

Anyone considering window replacement should first think about end goals. If reducing energy costs is important, the investment in new windows ought to be weighed against other energy efficiency opportunities. An energy audit by a qualified professional is the best way to compare options.

Windows may not be the problem

The auditor can perform a diagnostic test to determine if old windows actually leak air. These tests often show that windows, even old ones, are not as leaky as they might seem, and that more significant air leakage happens elsewhere in the home. Storm windows or drapes can reduce heat loss (or gain) through the windows. But if new windows are necessary, homeowners have a number of choices. Double-pane windows usually meet 18

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

code, but the additional cost for triple-pane windows could be worth the investment in an area with extreme temperatures. Argon or Krypton gas between the panes also adds efficiency.

Take a look at low-E

Low-emissivity coating also can be added to the glass. “Low-e” coating reflects heat back into the interior space, which reduces heating bills and increases comfort. The efficiency of the overall window is measured by its U-factor, which assesses the heat loss of the entire window. Lower U-factors are more efficient. The window framing material, the number of layers of glass, and the special coatings on the glass all contribute to the overall U-factor. Another simple measure is to look for is the ENERGY STAR label. Only windows that are substantially more efficient than standard code requires receive that label.

Pay attention to the installation

Working with a professional is important. A poor installation can result in long-term damage, such as moisture problems that can create mold, mildew, and wall rot, which can prevent the window from operating properly or cause paint to peel. Bids for new windows vary a great deal, so it’s worth requesting more than one and comparing qualifications, as well as price, for something that will change the look and comfort of your home for many years. PAT KEEGAN and BRAD THIESSEN write for Collaborative Efficiency, an energy communications company.


WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

ANNUAL MEETING

Official Notice

THE

77TH

ANNUAL MEETING OF MEMBERS

Of Washington Electric Cooperative, Inc.

Thursday, May 18, 2017 WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE 440 HIGHLAND RIDGE ROAD, MARIETTA Order of Business: 5 p.m. Registration begins FREE KFC DINNER 5 - 6 p.m. Entertainment 6 p.m. Registration Ends 6 p.m. Official welcome

6:05 p.m. Business Session – Meeting called to Order

A. Reading of unapproved minutes of previous meeting and action thereon B. Reading of notice of meeting and proof of publication and mailing thereof

6:10 p.m. Nominations report & election information

6:15 p.m. Buckeye Power update 6:30 p.m. Management reports 6:45 p.m. Youth report

C. Unfinished business D. New business

Door prize drawings Grand prize: $250 electric bill credit Every member gets a $10 bill credit Free KFC dinner Co-op gift for each family

E. Door prize drawings E. Election results F. Adjournment

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WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

BILL PAY

Our bill appearance is changing!

B

eginning in July, Washington Electric Cooperative’s monthly bill will have a new look! We’ve developed a new style we think is more attractive and easier for you to read. Rest assured, only the appearance of the bill is changing. Your rates, as well as the information that appears on the bill, will remain the same — it will just look different on paper. A sample mockup bill is included at right. Due to credit card security compliance issues, there will no longer be a place for members to submit their credit or debit card information on the remittance portion of the bill. In other words, beginning in July, you may not mail us your credit or debit card information as payment for your bill. All payments using a debit or credit card must be made using our free, secure online or pay-by-phone systems. This change will bring Washington Electric Cooperative into compliance with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard. 1291985104. So remember... in July, your electric bill will have a fresh appearance. We hope you like it!

CO-OP NEWS

Ullman earns BL certification Congratulations to Larry Ullman, who recently received the Board Leadership certification through the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. The Board Leadership program consists of a series of courses focusing on specific industry and governance issues such as risk management, power supply, parliamentary procedure, technology, and policy development. Ullman has served on the Washington Electric Cooperative Board of Trustees since 2008. He’s pictured here at left, receiving the certificate from WEC General Manager/CEO Jack Bragg. 20

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

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MESSAGE FROM THE GENERAL MANAGER

P LU G

INTO

M

ay is Electrical Safety Month, and Washington Electric Cooperative will share safety tips and reminders throughout the month to help raise awareness about the dangers of electricity. You can find these tips on our website (www.weci.org), as well as our Facebook and Twitter pages.

Our responsibility to you

We all depend on electricity to power our lives, but accidents can happen when electricity is improperly used. Washington Electric’s concern for safety extends beyond our employees. We care deeply about the safety of our members, and this month, we encourage you to plug into safety. According to the Electrical Safety Foundation International, thousands of people in the U.S. are critically injured and electrocuted as a result of electrical fires, accidents, and electrocution in their own homes. To promote safety education in our local communities, we participate with the Mid-Ohio Valley Safety Council, and we offer free safety presentations to schools and local organizations. We frequently provide electrical safety content in Ohio Cooperative Living magazine, and we encourage the public to contact us if they see a downed power line or any other type of dangerous electrical situation. We strive to provide our communities with safe, reliable, and affordable electricity and to serve as your trusted

Washington0517.indd 3

SAFETY energy advisor, now and well into the future.

Our responsibility to employees

It is no accident that safety is a top priority at Washington Electric. We are committed to a culture of safety that is integral to Jack Bragg Jr. our daily operations. In fact, General Manager/CEO Washington Electric is part of the Rural Electric Safety Achievement Program (RESAP) that follows specific guidelines and protocols for electrical safety that are considered leading practices. Our lineworkers are required to wear personal protective equipment at all times when on the job. This includes special fireresistant clothing that will self-extinguish, limiting potential injuries from burns and sparks. Insulated and rubber gloves are worn in tandem to protect from electrical shock. Our safety team regularly discusses important safety issues pertaining to work within the building as well as out in the field. We believe it is our duty and responsibility to raise awareness about the importance of electrical safety. Please visit www.weci.org/content/safety for tips about how to keep you and your loved ones safe. MAY 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

MEMORIAL

WEC mourns loss of David Miller

T

he Washington Electric family is saddened by the unexpected passing of David Miller on April 9.

Miller, 67, was first elected to the co-op’s board of directors in 1998 and became chairman in 2010. His leadership helped WEC achieve success in a multitude of Miller areas, including the implementation of an automated meter reading system, construction of a new facility, payment system upgrades, an enhanced right-ofway maintenance and pole testing program, and the hiring of three general managers. “To say that our cooperative has suffered a great loss would be an understatement,” said General Manager Jack Bragg. “Washington Electric is what it is today in large part because of his participation on the board and the guidance he provided as chairman over the past seven years. He was

Capital credits

Washington Electric refunded capital credits totaling $82,854.54 to the estates of 54 members through March 2017. If you know of a deceased member, please have the executor of the estate call our office.

Account number credit

If you find your account number in the local (center four) pages of this magazine, call the co-op office by the 16th of the month in which it is published; you will receive at least

well-respected among his peers on both a local and state level, and he leaves behind quite a legacy of community commitment. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family during this difficult time.” Miller also served on the board of directors for Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. He earned the Credentialed Cooperative Director and Board Leadership certificates, programs offered by the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association that educates cooperative board members on a variety of industry-related topics. “David was committed to improving service,” said Ken Schilling, retired Washington Electric general manager. “As chairman, he was always looking for ways to improve the rural life and the business environment for members. He was the type of board member every general manager dreams of working with, and he was like an older brother I could always lean on when I needed sound, quality advice. Our co-op, our community, our state, and all of us who love agriculture and rural life will forever miss him.” $10 in credit on your electric bill. In March, Leah Way of Macksburg did not locate her account number.

Co-op Connections discount card ®

Washington Electric members saved $557.57 in February on prescriptions with the Co-op Connections® card. Members have saved a total of $86,544.93 since the program launched in June 2011. Be sure to check out www.connections.coop and Coupons.com for discounts!

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

David Miller, CCD, BL CONTACT

740-373-2141 | 877-549-9324 www.weci.org REPORT OUTAGES AFTER HOURS

877-544-0279 OFFICE

440 Highland Ridge Road P.O. Box 800 Marietta, OH 45750 OFFICE HOURS

Mon. - Fri. 7:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. 20B OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

Washington0517.indd 4

Chairman 740-732-5402

Paul Fleeman, CCD, BL First Vice Chairman 740-934-2306

Betty Martin, CCD Secretary-Treasurer 740-473-1539

Eldon Miller, CCD

Assistant Secretary-Treasurer 740-373-8594

William Bowersock, CCD, BL 740-373-5861

Gale DePuy, CCD, BL 740-473-1245

Larry Ullman, CCD, BL

Jack Bragg Jr.

General Manager/CEO jbragg@weci.org

BILL PAY

Easy 2 Pay online system www.weci.org

HAVE A STORY SUGGESTION?

E-mail your ideas to: jgreene@weci.org.

Facebook.com/WashingtonElectricCoop

Twitter.com/washelectcoop

740-934-2561

CCD — Certified Cooperative Director BL — Board Leadership

4/19/17 5:08 PM


Brighter Together

ate ty amily

ural

s,

ard

r. ove ers. ger her I vice. o

-

-

2016

ANNUAL REPORT

?

oop

Washington0517.indd 5

MAY 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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ANNUAL REPORT

YOUR DAVID MILLER, CCD, BL, Chairman *See memorial on Page 20B

ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE

PAUL FLEEMAN, CCD, BL, First Vice Chairman

BETTY MARTIN, CCD, Secretary/Treasurer

ELDON MILLER, CCD, Asst. Secretary/Treasurer

Certification guide: • CCD: Credentialed Cooperative Director • BL: Board Leadership

WILLIAM BOWERSOCK, CCD, BL

Washington Electric is a Touchstone Energy® Cooperative serving portions of six counties in southeastern Ohio. Locally owned and operated, the cooperative is governed by a democratically elected seven-member board of directors.

GALE DEPUY, CCD, BL

Service territory map Washington Electric Cooperative Inc. £ ¤

¬ « ¬ « ¬ « Guernsey County

22

660

Pleasant Grove

¬ «

313

146

285

¬ « ¬ « 284

60

285

379

215

60

¬ «

339

376

¬ «

266

¬ « 60

¬ « 329

Athens County

555

¬ « 550

5

10 Miles

7

Interstate

¬ « 26

US Highway

¬ « 676

¬ « 60

Matamoras

Washington County

¬ « 7

¬ «

Devola

676

¬ «

2.5

¬ «

260

77

¬ « Amesville

¬ «

¬ «

§ ¦ ¨

Chesterhill

339

0

800

565

60

555

¬ «

536

¬ «

537

Lower Salem

530

¬ « Lowell

« ¬ « ¬ 792

¬ «

Beverly

¬ «

¬ «

Antioch

145

60

377

260

255

Graysville

¬ «

¬ « Stockport

¬ «

¬ «

Macksburg

¬ «

¬ «

¬ «

26

Dexter City 821 83

78

¬ «

260

564

Morgan County

¬ « ¬ «

78

Monroe County

¬ «

¬ «

78

¬ «

¬ «

Woodsfield

145

724

Stafford

¬ « ¬ «

Clarington

Lewisville

¬ «

¬ «

669

McConnelsville

26

78

78

Malta

556

¬ «

¬ «

147

78

¬ «

Summerfield

¬ « « ¬ ¬ « ¬ « Noble County

Beallsville

Miltonsburg

146

285

9

¬ « Wilson Jerusalem

¬ «

¬ «

Caldwell

¬ «

148

800

513

¬ «

¬ «

¬ « 37

¬ «

¬ «

145

Sarahsville

83

Batesville

¬ «

§ ¦ ¨

¬ « ¬ «

513

147

566

¬ «

340

Belmont County

¬ « ¬ «

672

Belle Valley

¬ «

761

313

574

146

¬ «

340

¬ «

¬ « ¬ « ¬ «

Senecaville

821

77

Muskingum County

Mission Statement

¬ «

¬ « Pleasant City

« ¬ « ¬

Cumberland 146

Philo

313

83

¬ « ¬ «

146

376

Washington Electric Cooperative, Inc., is a local, consumer-owned, nonprofit cooperative whose mission is to provide reliable electricity and other services to consumers while assuring the financial integrity of the cooperative and maintaining a strong community presence.

LARRY ULLMAN, CCD

26

State Highway Cities Counties Washington

Marietta

¬ «

¬ «

807

7

¬ « 7

Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 2007

20D OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

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MESSAGE FROM THE GENERAL MANAGER

COOPERATION, COHESION, AND

SERVICE

A

s Washington Electric reflects on 2016 and looks toward the future, we continue to realize what we have known since our inception — we shine brightest when we work together. This is the very foundation for the cooperative business model that has served our community so well for so long. It’s a fundamental truth that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, and that is reflected as we strive daily to meet the cooperative’s mission. That mission is to provide reliable electricity and other services to our consumers while assuring the financial integrity of the cooperative and maintaining a strong community presence. Delivering on that mission depends on our dedicated employees representing the interests of our membership and support from the membership in the form of investment, input, and participation.

n

Following the cooperative business model and the Seven Cooperative Principles will ensure that Washington Electric meets its basic mission. Because we are a cooperative, we are a consumerowned, nonprofit business designed to represent the interest of the member-owners to act as good stewards of the assets entrusted to us. As a local entity, the services are provided by local people who have a vested interest in the members and communities we serve. We work for our neighbors,

not absentee owners or unknown shareholders in far-off places, so the success of the cooperative and its communities are of the highest importance. Achieving this endeavor happens only through our work together as employees and members. Jack Bragg Jr. As we move forward to meet General Manager/CEO the demands of the future, this bond will grow stronger. The overriding concern for community will allow us to continue focusing on the sustainable development of those communities through member support of our policies. Continued investment in technology, right-of-way maintenance, safety, and system upgrades will allow us to meet the future needs of our members. We will continue to participate and invest in the communities we serve while also working daily to increase member satisfaction through reliable and economical electric service.

We are excited about the future and continuing to carry out a mission that has served us well for 77 years. Washington Electric will continue to explore new technologies, practices, and methods to provide electric energy at a fair cost. The future is bright, and if we work together, it can be even brighter.

es

2007

Washington0517.indd 7

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WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC. BALANCE SHEETS December 31, 2016 and 2015

ASSETS

2016

2015

UTILITY PLANT

47,751,715

47,106,034

Electric plant in service Construction work in progress

1,067,253

238,037

48,818,968

47,344,071

(12,577,807)

(11,465,324)

36,241,161

35,878,747

7,720,644

7,733,110

616,378

674,429

8,337,022

8,407,539

1,578,125

1,417,544

3,079,704

2,921,311

Materials and supplies

358,213

362,480

Prepayments

106,501

103,466

5,122,543

4,804,801

$49,700,726

$49,091,087

21,809,510

21,281,105

480,454

448,700

5,357

5,357

22,295,321

21,735,162

23,360,504

22,572,472

Accrued sick leave

295,529

353,702

Accrued post-retirement benefits

277,600

292,600

23,933,633

23,218,774

0

500,000

991,000

991,000

1,038,688

1,215,758

232,478

220,787

1,209,606

1,209,606

3,471,772

4,137,151

$49,700,726

$49,091,087

Less: Accumulated provision for depreciation and amortization NET UTILITY PLANT

INVESTMENTS AND OTHER ASSETS Investments in associated organizations Deferred charges TOTAL INVESTMENTS AND OTHER ASSETS

CURRENT ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful accounts of $294,730 ($279,873 in 2015)

TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS TOTAL ASSETS

LIABILITIES AND EQUITIES EQUITIES Patronage capital Accumulated other comprehensive income Other equities TOTAL EQUITIES

LONG-TERM LIABILITIES Mortgage notes payable

TOTAL LONG-TERM LIABILITIES

CURRENT LIABILITIES Line of Credit Current maturities of long-term debt Accounts payable Consumer deposits Accrued liabilities TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITIES 20F OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

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WASHINGTON ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC. BALANCE SHEETS December 31, 2016 and 2015

2016

OPERATING REVENUES

2015

$17,504,822

$16,526,592

8,872,373

8,850,064

Distribution expense - operations

1,224,812

1,135,681

OPERATING EXPENSES Cost of power Distribution expense - maintenance

2,184,718

2,148,008

Consumer accounts

508,440

549,705

Administrative and general

1,224,017

1,280,658

Depreciation and amortization

1,393,824

1,359,273

51 514,087

496,6 496,689

TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES

15,922,271

15,820,078

OPERATING MARGINS BEFORE FIXED CHARGES

1,582,551

706,517

Interest on long-term debt

1,118,634

1,133,055

OPERATING MARGINS AFTER FIXED CHARGES

463,917

(426,538)

Capital credits

367,617

836,694

OPERATING MARGINS

831,534

410,156

130,722

129,571

13,387

23,342

144,109

152,913

$975,643

$563,069

Taxes

NON-OPERATING MARGINS Interest income Other income

TOTAL NON-OPERATING MARGINS NET MARGINS FOR PERIOD

HOW YOUR POWER DOLLAR WAS SPENT 2016 HOW YOUR POWER DOLLAR WAS SPENT IN 2016

Cost of Purchased Power…….………52.07% Cost of purchased power................... 52.07% Line Operation & Maintenace……..20.01% Line operation & maintenance.......... 20.01% Kilowatt Sales Tax …………….…………..3.02% Kilowatt sales tax.................................... 3.02% Consumer Accounting & Collecting.2.30% Consumer accounting & collecting..... 2.30% Depreciation............................................. 8.18% Depreciation………………………………….8.18% Administrative & general....................... 7.18% Administrative & General……………..7.18% Customer service expense.................... 0.69% Customer Service Expense…….……..0.69% Interest expense long term................... 6.56%

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2016:

A YEAR IN REVIEW

Seventy-seven years ago, the folks in our community shared at least one selfinterest: They wanted electricity.

I

n fact, many Americans who lived in rural parts of the country needed electricity, which is why electric cooperatives were formed. Individuals acted in their own self-interest, but that self-interest led to the community and economic development of the rural areas in which they lived. Today, rural electric co-ops like ours serve over 42 million people in 47 states. Electric cooperatives have provided a valuable service to this nation for a lifetime. But it’s you, our members, who make us special. Your participation, input, and investment throughout the years has made us into the organization we are today, and has proven time and again what we steadfastly believe here at Washington Electric — we shine brightest when we work together. Our commitment to improving the lives of our members is as strong today as it was in 1940, when a group of farmers set out to light the rural landscape of southeastern Ohio. We remain focused on providing you with safe, reliable, and affordable electricity. Here’s a look back at your cooperative’s achievements in 2016.

System upgrades

In 2016, we began construction on a tie line connecting our South Olive and Marietta substations. This fall, we plan to begin work on a tie line between the Rinard Mills substation and Fly Metering Point. These tie lines provide backfeed capability for improved reliability. Last year also brought success in the area of transmission

reliability. We continued collaboration with transmission provider American Electric Power (AEP) on their ongoing Marietta Area Transmission project. In 2014, AEP Ohio, AEP Transmission, Buckeye Power, and Washington Electric Cooperative reached an agreement to upgrade the electric system serving customers in Marietta and parts of Washington, Monroe, and Noble counties. Bringing additional power sources into the region will improve electric service reliability. The existing 23-kV transmission grid will be rebuilt and upgraded to 138-kV. This project also involves adding new 138-kV transmission lines and improvements to several distribution substations serving AEP Ohio and Washington Electric consumers. AEP has also recently performed maintenance on their transmission lines that feed our substations, which led to a significant decrease in power supply outages. Overall, our power outage totals in 2016 fell by 22 percent compared to 2015, and led to a 99.96 percent reliability rate. We are proud of that figure.

Right-of-way maintenance

Given that a large portion of our service territory is forested, right-of-way maintenance is a priority. Providing safe and reliable electric service requires year-round planning to keep power lines clear of trees, brush, and other debris. In 2016, we trimmed vegetation on around 100 miles of line and spray treated just over 600 acres. Additionally, we inspected about 3,000 poles to identify those that needed treated, repaired, or replaced.

Safety

Safety is of the highest importance at Washington Electric Cooperative. Our goal is to ensure that each employee safely returns home each night to his or her family. We work hard to ensure that we provide the proper training,

20H OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

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tools, and resources for employees to perform their duties safely and efficiently.

Renewable energy & efficiency

In partnership with our generation and transmission provider Buckeye Power, in late 2016, we installed a 50-kilowatt solar panel array in front of our facility near Marietta as part of a program called OurSolar. The panels are directly connected with Washington Electric’s distribution system and help our members tap into renewable energy without the expense and drawbacks of doing it themselves. The array is one of several being installed throughout Ohio, bringing more emission-free energy to the state’s electric cooperatives. Our water heater and air-conditioning load control programs help us avoid peak energy demands, which translates to cost savings on wholesale power. Members enrolled in these programs received rebates on highefficiency water heaters, dual fuel heat pumps, geothermal systems, and whole-house air conditioners. This year, we introduced a new rebate program for ENERGY STAR®rated replacement refrigerators and stand-alone freezers.

Capital credits

Washington Electric Cooperative’s Board of Directors approved the retirement of $321,053.31 in capital credits. As a not-for-profit cooperative, we return all profits back to our members based on their electricity purchases. This is a key component of the cooperative business model and follows one of our Seven Cooperative Principles: members’ economic participation. Capital credits represent the most significant source of equity for Washington Electric. Since a cooperative’s “shareholders” are also the people the coop serves, capital credits reflect each member’s ownership in the cooperative. This differs from dividends that investor-owned utilities pay to shareholders, who may or may not be customers of the utility. Since 2011, we have retired $1,161,355.66 to our members in capital credits.

Community involvement

Another one of our Seven Cooperative Principles is commitment to community. We are proud to be a part of the communities we serve, and we carry out that dedication through involvement with local chambers of commerce, economic development organizations, county fairs, and local charities. In 2016, we served as a sponsor of the Mid-Ohio Valley Veterans Outreach Organization’s Veterans Resource Fair, and we’re a longtime participant and supporter of the Marietta, Noble County, BarlowVincent, and Beverly-Waterford Safety Towns. We provide five scholarships annually to high school seniors whose parents are co-op members. We’ve also awarded nearly $5,000 in grants, sponsorships, and donations to help support organizations including the Washington County 4-H Endowment Fund, Building Bridges to Careers, Noble County Junior Women’s League, Monroe County Sheriff’s Department, Harvest of Hope, Habitat for Humanity, area schools, and many others.

Member satisfaction

One of our proudest achievements in 2016 was a sevenpoint increase in our American Consumer Satisfaction Index (ASCI) score. This survey, conducted among our members each spring, measures the satisfaction of U.S. household consumers with the quality of products and services. It provides Washington Electric with valuable insight into how our members feel about their cooperative and the services we offer. Our jump from 71 to 78 was a significant improvement and places Washington Electric higher than the national averages for Touchstone Energy® cooperatives as well as investorowned electric utilities.

Looking ahead

Later this year, Washington Electric will launch SmartHub, an exciting new online and electronic payment system that will provide our members convenient account access and detailed information about their energy use. SmartHub also offers advanced options for receiving outage, billing, and other alerts. We expect this program to become available in early fall.

Washington0517.indd 11

MAY 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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4/19/17 5:09 PM


440 Highland Ridge Road P.O. Box 800 Marietta, OH 45750 740-373-2141 | 877-549-9324 www.weci.org

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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

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Co-op students earn college

S

even Ohio teens have been awarded scholarships to attend college next year in separate competitions affiliated with Ohio electric cooperatives. Four of the seniors earned Louise Freeland Scholarships, and another

scholarships

four won awards in the Ohio Line Supervisors Association (OLSA) Scholarship competition. A panel of independent judges reviewed the applications and interviewed the finalists before determining the winners.

OLSA winners

The Ohio Line Supervisors Association is an association of the line supervisors of 25 electric cooperatives in Ohio and West Virginia, affiliated with Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives.

Bradlee Warnement First place — $2,000 North Central Electric Cooperative

Mia Moore Second place — $1,500 Carroll Electric Cooperative

McKenzie Ortiz Third place — $1,000 South Central Power Company

Freeland winners

Named in honor of a long-time employee of Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, the $2,800 Louise Freeland Scholarships are awarded annually to the children of electric cooperative employees and trustees.

Olivia Tilton Butler Rural Electric Cooperative

MacKenzie Smith Adams Rural Electric Cooperative

Joshua Leach South Central Power Company

Tiffany Hatcher Pioneer Electric Cooperative

OEC seeks applicants for new technical scholarship

Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives is seeking applicants for its inaugural Technical Scholarship, available to students pursuing career training at a technical school. OEC will award two scholarships: One $2,000 award to a student in a four-year program, and another of $1,000 to a student in a two-year program. Applicants must be currently

attending or planning to attend an accredited technical school or program. Winners will be required to submit proof of enrollment in order to receive the funds. Visit www.ohioec.org/technicalscholarship for full scholarship rules and applications. The application deadline is June 30.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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OHIO HISTORY

STORY BY MARGIE WUEBKER PHOTOS BY JILLY BUTLER

L A OF BOR

LO V E R

udy Dalrymple leaves his room at the Ohio Veterans Home in Sandusky between 5 and 5:30 a.m. most days, and settles into a comfortable padded chair behind his sturdy worktable. Using crepe paper, wire, cloth tape, and his trusty wooden crimping tool, he forms delicate poppy blossoms, one after another, again and again, until he’s surrounded by a mound of flowers, which are destined for American Legion auxiliaries across Ohio to use in their major fundraising efforts aroundaround Memorial Day. efforts Memorial Day. 24

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017


STORY BY MARGIE WUEBKER

May means poppy time for the auxiliaries, when members work the local churches, banks, supermarkets, and shopping centers to solicit donations, in exchange for the ubiquitous flowers — every one of which is handmade by veterans such as Dalrymple, a Vietnam War veteran originally from Defiance, who has been making the flowers since 1988.

Where it all happens

The Auxiliary maintains its Poppy Shop on the 99-acre grounds of the Veterans Home in Sandusky, the only place in the state where that work goes on year-round. According to Patricia Taylor, the auxiliary’s poppy chairman, the 2017 goal is nearly 400,000 poppies. Dalrymple certainly does his part. He “cuts out” periodically for coffee breaks, and usually takes a lunch around 10 a.m., but his workday seldom ends before 6 p.m. He works slowly and steadily these days — unlike years past, when he says he once completed 800 poppies in a single day — but still manages quite the pocketful of posies by the time the day’s done. He crimps the edges of each petal before adding a commemorative label — the final step in the process. He occasionally looks down to check the progress, candidly admitting that years of practice prevent the need for constant vigilance. Dalrymple has a five-person team of helpers, all Veterans Home residents. Most of the others work in the comfort of their apartments, but Dalrymple prefers his rectangular alcove, just a short walk from the main building. “I’ve taught a lot of veterans how to make poppies through the years,” he says. “They come and go over time. I expect someone will pick up and take my place in years to come, but until then, this gives me a reason to get up in the morning and a way to help others.”

Pride in their work

The Auxiliary hosts an annual open house each April, affording representatives from various

units the opportunity to check out the operation. “The guys here in Sandusky really take pride in their work,” says American Legion Auxiliary Department of Ohio President Denise Conrad. “They know that each and every donation realized through their efforts benefits other veterans in need of assistance.” The Auxiliary pays each poppy maker $100 for every 1,000 memorial flowers made. Money from sales is used to aid hospitalized veterans and those residing in veterans homes.

Symbolism

The poppy became the memorial flower for the American dead in the years after World War I. Veterans returning to their homeland remembered wild poppies covering devastated battlefields in France, and shortly after the armistice, patriotic organizations in different countries began selling the flowers to raise money for injured veterans and their families. The Auxiliary’s poppy program started in June 1919, with the homecoming of the 32nd Division in Milwaukee. Members decorated a coffee and doughnut booth with paper poppies. People pulled off flowers and left behind donations on the counter. A booth worker proposed distributing poppies on streets around Memorial Day as a way to raise money for the rehabilitation of veterans. The American Legion Auxiliary assumed responsibility for the national program in 1924. Each component of the veteran-made poppies holds special significance, according to Taylor. The red petals represent the blood shed by men and women of the armed forces, while the yellow/black center calls to mind the mud and desolation of the battlefield. The green stem is symbolic of the forests, meadows, and fields where generations of Americans perished in the defense of freedom, and attests to the courage and determination of those fallen warriors. MARGIE WUEBKER is food editor for Ohio Cooperative Living.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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TRAVEL OHIO

Young and old alike honor a local legend about a snake in July in Peninsula (above), while bratwurst (left) rules the day in August in Bucyrus.

FUN AND FUNNY

F E S T I VA L S Springtime can only mean one thing: It’s the beginning of festival season in Ohio, a time when there’s a celebration to honor just about any hobby, haute cuisine, and historical happening in hamlets across the state. Here’s a look at some of the more interesting festivals happening this spring and summer.

MAY2017 •  2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING LIVING MAY OHIO COOPERATIVE

27 27


Peninsula Python Days

F

or laugh-out-loud, small-town unusual, head to Peninsula on July 15, when a python leads the parade at Peninsula Python Days. A 100-foot-long, people-powered creation of a fabric covered frame, leads a parade celebrating that June day in 1944, when farmer Clarence Mitchell saw a python slither through his corn field. The snake, rumored to be up to 22 feet long, had escaped from a circus wagon passing through town — or maybe not. Even though several people throughout the Cuyahoga Valley claimed to see the python throughout the summer — one woman said it swallowed her chicken whole — the reptile was never

caught. Regardless of legend or truth, Peninsula residents have turned that bit of small-town folklore into a festival of family fun. Along with the parade, Peninsula celebrates its lore with python-themed handmade lawn decorations and a variety of python-themed activities. Head to the library to play Peninsula Python Pandemonium, color pages of Peninsula Python ABC, and check out the mural that depicts the python’s legend. There are more Peninsula Python lore and activities at the Cuyahoga Valley Historical Museum and various businesses. — JAMIE RHEIN

Peninsula Python Days: 8 a.m.-dusk, July 15, Peninsula. Parade starts at noon at the corner of Riverview Road and Route 303. For more information, visit www. explorepeninsula.com for more information.

Ohio Bigfoot Conference and Festival Bigfoot (or Sasquatch) is closely associated with the Pacific Northwest, but there have been thousands of sightings reported in Ohio and nearby states. If you’re a Bigfoot believer, or even just curious about the subject, the annual Ohio Bigfoot Conference is the place to be.

Ohio Bigfoot Conference and Festival: May 1921, 2017, Salt Fork State Park Lodge and Conference Center, 14755 Cadiz Rd., Lore City. Visit www. ohiobigfootconference. org for information. 28 28

The event, which began in 2012, features lectures and appearances by a number of nationally known Bigfoot experts and researchers, including this year’s master of ceremonies, Cliff Barackman, co-host of Animal Planet’s “Finding Bigfoot” series. Also on hand will be Canton native Robert W. Morgan, a Bigfoot expert who gained notoriety in the 1970s and 1980s through his appearances in documentaries and the TV program “In Search Of.” The conference also celebrates the 50th anniversary of the renowned Patterson-Gimlin film, taken along Bluff Creek in California.

OHIOCOOPERATIVE COOPERATIVELIVING • MAY LIVING • MAY2017 2017 OHIO

There will be a number of fun events, including hikes and a vendor fair offering a variety of Sasquatch swag, including books, T-shirts, artwork, and even Bigfoot chainsaw sculptures. The formal conference is followed by the Ohio Bigfoot Festival on Sunday in the picnic area at Salt Fork State Park. The festival includes hands-on demonstrations and clinics on everything from how to cast a footprint in plaster to the proper use of audio/video recording devices and other gear used for Bigfoot spotting. — BRIAN ALBRIGHT


Summer Solstice Lavender Festival Lavender is one of the most beloved herbs for its natural healing qualities, its delicate flavor in cooking, and its prettiness in gardens and floral arrangements.

The versatile herb will be celebrated in June at the ninthannual Summer Solstice Lavender Festival at Peaceful Acres Lavender Farm in Martinsville. Activities include food demonstrations, wreath-making, and medication exercises, coupled with the inhalation of the scent of essential oils. “The festival presents the best time to step into a field of blooming lavender for instant relaxation and amazing photo opportunities,” says Kym Prell, owner of Peaceful Acres Lavender Farm, and a certified reflexologist. Peaceful Acres offers a 2-acre lavender field and walking trails on a 10-acre plot. There’s also an onsite gift shop, where folks can find plenty of lavender-related merchandise. Visitors may pay to pick blooming lavender at the farm from May through September. Prime blooming season is in June, during the festival. “Our farm was created to offer a healing, relaxing space for anyone who wants to visit,” Prell says. “We created the festival to share the amazing feeling you get while standing in a fully blooming field.”

Summer Solstice Lavender Festival: 10 a.m.-6 p.m., June 17; and 11 a.m.-4 p.m., June 18, Peaceful Acres Lavender Farm, 2387 Martinsville Road, Martinsville. Learn more at www.peacefulacreslavenderfarm.com.

— WENDY PRAMIK

Bucyrus Bratwurst Festival No town loves brats more than Bucyrus, a.k.a. “The Bratwurst Capital of America.” The Crawford County seat not only has a strong German heritage, but it also serves as the hub for a county-wide cluster of sausagemakers. Every August, Bucyrus celebrates its signature food with a three-day festival on the streets surrounding the town square. The family-friendly fun includes parades, rides, entertainment ranging from tribute bands to polka tunes, and, of course, plenty of tasty, locally made bratwurst links sizzling on grills. “Our bratwurst producers use family recipes for authentic German bratwurst that have been handed down through the generations,” says Assistant Festival Director Kevin Myers. The Bratwurst Festival started in 1968, and now

ranks among Ohio’s bestattended community events, routinely attracting 100,000 people. In addition to its time-honored beer-stein auction, this year’s 50th Bucyrus Bratwurst Festival features four food-eating contests: bratwurst, ice cream, pizza, and German-style jumbo cream puffs. “The festival is a deep-rooted tradition and a great way to enjoy friends and family while experiencing the sounds of German music and the wonderful smell of bratwurst,” Myers says. —DAMAINE VONADA

The Bucyrus Bratwurst Festival, Aug. 17-19, 2017. Call 419-562-BRAT (2728) or visit www. bucyrusbratwurstfestival.com for information.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 29 LIVING 29


STORY BY CELESTE BAUMGARTNER PHOTOS COURTESY SEVEN OAKS FARM

CO-OP PEOPLE

HELPING

HOOVES

The miniature horses of Seven Oaks Farm bring joy and comfort to those who could use some of both Miniature horses make good therapy animals for the very reason that they’re small, and so not as intimidating to kids (or adults) as regular-sized versions.

T

he 30 or so therapy horses of Seven Oaks Farm may be little, but they have a big impact. Owner Lisa Moad brings the horses around to more than 50 care facilities and numerous Ronald McDonald houses to bring comfort to the residents and guests, and joins with several police departments to help with community and anti-bullying efforts. “The kids come out, and they see little horses, and that’s exciting for them,” Moad says. “They just spend time brushing their hair and putting bows on the animals, talking, and then they get to giggling. For them, it’s

30 30

OHIO OHIOCOOPERATIVE COOPERATIVELIVING • MAY LIVING • MAY2017 2017

a short break of time when they can just be kids again.” Moad’s venture started when she saw an online video of a woman in hospice care. The woman had been a horse owner and, in her final days, wanted to see a horse again. Moad already owned some minis at the time, and figured — correctly, as it turns out — there probably were others in similar situations. She contacted a nursing home, and they invited Moad to bring her miniature horses to visit the residents, and the family has been at it ever since. At Covenant Village, a physical therapy rehabilitation center in Green Township,


Karen Seimer, director of activities, appreciates that the little equines are so even-tempered. “I have a lot of residents who can get out in their wheelchairs to see the horses. We gather in a group and pet the the animals and spend time with them,” Seimer says. “But if there is somebody who loves animals and is The animals of Seven Oaks Farm visit children and adults in schools, care facilities, nursing bed-bound, Lisa will homes and hospitals, often making several trips per week. go with me and take the horses right to the bedside, and they’ll can identify with a one-eyed horse,” Moad says. nuzzle up to someone’s face. The residents love Another of the horses, Denver, is coated with it — they’re so excited and joyful.” glitter and sports a unicorn horn for visits to Adds Moad: “The seniors are the people we see the most, and when we go into the senior homes or the Alzheimer’s units, the reception we get and the brightness in their lives is significant.” Moad also takes the miniature animals to a variety of community events with the Cincinnati ‘Kids Police Department, one of several police with issues departments with which can identify with she works.

a one-eyed horse.’

“What’s nice about these therapy horses is that they’re small,” says Roberta Utrecht, a patrol officer with the department. “They are the perfect size, so they’re not intimidating, even though there’s a police officer standing next to them.” Most of Moad’s minis are rescue horses. Some have pedigrees and have won national honors, but come to Seven Oaks Farm when their owners can no longer care for them. They’re an interesting mix of characters. A pair of mini mules graze in the pasture along with Patches, who has one eye — “kids with issues

Ronald McDonald houses. Then there’s Wendy, who’s everyone’s favorite, since she’s teeny, even by miniature horse standards. Training and caring for all those little animals takes work. Moad and her husband, John, who are members of Butler Rural Electric Cooperative in Oxford, have five adult sons, each with significant-others, and all 10 help. Work starts in the wee hours of the morning, to care for the horses and do all of the things that living on a farm requires. Moad also supervises the farm’s many volunteers, including groups of students from nearby Miami University, who earn service-learning hours. It’s also good work for groups of developmentally disabled people, and for high school students looking for community-service hours. “A lot of people just want to work with horses,” Moad said. “Some people have a fear of horses, and this is their gateway into being with a big animal. For a lot of people, it’s their time to be out and enjoy being with the horses. We always need help; we need people just to pet the horses and love on them.” CELESTE BAUMGARTNER is a freelance writer from Hamilton.

MAY MAY2017 •  2017 • OHIO OHIOCOOPERATIVE COOPERATIVELIVING LIVING

31 31


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MEMBER INTERACTIVE

NEW

LIFE

A beautiful sight: mother and offspring at The Wilds!

A baby robin fresh out of the nest.

Tonya Bess South Central Power Company member

Robin Mata Butler Rural Electric Cooperative member

Twin goats, Mork and Mindy, born January 25, 2017. Genie Day Consolidated Electric Cooperative member

We raised Percheron draft horses for years and this is a picture of a new filly, right after she was born. The mare was checking on her and hadn’t even gotten up from delivery! Sharon and Myron Dawson Guernsey-Muskingum Electric Cooperative members

Send us your pictures!

Upload your photos at www.ohioec.org/ memberinteractive. For November, send a photo or 100 words describing what you’re thankful for by August 15; for December, send photos representing the 12 Days of Christmas by September 15. “Sunflower” and her new little fella, “Eeyore,” on Eeyore’s first day on the earth. Kathy DeHass Holmes-Wayne Electric Cooperative member

34

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

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MAY 2017 CALENDAR NORTHWEST

MAY 4–14 – Last Round-Up of the Guacamole Queens, Van Wert Civic Theatre, 118 S. Race St., Van Wert, Thur.–Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $13. A southern-fried high school reunion comedy. 419-238-9689 or www.vwct.org. MAY 5–14 – Biggest Week in American Birding, headquarters at Maumee Bay Lodge and Conference Ctr., 1750 State Park Rd., Oregon, daily 7 a.m.–8 p.m. Free. Guided tours, bird ID workshops, birding by canoe, field trips, keynote presentations, Birder’s Marketplace, and evening socials with free food and music. 800-243-4667 or www. biggestweekinamericanbirding.com.

NORTHEAST

THROUGH MAY 18 – 35th Annual National Whiskey Painting Exhibition and Art Sale, Cuyahoga Valley Art Ctr., 2131 Front St., Cuyahoga Falls, Mon.–Thur. 9 a.m.–8 p.m., Fri. 9 a.m.–9 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–2 p.m. A Whiskey Painting is done in watercolor by dipping the brush in alcoholic spirits. Sale prices generally starting at $75. 330-928-8092, e-mail cvartcenter@ sbcglobal.net, or http://cvartcenter.org/exhibits/. MAY 4–6 – Village-Wide Garage Sales, 209 N. Market St., Minerva, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. 330-868-7705, ext. 106, or 330-8683783. MAY 5–7, 12–14 – The Little Mermaid, Geauga Lyric Theater Guild, 101 Water St., Chardon, Fri./Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $18, Stds./Srs. $15, $10 C. (12 and under). 440-286-2255 or www.geaugatheater.org. MAY 5–6 – Dandelion May Fest, Breitenbach Wine Cellars, 5934 Old Rte. 39 NW, Dover, Fri. noon–7 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.–7 p.m. Dandelion food tastings, cooking demos, dandelion picking contest and jelly-making, vendor fair, 5K run. 330-343-3603 or

SOUTHEAST

MAY 6–7 – 29th annual “Springtime in Ohio” Art and Craft Show, Hancock Co. Fgds., 017 E Sandusky St., Findlay, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $5, under 12 free. More than 280 exhibitors. Crafts and art displays, food, entertainment, kids’ activities, and demos. 419-436-1457 or http://cloudshows.biz/event-calendar.

MAY 20–21 – Settlers Reenactment, Auglaize Vlllage and Farm Museum, 12296 Krouse Rd., Defiance, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Living history demonstrations for the period 1750–1812. Hands-on activities include churning butter, carding wool, and candle dipping. Train rides $2. 419-636-2560.

MAY 13 – Lilac Festival, downtown Defiance. Celebrate the official flower of Defiance at this arts and crafts fair. Free lilacs to the first 500 attendees. 5K race, Power of Purple parade, arts and craft vendors, food, and kids' activities. 419-782-0739 or http://visitdefianceohio.com/event/downtown.

MAY 22–23 – Auditions for Summer Youth Theatre: Lion King, Jr., Van Wert Civic Theatre, 118 S. Race St., Van Wert, 6:30 p.m. Open to school-age students K–12. Show dates are June 22–25. www.vwct.org.

MAY 13 – Bluffton Arts and Crafts Show, Main St., Bluffton, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Street fair featuring crafts, antiques, gardening items, concessions, family/kids’ activities, and live entertainment. 419-369-2985 or www.explorebluffton.com.

MAY 25–29 – Main Street Port Clinton Walleye Festival, Waterworks Park, Port Clinton. Features free live concerts, Kids’ Fishing Derby, Grande Parade, educational programs and activities, Walleye 5K Run & Walk, carnival rides, and more than 130 vendors. 419-734-5503 or www.walleyefestival.com.

MAY 13–14 – Spring on the Farm, Sauder Village, 22611 St. Rte. 2, Archbold, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Experience what life in rural Ohio was like more than 100 years ago. 800-590-9755 or https://saudervillage.org.

MAY 26-28 – Buckeye Farm Antiques, 28th annual Tractor and Engine Show, Shelby County Fairgrounds, Sidney, free kids activities, tractor and truck pulls, and working primitive machines, 937-596-6812 or www.buckeyefarmantiques.com.

MAY 14 – VanWert Area Boychoir Spring Concert, St. Mark's Lutheran Church, corner of West Sycamore and 127, Van Wert. 3 p.m. 419-238-1962.

MAY 29 – Memorial Day Horsemanship Clinic, Wyandot Co. Equine Rescue, 4658 St. Rte. 199, Carey. A unique opportunity to have a professional trainer help you with your horse. $30 to observe, $50 to participate. 419-294-4477.

MAY 19–20 – Hamler Country Fest, St. Rte. 109, Hamler. Gates open Fri. 5:30 p.m., Sat. 2:30 p.m. $15. Rodney Atkins, Nashville Crush, Brent Lowry and the Drifters, and more. Open seating under roof; bring lawn chairs. 419-748-7459, e-mail hamlercountryfest@gmail.com, or www.hamlercountryfest.com. MAY 20 – Antique Car Gathering, Sauder Village, 22611 St. Rte. 2, Archbold, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. More than 100 antique cars dating back to the early 1900s. 800-590-9755 or https:// saudervillage.org. www.breitenbachwine.com/events/dandelion-festival. MAY 6 – PSA Train Collectors Association, Lake Erie Chapter, Spring Train Show, UAW Hall, 5615 Chevrolet Blvd., Parma, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $6, under 12 free. All-gauge show including ‘O,’ ‘S,’ ‘HO,’ ‘N,’ ‘Z,’ and large scale with over 150 tables. Watch trains run on operating layouts. New and old trains to buy, sell, or trade, plus parts, repair manuals, price guides, and more. 440-845-2700 or e-mail tcalakeerie@gmail. com. MAY 6–7 – PSA Model Train Days, Painesville Railroad Museum (a.k.a. NYC Painesville Depot), 475 Railroad St., Painesville, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5, Family $7. Modular displays, operating layouts in ‘N’ scale, ‘HO’ and ‘S’ scale, ‘O’ and ‘G’ gauge. Model train flea market on grounds. Food and drinks will be available. 440-417-6746, e-mail prrm@att.net, or www. painesvillerailroadmuseum.org. MAY 6–7 – Ohio Civil War Show, Richland Co. Fgds., 750 N Home Rd., Mansfield, Sat. 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.– 3 p.m. $7. Buildings with 750 tables, military items, relics, and memorabilia from 1775 to 1945 to buy, sell, or trade. 6-gun battery firing demos, Civil War hospital scenario and battleground encampments, and fife and drum corp presentation. www.ohiocivilwarshow.com. MAY 7 – 2nd Annual Harrison Career Ctr. FFA Truck and Tractor Show, Harrison Career Ctr., 82500 Cadiz-Jewett Rd. (Ohio Rte. 9), Cadiz, 1-6 p.m. Trucks, tractors, cars, and more — all makes, models, and years. Food, music, and family fun. 330-440-5578. MAY 12–13 – Our Town, NewPointe Community Church, 8882 OH-39, Millersburg, Fri. 7 p.m., Sat. 2 and 7 p.m. $10. Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize–winning play focuses on the lives of its citizens and their experiences with love and loss. 330473-2879 or www.holmescenterforthearts.org.

MAY 5–SEPT. 29 – Cambridge Main Street Farmers Market, Courthouse Square, Cambridge, Fri. 9 a.m.–1 p.m. 740-439-2238 or www.downtowncambridge.com.

MAY 6 – Pickaway-Ross Central Ohio Expo, 895 Crouse Chapel Rd., Chillicothe, 10 a.m.–2 p.m. Craft show, car show, kids tractor pull, flower sale, book sale and food. 740-642-1301. MAY 6 – Spring Fest, Deerassic Park Education Ctr., 14250 Cadiz Rd., Cambridge, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. 740-435-3335 or www. deerassic.com. MAY 13 – 15th annual Battle from the Saddle Trail Ride, Scioto Trails State Park and Forest, Chillicothe, ride out at noon. 740-703-8176 or jeweyoates@gmail.com.

MAY 4–7 – Wild Turkey Festival, downtown McArthur. Rides and games, car show, quilt show, parade, live music, and contests. 740-591-1118 or www.vintoncountytravel.com/ events/wild-turkey-festival-2017.

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MAY 13 – Kids’ Fishing Rodeo, Bob Evans Farm Pond, Rio Grande, 8–11 a.m. Bring your favorite fishing pole. For kids age 12 and under. Win one of six scholarships. 740-709-1256 or www.kingkatusa.com. MAY 13 – Cabela’s King Kat Tournament, 321 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, 6:30 a.m.–3 p.m. 740-446-8080 or www. kingkatusa.com.

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • MAY 2017

MAY 29 – Salute the Troops, Perry’s Victory and International Peace Memorial, 93 Delaware Ave., Putin-Bay, 11 a.m. Free. Pay tribute to all servicemen and women who have lost their lives in conflicts throughout U.S. history. 419-285-2184 or www.nps.gov/pevi/index.htm.

MAY 13 – Fairlawn Spring Avant-Garde Art and Craft Show, St. George’s Fellowship Ctr., 3204 Ridgewood Rd., Fairlawn, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $3, under 12 free. Large show features artists and crafters selling their original handmade items. 440227-8794 or www.avantgardeshows.com. MAY 20 – German Maifest at Historic Zoar Village, 198 Main St., Zoar, Ohio, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. German food and drink, games, make-and-take art projects, and spring tours of the village. Grand opening of the Bimeler Art Gallery featuring Zoar works by the Cleveland School of Artists. 800-262-6195 or www. historiczoarvillage.com. MAY 20 – Two for Tea, Elizabeth House Tea Room, 438 Union St., Mount Pleasant, 1–3:30 p.m. $9.50, C. (under 12) $5. Exhibit of antique clothing and tea sets, including an afternoon tea. 740-633-1809. MAY 21 – 2nd Annual “Almost Summer” Car and Bike Show, Madison Comprehensive High, 600 Esley Lane, Mansfield. $10 entry fee. Registration 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Card Shark Ride for Education registration begins at 9 a.m., additional $5. Awards presented at 3 p.m. Proceeds benefit Madison Career Tech Programs. 419-589-2112, ext. 8490 or 8624, or www.mlsd. net/highschool.html. MAY 25 – Fort Steuben Summer Concert Series, Berkman Amphitheater, Fort Steuben Park, 120 S. 3rd St., Steubenville, 6:30–9 p.m. Bring a blanket and picnic basket and enjoy a free concert at this site overlooking the Ohio River. 740283-1787 or www.oldfortsteuben.com. MAY 25 – Richland Co. Chapter, Ohio Genealogical Society Meeting, OGS Library, 611 St. Rte. 97 W., Bellville, 7 p.m. Free and open to the public. Andrew Richmond presents “Ohio Furniture 101: An Introduction to Styles and Cultural Groups.” 419-566-4560, e-mail sunda1960@ yahoo.com, or www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ohrichgs.

MAY 19–21 – Cambridge Singers Spring Show: “Come Rain or Come Shine,” Scottish Rite Auditorium, 941 Wheeling Ave., Cambridge, Fri./Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 3 p.m. 740-432-3956. MAY 20 – Rendezvous at the Rock, Leo Petroglyphs Historic Site, Park Rd., Leo (Jackson Co.), 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Native American displays, flint knapping, atlatl, music, food, and a wildflower walk. 740-384-3537 or www.leopetroglyph.com. MAY 25–28 – Feast of the Flowering Moon, Water St., Chillicothe, 10 a.m.–10 p.m. Free. Native American music, dancing, traders, exhibits, arts and crafts, and demos. 800-4134118 or www.feastofthefloweringmoon.org. MAY 26–29 – Muskingum Valley Trade Days, 6602 St. Rte. 78, Reinersville. Large flea market. 740-558-2740 before show or 740-558-2402. MAY 31–JUN. 4 – National Road Yard Sale, throughout Guernsey Co. www.oldstorefrontantiques.com.


SOUTHWEST CENTRAL

MAY 6 – Gardens at Gantz Farm Herb and Perennial Sale, Gantz Park, 2255 Home Rd., Grove City, 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. A wide variety of culinary and landscape herbs and perennials for sale, featuring rain-garden, pollinator-friendly, and native plants. 614-871-6323. MAY 6 – Model Train Show Family Fun Day, Marion Co. Fgds., Veterans Memorial Coliseum, 220 E. Fairground St., Marion, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $5, under 12 free. Features several operating layouts running American Flyer and other 1/64th model trains. Trains, accessories, and other merchandise for sale. First 50 kids attending receive a free train whistle. 614766-9033 or www.sspree.info/FFunday.html.

THROUGH AUG. 27 – “Totally Tiffin . . . Ever Erickson,” Ohio Glass Museum's Gallery, 124 W. Main St., Lancaster, Tues.–Sun. 1–4 p.m. Fantastic displays of unique pieces of handcrafted artistic Ohio-made glass. 740-687-0101 or www.ohioglassmuseum.org. MAY 4–6 – Central Ohio S Gaugers Model Train Show: Spring S Spree, Marion Co. Fgds., Veterans Memorial Coliseum, 220 E. Fairground St., Marion. Over 135 dealer tables, several operating layouts, daily door prizes, how-to clinics, a pizza party Friday night, and flying pancake breakfast Saturday morning. Visit the historic Marion Union Train Station just minutes away. Don't miss the tour of the unique Age of Steam Roundhouse tour. 740-382-2558, www. cosg.org, or www.sspree.info/info.html. MAY 6 – Time Travellers’ Faire, Tri-Rivers Career Ctr., 2222 Marion-Mount Gilead Rd., Marion, 7 p.m. $15 in advance, $20 at door. “Travel” to your favorite time in history while dressing in period clothing from the past, present, alternative past, or future if desired. Historic fashion show, Victorian tea, and appetizers and desserts. 740-387-4255 or www.marionhistory.com.

SOUTHWEST

MAY 6 – Pickaway-Ross Central Ohio Expo, 895 Crouse Chapel Road, Chillicothe, 10 a.m.–2 p.m. Visit program labs and enjoy the many activities scheduled, including a craft show, car show, kiddy tractor pull, flower sale, book sale, and auction. Food vendors on site. 740-642-1301. MAY 6–7 – Central Ohio Folk Festival, Battelle Darby Creek Metro Park, 1775 Darby Creek Dr., Galloway. Continuous concerts and over 45 musicians’ workshops. 614-470-3963 or www.cfms-inc.org. MAY 7 – Mommy and Me Princess Tea, Marion Palace Theatre, 276 West Center St., Marion, 12:30 p.m. $22 (1 adult and 1 child), additional tickets $10 adult, $8 child. For children 4–12. Participants are treated to a kid-friendly luncheon with finger sandwiches, sides, and drinks while enjoying live music performed by a youth string quartet. Other activities include games and storytime. 740-383-2101 or www marionpalace.org. MAY 11 – Five Nights On Campus: Lora Ellis in Cinema Sweethearts, Morrill Hall Auditorium, 1465 Mount Vernon Ave., Marion, 7:30 p.m. A celebration of the Golden Age of Hollywood’s iconic leading ladies — and the songs that made us fall in love with them. 740-725-6340 or https:// osumarion.osu.edu/initiatives/cultural-arts/five-nights.html. MAY 11–13 – Chadwick Arboretum & Learning Gardens Spring Plant Sale and Auction Fundraiser, 2201 Fred Taylor Dr., Columbus, Thur. 5:30–8:30 p.m., members only (buy a membership at the sale site); Fri. 8 a.m.–7 p.m.; Sat. 8 a.m.–3 p.m. Perennials, annuals,

and carriages are welcome. Decorate carriage with flowers to celebrate spring. 513-523-8687 or http://butlercountyoh.us/ event-calendar/. MAY 6–7 – Glassblowing Workshop: Mother’s Day Vase with Flower, Neusole Glassworks, 11925 Kemper Springs Dr., Cincinnati. $50. 30-minute slots scheduled between 10 a.m. and 8 p.m. Reservations required. With the help of professional glassblowers, you can blow one vase, then sculpt one flower from hot molten glass. Must be age 5–6 or older. 513-751-3292, e-mail neusoleglassworks@hotmail.com, or http://neusoleglassworks.com.

MAY 1 – Down Home, Downtown: Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, Miami University Hamilton Downtown, 221 High St., Hamilton, 7–9 p.m. Free. Enjoy the bluegrass band’s lightning-fast instrumentals, close harmonies, and entertaining novelty songs. E-mail vaughnjh@gmail.com.

MAY 10 – Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, Christ Church Glendale, 965 Forest Ave. Glendale, 12 p.m. Enjoy live music with your lunch. Bring your own lunch or purchase a box lunch on-site. 513-771-1544 or e-mail bryan.mock@ christchurchglendale.org. MAY 12 - Moth Night, Cedar Bog Nature Preserve, 980 Woodburn Rd., Urbana, at dusk. Free. Led by volunteer naturalist Jim Lemon. Weather permitting. 937-484-3744 or e-mail cedarbog@ctcn.net.

MAY 3, 10, 17, 24, 31 – Bluegrass Night at Pit to Plate BBQ, 8021 Hamilton Ave., Mt. Healthy, 7–9 p.m. Free. An evening of lively music with Cincinnati’s finest bluegrass band, Vernon McIntyre's Appalachian Grass. Everyone is invited to bring a musical instrument and join the band to pick a good bluegrass number. 513-931-9100.

MAY 12–14 – Appalachian Festival, Coney Island, 6201 Kellogg Ave., Cincinnati, Fri. 9 a.m.–9 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–6 p.m. $10, Srs. $5, C. (2–12), $2, under 2 free. Handmade crafts, down-home food, Living History Village and educational exhibits, old-time dance, storytelling, and music. www.appalachianfestivalcincinnati.org.

MAY 6 – Red Bricks and Roses Horse-Drawn Carriage Parade, Millett Hall, Miami University, 500 E. Sycamore St., Oxford, noon–1 p.m. Parade through historic Oxford and enjoy the university’s beautiful campus. All types of horses

MAY 13 – “Embracing Nature in Your Backyard,” with Donna Schwab, Cedar Bog Nature Preserve, 980 Woodburn Rd., Urbana, 10 a.m. $10, $5 CBA/OHC members. 937-4843744 or e-mail cedarbog@ctcn.net.

WEST VIRGINIA

MAY 6–7 – Antique Gas and Engine Show, WV State Farm Museum, 458 Fairgrounds Rd., Point Pleasant. Exhibits of a working sawmill, displays of small engines and antique tractors, over 30 historic buildings, and numerous other exhibits. 304-675-5737. MAY 12–13 – 23rd Annual Bluegrass Festival, North Bend State Park, Cairo, Fri. 6–10 p.m., Sat. 1–10 p.m. $10 Fri., $30 Sat., $35 weekend pass (advance). Bluegrass musicians from around the state and the region, plus local artisans. 304-643-2931, 1-800-CALL-WVA, or www.northbendsp.com.

vegetables, herbs, trees, shrubs, and more for sale, plus local artwork. http://chadwickarboretum.osu.edu. MAY 12 – Phil Vassar, Marion Palace Theatre, 276 West Center St., Marion, 8 p.m. $30–$47. Billboard’s Country Songwriter of the Year. 740-383-2101 or www.marionpalace. org. MAY 12–14 – Community Days Festival, Fairfield Co. Fgds., Lancaster, Fri. 4–10 p.m., Sat. noon–10:30 p.m., Sun. noon–6 p.m. Free. Rides, food, games, craft show, car show, and entertainment. New this year: Fast Traxx Moto Cross racing, Sat. night concert. www.communitydaysfestival.org. MAY 13 – Harding Home Kickoff Breakfast, Tri-Rivers Career Ctr., 2222 Marion-Mount Gilead Rd., Marion, 7:30–10 a.m. $5 in advance, $6 at door. Celebrate the Harding Home visitor season with a hearty breakfast of Florence Harding’s waffles and your choice of toppings, bacon, juice, and beverage. 740-387-9630 or www.hardinghome.org. MAY 13 – Pickerington Community Chorus: “Say It with a Song: Celebrating 10 Years,” with special guests Pickerington High School Central’s Chorale, Peace United Methodist Church, 235 Diley Rd., Pickerington, 7 p.m. $10, Srs./C. $8 in advance; $12/$10 at the door. www. pickeringtoncommunitychorus.com. MAY 27–29 – Utica Sertoma Ice Cream Festival, Ye Olde Mill and Velvet Ice Cream Co., 11339 Mt. Vernon Rd., Utica. $5 per car. Fun-filled weekend for the entire family. Rides, games, antique gas engines, car show, motorcycle show, eating contests, arts and crafts, and ice cream, of course! E-mail uticaohiosertoma@gmail.com or www. sertomaicecreamfestival.com. MAY 28–29 – Asian Festival, Franklin Park, 1755 E. Broad St., Columbus, 10 a.m.–8 p.m. Free. A celebration of Asian culture, including dance, music, martial arts, food, and much more. A unique opportunity to see performers from Asia and all over the U.S. http://asian-festival.org. MAY 29 – Memorial Day Celebration, Veterans Memorial Park, 154 Commerce St., Lockbourne. Parade starts at noon, followed by a service honoring Lockbourne Air Force Base, WASPS, and all veterans. 614-491-3161.

MAY 19 – Taste of the Arts: A Feast for the Senses, Ash and Main Sts., Piqua. A delightful evening of fun, live music, and food in downtown Piqua. Be sure to stop in and see the various demos in the storefronts. Huge selection of food options from various local restaurants and caterers. Items range from $1 to $4. 937-773-9355 or www.mainstreetpiqua.com. MAY 19–21 – Maifest, Germania Park, 3529 W. Kemper Rd., Cincinnati, Fri. 6 p.m.–midnight, Sat. noon-midnight, Sun. noon–8 p.m. $3, under 12 free. Raise a stein to spring’s blooming flowers and warming weather with our own Maifest celebration — the most authentic in Cincinnati. Enjoy traditional German food, drink, and entertainment. www. germaniasociety.com/maifest/. MAY 20 – 3rd Annual Food Truck Competition and Rally, Miami Co. Fgds., North Co. Rd. 25A, Troy, 11 a.m.–9 p.m. Free. Teams of food trucks will gather to show off their best dishes and desserts. 937-335-7492. MAY 20 – Upper Valley Fiber Fest, Miami Co. Fgds., North Co. Rd. 25A, Troy, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. A fiber enthusiast haven! A celebration of all things fiber related: spinning, knitting, weaving, quilting, crochet, felting, and more. Hands-on demos and plenty of vendors. www.uppervalleyfiberfest.org. MAY 26 – ArtsConnect Café Lunchtime Concert: McIntyre Bluegrass Duet, Springfield Township Senior and Community Arts Ctr., 9150 Winton Rd., Cincinnati, 11:30 a.m.–1 p.m. Free. Bring your own lunch or purchase one from on-site food truck. Bring lawn chair in case seating is limited. 513-522-1410 or www.theartsconnect.us.

PLEASE NOTE: Ohio Cooperative Living strives for ac­curacy but strongly urges readers to confirm dates and times before traveling long distances to events. Submit listings AT LEAST 90 DAYS prior to the event by writing to Ohio Cooperative Living, 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229 or events@ohioec. org. Ohio Cooperative Living will not publish listings that don’t include a complete address of where the event takes place or a number/website for more information.

MAY 2017 •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING

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330-758-2114 740-245-5193 513-756-9700 330-859-2581 330-627-8089 740-753-9242 937-484-3406 937-927-5363 419-446-2460 740-569-7351 740-392-4117 740-374-3245 614-877-4244 419-264-2031 567-204-8257 740-498-6613 937-604-0036 937-269-6247 419-784-1806 740-927-8874 419-938-3981


www.ohioec.org

COOPERATION AMONG COOPERATIVES Cooperatives serve their members most effectively by sharing resources and collaborating with co-op organizations at the state, national, and international levels. Overall, cooperation strengthens the cooperative network.


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Courtesy of InfinityDISH with activation, certain conditions apply.

WE ARE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK; 8 AM – MIDNIGHT EST, SUNDAY 9 AM – MIDNIGHT EST. OFFER ONLY GOOD FOR NEW DISH SUBSCRIBERS. SE HABLA ESPAÑOL All calls with InfinityDISH are monitored and recorded for quality assurance and training purposes. Offer for new and qualifying former customers only. Qualification: Advertised price requires credit qualification and eAutoPay. Upfront activation and/or receiver upgrade fees may apply based on credit qualification. Offer ends 6/21/17. 2-Year Commitment: Early termination fee of $20/mo. remaining applies if you cancel early. Included in 2-year price guarantee at $39.99 advertised price: Flex Pack plus one add-on Pack, HD service fees, and equipment for 1 TV. Included in 2-year price guarantee at $54.99 advertised price: America’s Top 120 Plus programming package, Local channels and Regional Sports Networks (where available), HD service fees, and equipment for 1 TV. Included in 2-year price guarantee for additional cost: Programming package upgrades ($54.99 for AT120+, $69.99 for AT200, $79.99 for AT250), monthly fees for additional receivers ($7 per additional TV, receivers with additional functionality may be $10-$15) and monthly DVR service fees ($15). NOT included in 2-year price guarantee or advertised price (and subject to change): Taxes & surcharges, add-on programming (including premium channels), Protection Plan, and transactional fees. Premium Channels: Subject to credit qualification. After 3 mos., you will be billed $60/mo. for HBO, Cinemax, Showtime, Starz and DISH Movie Pack unless you call to cancel. Other: All packages, programming, features, and functionality are subject to change without notice. After 6 mos., you will be billed $8.99/mo. for Protection Plan unless you call to cancel. After 2 years, then-current everyday prices for all services apply. For business customers, additional monthly fees may apply. Free standard professional installation only. HBO®, Cinemax® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. STARZ and related channels and service marks are property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. Visa® gift card must be requested through your DISH Representative at time of purchase and is subject to DHA elite credit approval. $50 Visa® gift card requires activation. You will receive a claim voucher within 3-4 weeks and the voucher must be returned within 60 days. Your Visa® gift card will arrive in approximately 6-8 weeks. InfinityDISH charges a one-time $49.99 non-refundable processing fee which is subject to change at any time without notice. Indiana C.P.D. Reg. No. T.S. R1903.


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