
34 minute read
More Power
from 2021-09-BEMC
Benefits of Using Electricity in New Ways
By Charles Guerry
If you’re like most North Carolinians, you’re interested in saving money on energy costs and in doing your part to help the environment. But wouldn’t it be great if you could do both? Well, through a concept called “beneficial electrification,” you can.
This utility industry term — which may be familiar from past issues of Carolina Country — is when electricity is used in place of fossil fuels like propane, natural gas or fuel oil in a way that creates at least one of several potential benefits. Beneficial electrification is being used in all sorts of applications across industries. Two examples are farming, where diesel pumps can be replaced with electric pumps, or other heavy farm equipment can be run on electricity; or industry, where warehouse forklifts can run on rechargeable batteries. In both examples, fuel costs are reduced, and on-site emissions are brought down to zero. But back to what this concept means for you in your home. There are four potential benefits of switching from fossil fuel to electricity, and for something to truly meet the requirements of being “beneficial electrification,” it has to do at least one of these four things, without harming any of them. 1. Save consumers money | As mentioned in the farm and industry examples, using less fuel often saves money. Electric vehicles (EVs) are one example. Most EVs charge at home, resulting in a cost equivalent to paying $1/gallon for gas — pricing most of us haven’t seen for 20 years. And limited moving parts in an EV make for limited required maintenance (oil changes are a thing of the past, for one). Upfront, an EV will likely be more expensive than its gasoline-powered counterpart. But take a look at long-term maintenance and fuel costs to truly get a sense of whether a switch to an EV will be beneficial to you or not. Your electric co-op can help in doing the math. 2. Improve the environment | Using the EV example again, if your car were to be electric, you’d obviously bring its tailpipe emissions down to zero. Of course, those emissions are shifted to the source of electricity down the
line. The good news here is that the power provided by North Carolina’s electric cooperatives is getting greener all the time. We are now collectively working toward a sustainability goal to achieve net-zero carbon dioxide emissions by 2050. New renewable sources of power will play a big role, including solar. Our electric co-op, Halifax EMC, recently completed a solar and battery storage project that will generate enough energy to power more than 1,000 homes each year (learn more on page 8). 3. Increase grid flexibility | This is a trickier ...you can use concept, but it means creating more interconnected electricity in new resources for electric co-ops to use in making the power grid run as efficiently as possible (see “Boosting Reliability ways to save Through Grid Management,” August 2021, page 10). An example is switching a natural gas or propane water money and help heater to electric. In some cases, you may be able to us all work toward enroll that electric water heater in an electric co-op demand response program, which would allow the co-op a brighter future. to manage the water heater temporarily during periods of peak demand — when power is needed most across the grid. Heat pumps controlled by smart thermostats create another opportunity for this kind of demand response resource. 4. Improve quality of life | This can come in all sorts of forms. Perhaps it means your quiet electric lawn mower doesn’t wake your family on a Saturday morning, or your EV doesn’t stink up the carpool or drive-through line with tailpipe emissions. Electric technology is often more reliable, takes less maintenance and is generally easier to use. Electrification can be a benefit to your family and to our communities. Please contact your electric co-op to discuss ways you can use electricity in new ways to save money and help us all work toward a better world — and a brighter future.
Charles Guerry is executive vice president and general manager for Halifax EMC, headquartered in Enfield.
3,000-Year-Old Beauty Secret Revealed
Turquoise — the original fashion icon — comes full circle for an amazing price.
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She’s been around for thousands of years, but she’s never gone out of fashion. We’re talking turquoise, one of the world’s most ancient gems. Egyptian queens adorned themselves with turquoise jewelry more than 3,000 years ago. And the blue beauty is even more coveted now than she was a millennia ago. Do you know someone who’s even more beautiful now than when you first met? Then the Timeless Turquoise Pendant is for them –– a stylish circle formed from seven total carats of natural turquoise and exquisite sterling silver metalwork. And the price? Let’s just say we made sure timeless was attainable for less than you’d think. Time is running out for timeless turquoise. Just because turquoise is timeless, doesn’t mean supplies of it will last forever. Turquoise is only found a few places on Earth. Typically unearthed in arid climates like the American Southwest and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, turquoise requires a delicate balance of minerals and water to achieve its gorgeous range of blues. But even when conditions are optimal for turquoise to form, finding stones of gem-worthy quality is a challenge. There are very few turquoise mines left, and then, less than 5% of turquoise mined worldwide is of jewelry condition, making it rarer to come by than even diamonds. There are turquoise and sterling silver pendants out there for over $1,200. And while genuine turquoise can garner a pretty penny, there’s no reason to be paying a designer price when we can bring you designer pieces for a remarkable price. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed. Try the Timeless Turquoise Pendant for 30 days. If it fails to delight, just send it back for a refund of the item price. Limited Availability. These are handcrafted artisan pieces, and we only have so many. Call today.
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Halifax EMC Solar + Storage Project Marks NC Milestone

Solar power is a growing resource for North Carolina’s electric cooperatives, although reliability of the renewable resource can be limited by, simply put, when the sun shines.
Innovations in energy storage are helping to make solar power available around the clock, and Enfieldbased Halifax Electric Membership Corporation (EMC), partnered with the North Carolina Electric Membership Corporation (NCEMC), recently marked a milestone by pairing solar power with battery storage. The 6.9-MWdc Grissom solar energy and battery storage project is the first utility scale “solar + storage” installation to be deployed by North Carolina’s electric cooperatives. At the end of 2020, there were only 73 projects of its kind in the country, according to the Energy Department’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “This pairing of solar energy with battery storage is important,” said Jimmy Wilkins, vice president of portfolio and resource optimization for North Carolina’s Electric Cooperatives. “Solar energy is most abundant during the middle of the day, but demand peaks in the late afternoon hours in the summer and early in the morning during winter. With this project, we are capturing a renewable resource when it’s most abundant, storing it and discharging it exactly when it’s needed — there’s a lot of potential here.”
The Grissom Solar project was developed by Asheville-based Pine Gate Renewables. It will generate enough energy to power approximately 1,030 homes annually, and NCEMC is buying the power under a long-term contract. In addition to the solar energy, Grissom provides 10 MWh of additional energy storage, expected to be dispatched during peak demand hours, helping to control costs.
“With this project, we are capturing a renewable resource when it’s most “The Grissom project is an important abundant, storing it and discharging it step toward meeting sustainability goals shared by North Carolina’s electric cooperatives,” said Halifax EMC Executive Vice President and exactly when General Manager Charles Guerry. it’s needed.” “Halifax EMC is excited to share new efforts to build a brighter future for our local communities — through innovation, sustainability, and a continued focus on reliability and meeting member needs.”
Brunswick Electric’s Cypress Creek solar sites utilize Lockheed Martin batteries.
More Solar + Storage for NC Co-ops The pairing of solar panels and energy storage creates a valuable, flexible resource, which North Carolina’s electric cooperatives are taking advantage of. Since late 2017, Supply-based Brunswick Electric has been utilizing 12 solar + storage sites with a capacity of 499 kilowatts (kW) each (smaller than what’s considered “utility scale”), managed by Cypress Creek Renewables. The sites provide Brunswick Electric with a combined 6 MW of power, used during times of peak demand. NCEMC is also developing 10 solar + storage sites with a combined capacity of 18 MW, paired with 2-hour batteries. These sites are planned to come online by the end of 2022.
Renewable Energy Grows to Second-Largest Source of U.S. Power
Last year, renewable energy sources — including wind, hydropower, solar, biomass and geothermal energy — generated about 21% of all the electricity generated in the United States, or a record 834 billion kWh. This put renewable generation surpassing both nuclear (790 billion kWh) and coal (774 billion kWh) for the first time on record, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
“This outcome in 2020 was due mostly to significantly less coal use in U.S. electricity generation and steadily increased use of wind and solar,” EIA said. “In 2020, U.S. electricity generation from coal in all sectors declined 20% from 2019.”
Renewables, including wind power and small-scale solar, increased by 9% during the period. Wind power, currently the most prevalent source of renewable electricity in the country, grew 14% in 2020 from 2019.
In coming years, EIA expects natural gas generation to remain dominant while other sources fluctuate. Coal is expected to rebound as the second-largest source in 2021, while renewables are expected to reclaim the #2 spot in 2022.
Annual U.S. Electricity Generation
(1990–2020)
billion kilowatthours (kWh)

Source: EIA Monthly Energy Review Note: This graph shows electricity net generation in all sectors (electric power, industrial, commercial, and residential) and includes both utility-scale and small-scale (customer-sited, less than 1 megawatt) solar.
Q: What was our main power source 100 years ago?
A: From the time our country was founded to the late 1800s, a typical family relied on wood as its primary source of energy, according to EIA. But the nation’s first commercial central power plant — Thomas Edison’s Pearl Street Station in Manhattan — used coal to create steam beginning in 1882. Several hydropower plants came online in the late 1800s, but coal technology continued to develop and overtook wood as our primary energy source by the turn of the century. “While the overall energy history of the United States is one of significant change as new forms of energy were developed, the three major fossil fuels [petroleum, natural gas and coal] have dominated the U.S. fuel mix for well over 100 years,” EIA said.

Celebrate National Drive Electric Week
National Drive Electric Week is September 25–October 3, which provides an opportunity to learn about electric vehicles (EVs) and determine if an EV is right for you. There are a few ways you can join in:
1Attend an event. Electric co-ops will be hosting events in communities around the state to introduce members to the benefits of driving electric. Find what’s happening near you from Plug-in NC, the statewide program affiliated with Raleigh-based Advanced Energy, at pluginnc.com.
2Plan an event. Nothing going on near you? Host your own event! Download a planning guide from Plug-in NC (bit.ly/plugin-event), or visit driveelectricweek.org.
3Learn more from your electric co-op. Use the opportunity to discuss EVs with your local electric co-op. Many offer incentives for driving electric, and all will be happy to discuss how an EV may make sense for you.
Moving Forward Through Farming

Agriculture is empowering Black youth at Sankofa Farms

By Pamela A. Keene Photos by Randy Berger Photography
Akemm Bell shows off Sankofa Farms peppers.
Self-described farmer, teacher and dreamer Kamal Bell lives his mission of connecting young African American boys to the land every day. But he’s about more than that. He’s an agent of change.
“There’s always been a difficult and troubled relationship between Blacks and farming; I set out to change that,” says Kamal, who was teaching at Lowe’s Grove Middle School in 2016 when he purchased 12 acres in Orange County with funding help from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. “I also saw that many of our families existed in a food desert, a place where fresh produce was expensive and hard to come by and home gardens didn’t exist.”
From that parcel of land in Cedar Grove grew Sankofa Farms LLC (sankofafarmsllc.com). As a schoolteacher, Kamal realized that connecting his Black students with the land would reap lifelong benefits in new and modern ways.
He invited several of his 7th-grade students out to visit the farm, which at that time was just rough land. Two of them — Kamoni King and Kamron Jackson — came as 12-year-olds and have since watched five acres of the farm morph into productive growing space with greenhouses and beehives.

Growing success

Building what became the farm’s Agricultural Academy took patience for Kamal. He’d invite out several students each year; one or two would stay and others would drop out. Brothers Jamil, 14, and Mikal Ali, 16, joined the academy four years ago because Jamil knew about Kamoni’s involvement. Andre Crooke, 16, and Sijaad James, 18, started the academy in March 2021.
“These students have helped with all aspects of creating the farm — from clearing the land and creating the infrastructure, to building the greenhouses, planting, tending and harvesting the crops,” he says. “They’re out here after school and on weekends, not only learning about farming, but learning leadership and life skills. They’re all on the payroll.”
Devin McAllister, Kamal’s friend from their studies together at NC A&T State University, is marketing director. Catarina Martinez, a student at Duke University, coordinates the farm’s Community Supported Agriculture program that sells fresh produce to consumers.
Additionally, Sankofa’s produce is distributed to retail locations around Orange County through Fight for $15, Duke Medical Root Causes and Table for NC.
“This way, we can help people who might not have regular access to fresh local foods at an affordable price,” Kamal says. “It’s such an accomplishment to be able to serve the community in this way and help address the food availability gap within minority groups.”
During the pandemic, the team completed the infrastructure. They planted their first produce seedlings in 2016, and they’ve been supplying locals with fresh food since October 2018.
(Left to right) student Jamil Ali, Sankofa Farms owner Kamal Bell and son Akemm, and student Mikal Ali.
Amber Bell serves as the farm’s community engagement director. “Giving people access to quality food, empowering these young people to become involved in agriculture and making a significant difference in their lives—that’s what this is all about.”


The farm recently created a lease-ahive program to introduce people to beekeeping and generate funding.

Deeper meaning
Students of the Agricultural Academy proudly refer to themselves as “Sankofites.” The farm’s name (pronounced SAHN-koh-fah) comes from a West African term meaning “to go back and get it,” symbolizing a quest for knowledge and represented by a mythical bird carrying an egg. “I translate it and understand it as ‘to remember your African ancestry as you move forward in life,’” Kamal says.
Crops include kale, tomatoes, cowpeas, peppers, radishes, watermelon, squash and okra. The farm maintains 65 beehives that this year produced 60 pounds of wildflower honey being sold through the Sankofa website.
The Bell family embraces the concept of Sankofa Farms; they live just a couple of miles away. Kamal’s wife, Amber, still teaches 4th grade and serves as the farm’s community engagement director.
“Our sons Kahlil, 7, and Akeem, 4, love to be out on the farm,” Kamal says. “Akeem loves the bees and has his own beekeeping channel on Instagram.”
As evidence of the farm’s success, Kamoni, 18, who graduated from high school this year, is headed off to North Carolina A&T State University to study agriculture. He will continue to be part of the academy, coming back on weekends. Kamron, 18, a certified beekeeper, is helping to develop the farm’s agritourism program, through “Bees in the TRAP” that stands for “Teaching Responsible Apiary Practices.” It teaches the basics of beekeeping.
Kamoni, and the other academy members, have embraced the philosophy of the farm.
“I’m going to build up the concept of the farm and pass it on to family and friends,” he says. “I will try to tell people around the world that land is wealth and wealth is power.”

Kamal has an even bigger vision for Sankofa Farms: clearing more land and building more greenhouses where the crops are grown, and working with Amber to create a program for young Black women.
He also says he wants to open a U-pick option, and the farm recently created a lease-a-hive program as a way to introduce more people to beekeeping and generate funding. From leasing a hive on site to supporting a hive virtually, donors receive honey, regular updates about their hive and consultations about beekeeping during the season.
“The joke when I was in college was that I was going to be a poor farmer after I graduated,” says Kamal, who’s now earning his doctorate in Agricultural Extension Education at NC State. “Frankly, where I am right now feels pretty good. But what’s really the most satisfying? Knowing that we’re giving people access to quality food, empowering these young people to become involved in agriculture and making a significant difference in their lives — that’s what this is all about. It’s so much bigger than farming and Sankofa.”
Pamela A. Keene is a freelance journalist who writes for magazines and newspapers across the Southeast and nationally.
carolinacountry.com/extras Witness Kamal’s passion firsthand as he teaches young Black men how to drive their communities forward.
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Kitchen Flops
Likely delicious, less than photogenic
Have you had a recipe come out, well, unsightly? Or maybe downright embarrassing? Make the best of it by sending us photos and stories about those baking and cooking flops that were so bad, they’re good. If you can share the recipe and an example of what it was supposed to look like, we’d appreciate that, too. We will pay $50 for each photo or story published in our December 2021 issue.
RULES
Deadline: September 30, 2021 One entry per household Digital photos should be a minimum of 1200 by 1800 pixels, prints a minimum of 4 x 6 inches. Include your name, electric co-op, mailing address and email address or phone number with your entry. Text should not exceed 200 words. If you would like us to return your photo print, include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. (We will not return others.) We retain reprint and online rights. Payment will be limited to those entries appearing in print, not entries featured solely on carolinacountry.com. SEND TO
Online: carolinacountry.com/ kitchenflops No emails, please. Mail: Carolina Country — Kitchen Flops 3400 Sumner Blvd. Raleigh, NC 27616
carolinacountry.com/extras

Check out the sorghum-syrup-molassesmaking process for yourself!
Mr. Doug readies loaded sorghum for processing by trimming the seed heads, which are sometimes fed to his cattle.
SWEET, SYRUPY GOODNESS
A culinary adventure following sorghum from field to biscuits
Story and photos by Wendy Perry
Before I set out on my latest culinary adventure, this time to the heights of our Blue Ridge Mountains, I needed to understand: Is what I’ve always called “molasses” truly that? Or was it just syrup some of us grew up calling molasses? One thing was (and remains) clear: I love it.
My earliest recollections of this tasty elixir was the jar, always there, on my grandma’s kitchen work table, beside a plate of soft butter and biscuits she’d made that morning. A great uncle had a “molasses cook’n” each fall when I was growing up, and Daddy would always take me there.
As a grownup, with never-ending curiosity for learning about and documenting “old-timey” food preparation methods, I road-tripped out to Western North Carolina to spend a day with one of the few NC farmers — Mr. Doug Harrell — still making sorghum syrup, or what he calls molasses syrup (and what I’ll just call the good stuff), the old way. I had a feeling I’d be putting all of my senses to work on this trip.
OUT IN THE FIELD
Meandering my way down winding back roads of Mitchell County as the sun was peeping through the trees, I was feeling a bit giddy, eager for the day ahead. When I arrived at Harrell Hill Farms on a cooking day last September, I could see the community spirit there at the molasses cookhouse, where family and friends were gathered. Mr. Doug, whose kind, gentle spirit and eagerness to share were immediately apparent on a prior phone call, moseyed over to greet me. He gave me a hug, as if we were longtime friends, this gentleman in his well-broke-in overalls, as comfortable as a second skin.
“Hop in the truck, Wendy,” he exclaimed. “Let’s go to the field!” The sun was just up, and no time to waste. Somehow, our ride — a tattered old truck — got us through a few mud pits along the path, remnants of Hurricane Laura that had skimmed through a few days prior and briefly delayed harvest.
As we came out from the wooded trail into an open field, we were met by a few of his 21 grandchildren, neighborhood youth and some 4-Hers, there to swoop up armfuls of the tall golden-green sorghum. Mr. Doug hopped on his tractor and quickly mowed down rows of stalks, which they loaded into the truck bed.
I took a deep breath of the pure, brisk mountain air, listening to the quiet crunch underfoot of the freshly mown sorghum as it was gathered.


INTO THE MILL
Mr. Doug’s granddaughter, Ashlyn “Lil’ Bit” McDaniel, hopped in the truck with us, and back to the cook shed we went with the first of many loads of sorghum. For hours on end, Lil’ Bit fed stalks into the cane mill, a chug-a-lug contraption from 1903, still doing its duty today. The room filled with the raw aroma of freshcrushed juice being strained and fed into a big repurposed dairy milk vat, where it would cook for hours for the next day’s syrup. I was fascinated to see how what looked like pond scum being extracted came to be liquid deliciousness.
The boiled juice from yesterday’s harvest was slowly released into the maze-like evaporator cooking pan, watched over so carefully by Mr. Doug’s brother, Larry. He’s the expert at this, continually stirring the mixture and skimming off impurities while keeping a close eye on the temperature. As the syrup cooked down and moved through the vats to the perfect temperature (between 232 and 243 degrees), a rich smell arose. The syrup reached the end of the pan, free of impurities and ready to move to the vat for bottling.

Larry carefully moves the finished hot syrup from the evaporator into the cooling and bottling tank. Using the decades-old, seasoned paddle, story author Wendy stirs the hot syrup as it reduces in the evaporator.

OFF TO THE TABLE
Mr. Doug’s daughter, Cyndi, turned a valve on and off, hundreds of times, meticulously bottling each and every jar of syrup. She’d then lower each into a vat of water to cool before boxing them up for local grocers, restaurants and a few family and friends.
It was there, holding my finger under that spigot for a drip, where I got my first taste of the day’s work. It was as good, no, better than any I could remember. I had seen all of the love and community spirit poured into each and every jar. And could taste it, too.
My heart was touched by Mr. Doug’s love of his trade, family and friends, and the legacy he is leaving on this community and land. Was I surprised to learn he was recently ordained as a minister? Or that a 2017 leukemia diagnosis hasn’t slowed him down? Nope. “Wendy, I just want to show folks that no matter what comes our way, we just have to keep on, and let Jesus lead the way,” Mr. Doug said.
Mr. Doug has been a steward of the farm, worked by his family since Hugh Harrell was granted the land in 1796, and his son has recently decided to move from Arizona to continue the family legacy.
I’ll admit: I’m still a tad confused about the whole syrup/ molasses thing. Technically, molasses is derived from sugar cane, and sorghum syrup comes from the sorghum like you’ll find on Harrell Hill Farms. But Mr. Doug calls his “molasses syrup,” since some of his customers call it one thing and some another. So we’ll go with that.
Now, pass me a biscuit, please.
Wendy Perry, a culinary adventurist and blogger, chats about goodness around NC on her blog at WendysHomeEconomics.com.
To buy your own
Harrell Hill Farms sells both sorghum syrup molasses as well as grass-fed beef directly from its farm. Please call or email first to check availability. Harrell Hill Farms 467 Byrd Road, Bakersville, NC 28705 828-467-0280 dougharrell68@gmail.com

Will Kornegay Ripe Revival Market’s Rocky Mount warehouse

Fresh Produce, Delivered
Will Kornegay is closing the gap between food excess and access
By Bridgette A. Lacy | Photos courtesy of Ripe Revival Market
In early 2020, Will Kornegay and his sister, Laura Hearn, were gearing up to expand distribution of locally sourced gummies produced through the company they co-created, Ripe Revival. And then the Covid19 pandemic hit. Retailers were no longer accepting new vendors; but Will saw an opportunity to launch a new project.
That April, he pivoted to sell boxes of meat, dairy, fruits and vegetables — sourced from North Carolina farms in season — for delivery to consumers’ front doors.
He focused his new company, called Ripe Revival Market (riperevivalmarket.com), on three pandemic challenges: consumers who wanted to avoid grocery stores and needed groceries delivered to their homes; Eastern NC farmers and local food distributors who needed new markets for their goods as restaurants, schools and other institutional buyers scaled back their operations; and the rising number of families experiencing food insecurity.
He also created the company’s Community Supported Produce Box, where purchasers receive a box of produce for themselves and a second box is donated to a North Carolina family struggling to access healthy food options.
In an effort to reduce food waste, the community-supported boxes feature 10 to 12 pounds of good but imperfect fruits and vegetables, such as potatoes with blemishes or fruits that are misshapen.
“It helps the farmer because it’s produce they couldn’t sell at a grocery store,” Will says. “It’s perfectly edible, but grocery stores won’t buy it.”
“Forty percent of produce is lost and left in the field every year because it’s considered ugly,” he continues. “At the same time, one in seven families in the U.S. face food insecurity. I want to bridge the gap between excess and access.”
Ripe Revival Market’s delivery area includes homes in Beaufort, Craven, Cumberland, Durham, Edgecombe, Greene, Lenoir, Nash, New Hanover, Onslow, Orange, Pitt, Wake, Wayne and Wilson counties.
“We distribute free boxes to families in Nash, Edgecombe, Wilson and Halifax counties,” he says.
Liz Lord, the senior engagement director for the Harrison Family YMCA in Rocky Mount, says families have been grateful and happy to receive fresh produce.
“We serve Nash and Edgecombe counties. A lot of food pantries have canned goods but not fresh, local produce. We deliver Will’s produce boxes to families,” Liz says. “There are a number of families that face transportation issues. They don’t have a vehicle, or gas money. Getting to the food can be a real issue. It’s hard if you live in a mobile home park in the county, or neighborhoods in the city, where they have to walk a tremendous distance. They don’t have a good way to access the supermarket, grocery stores.”
Will, a Rocky Mount native, always wanted to work in agriculture.
“My family didn’t farm, but I loved that lifestyle,” he says.
After graduating from NC State University with a bachelor’s in business administration and a concentration in marketing, he moved to Snow Hill. There he worked for the “Sweet Potato Man” himself, Bobby Ham, president of Ham Farms.
“It was my first job,” Will says. “I was immersed in produce and was able to see a large-scale operation of food production, processing and produce packaging. I gained an appreciation of farming, and began to realize small farmers needed help to utilize 100 percent of the crops.”
As a result, one of Will’s missions has become educating people about ugly produce.
“Just cut that defect out of it, it’s fine to eat,” he says. “It’s okay if it has a small crack or a small hole. That is just something that happens to fresh produce. It might have veins on it. Perfectly edible. We need to change how we look at that.”
Bridgette A. Lacy (bridgettelacy.com) is a freelance writer and the author of “Sunday Dinner, a Savor the South cookbook” by UNC Press.
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SEPTEMBER 2021
Bright Ideas Education Grants Application Deadline is September 15

Most teachers and students are eagerly anticipating the new school year, and looking forward to being back together in the classroom. If you’re an educator thinking creatively about how to best inspire students when they return, you still have time to apply for a Bright Ideas Education Grant. Each year, Brunswick Electric provides grants for up to $2,000 for innovative classroom projects that would otherwise go unfunded.
The deadline to apply for this cycle is Sept. 15, 2021. Instructions, frequently asked questions, and applications are available at NCBrightIdeas.com. We salute all teachers and are grateful for your creative problem solving, resourcefulness and dedication to the next generation.
The past school year was particularly challenging as teachers searched for new ways to engage their students in remote, classroom and hybrid learning. BEMC helped, with Bright Ideas Education grants going to 29 teachers who received $32,100 for online and in-person projects, benefitting more than 7,000 students in Brunswick and Columbus counties. Since its founding in 1994, the program has contributed more than $800,000 to area teachers.
Wanted: Your Current Contact Information
If your cell phone number or email address has changed since you became a member, letting us know can help you get better service. Here’s how.
1If the cell phone you use to report an outage is the one we have associated with your account, it can speed up the restoration process. Our system can automatically locate you. If we have your email address we can send you periodic emails containing important information and updates.
Email info@bemc.org or call (800) 842-5871 to update our records. Thanks for helping us serve you better.
2
BEMC offices will be closed Monday, September 6, for Labor Day. Have a safe and relaxing weekend!
Here’s How to Participate in Your 2021 Virtual Annual Meeting

Due to continued COVID-19 safety precautions, there will be no in-person Brunswick EMC membership meeting this year. The business portion of the 2021 meeting will be held in a virtual format and will be broadcast at 10:30 a.m. on September 25. Members will have the opportunity to register and vote for the Board of Directors at all three office locations on September 23 and September 24.
Gifts will be available to the first 2,000 members who register and vote, and all those who register and vote will be eligible for prize drawings. The drawings will be held during the virtual meeting, and prizes will be mailed to the winners. Information about how to attend the virtual business meeting, and how to submit questions to be answered during the meeting, will be posted on social media and at bemc.org.
We hope to hold an in-person meeting next year, with all the accompanying festivities. For now, the important things to remember for this year are: è There will be no in-person
Annual Meeting è You can attend the virtual business portion of the Annual Membership
Meeting Saturday, September 25, 2021, at 10:30 a.m. è Information on how to attend the meeting, and how to submit questions ahead of time, will be posted on social media and at bemc.org.
è Register and vote for your Board of
Directors at any office location on
September 23 from 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. and September 24 from 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
è Gifts will be available for the first 2,000 members who register and vote
è Those who register and vote will be eligible for prize drawings

Energy Efficiency Tip of the Month
Find yourself sitting in carpool lines now that school is back in session? Minimize idling your car by turning off your engine when your vehicle is parked for more than 10 seconds. Idling can use a quarter to a half gallon of fuel per hour, depending on engine size and air conditioner use, adding up to three cents of wasted fuel a minute.
Source: energy.gov
BRUNSWICK ELECTRIC
MEMBERSHIP CORPORATION CUSTOMER SERVICE {800)842-5871 I OUTAGE REPORTING (800)682-5309
Shallotte (910) 754-4391 I Southport / Oak Island (910)457-9808 I Whiteville (910)642-5011 00
P.O. Box 826, Shallotte, NC 28459 www.bemc.org I email: newsletter@bemc.org I Auto bill payment 24/7 (866)934-6830
BOARD OF DIRECTORS

This institution is an equal opportunit y provider and employer. Frederick Tedder John Ward Deborah Ahlers Perry Sellers Joshua L. Winslow
President Vice President Calvin Duncan Dan Strickland
CEO/General Manager
Moses Herring David Gore Larry Fowler Glenn Humbert Dennis Worley







