Currents august2017

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Suwannee Valley

www.svec-coop.com

We’re here to serve

(8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. • Monday - Friday, Lobby Hours)

Business Office: 800-447-4509 (8 a.m. - 5 p.m. • Monday - Friday)

Power Outage Reporting (Day, Night, Weekends & Holidays)

800-752-0025 SERVING THE SUWANNEE VALLEY OWNED BY THOSE WE SERVE 11340 100th Street • Live Oak, FL 32060

facebook.com/sveccoop

@SVEC_COOP_FL

CEO’S COR NER

Working together Michael S. McWaters Executive V.P./CEO

Few things illustrate what it means to be a community like the start of a new school year. We see school bus drivers ferrying kids across town, police officers assisting with traffic and teachers working to educate students who will one day grow up to fill those roles themselves. Back-to-school season is a reminder of just how much we have to pull together to make even the most routine events a reality. At SVEC, we’re proud to be part of a community filled with people who work hard for each other, and we strive to serve you with the same dedication every day. Sometimes that commitment means doing our part to educate future generations about how cooperatives work and the role they play in our country. One way we’re able to do that is through the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association Youth Tour in our nation’s capital. This year, SVEC sponsored two local students, giving them the opportunity to meet with lawmakers and other Youth Tour representatives from across the country. You can read more about their experience and what they learned in this newsletter. At other times, building a stronger community is simply about bringing our members together and allowing them to share their stories. This month, we took the opportunity to speak with one of our members, Bobby Barth, about his career as a guitar player for bands like Axe and Blackfoot. We think you’ll enjoy reading about his unique background and why he loves the Suwannee Valley. I hope all of our members who are going back to school have a strong start to the academic year. As always, it’s an honor for all of us at SVEC to serve you. 

currents August 2017

Country and cooperatives Teens represent SVEC at co-op association youth tour Riley Boss saw the sponsor signs for Suwannee Valley Electric Cooperative at sporting events and at functions around town. But it wasn’t until she and Bryce Puckett, both high school seniors, attended the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association Youth Tour in Washington, D.C., that she realized the vital role their cooperative plays. They learned it’s about much more than providing electricity. It’s about serving the community. Boss, of Branford, and Puckett, of Live Oak, participated in the Florida Electric Cooperatives Youth Tour of Tallahassee, earning the trip to Washington by scoring the highest on a written test on their knowledge of electric cooperatives and SVEC. One of the speakers during the sevenday tour explained details about a cooperative’s function in a community, Puckett says. “I just thought they provided power, but they have such a big role in our community,” he says. Cooperatives work for the sustainable development of their communities through policies supported by the membership. “They want to grow and become better, and it’s because they want to give back to our community,” Boss says. “We learned about the principles of the electric cooperative and how they relate to everyday life.” While the 17-year-olds gained new knowledge about the cooperative model, they also learned about the government, including its connection with electricity regulations.

Riley Boss, left, and Bryce Puckett had an opportunity to visit the Washington Monument in the National Mall as a part of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Youth Tour in Washington, D.C.

The teens met members of Congress and visited the Capitol, museums, monuments and memorials. “It was my first time in an art museum, and I loved seeing all the famous paintings I’d only seen before in pictures,” Puckett says. An unexpected treat was a visit to the World War II Memorial on a day when a large number of veterans also visited, Boss says. “We were able to talk to them, and that was really cool,” she says. The National Museum of African American History and Culture and the Holocaust Memorial Museum were on the tour. “It was really interesting to learn about the history,” Puckett says. “We learned things we didn’t learn in school.” The friendships made with teens from 46 states were unexpected, as well as the breadth of the learning opportunity. “It opened my eyes and gave me more respect for our country than I had before,” Boss says. 


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Currents august2017 by SVEC - Issuu