Your Voice, Your Vote

July 2024

The Issues That Are Shaping Your Co-Op’s Future

Today’s electricity industry is facing challenges and changes that could impact the way SVEC brings power to our consumer-members.

While these changes affect electric systems across the country, the conversation around them often focuses on urban areas rather than rural communities. That’s why it is important for cooperatives and the people they serve to make their voices heard when it comes to important energy issues.

Here, you can find a summary of some of the biggest issues facing today’s electric cooperatives and contact information for the people who represent us in Tallahassee and Washington, D.C.

Disaster Relief Assistance

Electric cooperatives depend on Federal Emergency Management Agency reimbursements to help mitigate the cost of restoring power after natural disasters.

Co-ops believe federal processes should be streamlined to ensure timely reimbursements and reduce the interest payments on loans communities rely on while waiting for those reimbursements. Co-ops support the FEMA Loan Interest Payment Relief Act (H.R. 2672/S. 1180) that is being championed in Washington, D.C., by many of Florida’s elected representatives.

Regulations on Utility Pole Attachments

Electric cooperatives own and maintain millions of utility poles. While the primary purpose of these poles is to support the delivery of reliable electric service, co-ops can lease access to communications companies to support the deployment of broadband and other communications infrastructure.

Co-ops and communications providers regularly work together to reach mutually beneficial agreements on terms for these “pole attachment” leases, negating the need for any new onerous regulations.

Electric cooperatives believe Congress must reject any attempt to add new regulatory and compliance burdens to rules for utility pole attachments.

EPA’s Power Plant Rule

Co-ops support environmental proposals that keep our air and water clean without jeopardizing our mission of providing reliable and affordable power.

The Environmental Protection Agency has announced a final rule to require increasingly stringent carbon dioxide emissions controls at coal and new natural gas power plants unless they shut down or curtail their operations.

Electric cooperatives believe the EPA’s rule exceeds the agency’s reach by asserting vast new authority of major economic and political significance without a clear statement from Congress. Its rule also mandates inadequately demonstrated technologies and unachievable emissions limits in an unworkable timeframe.

The EPA should withdraw this rule as it will jeopardize affordable and reliable electricity by forcing the premature closure of always available power plants while also making it harder to permit, site and build critical new power plants.

Reconnecting Rural America Act

Access to broadband creates new ways to live, learn and earn in rural America. But the economics of deploying reliable, high-speed internet in rural areas is a challenge.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has been a longtime trusted partner for rural economic development efforts, and many cooperatives are leveraging the USDA ReConnect Program to deploy broadband networks.

The recently introduced ReConnecting Rural America Act (H.R. 4227/S. 1642) would codify the USDA’s ReConnect program, taking important steps to make the program permanent and ensure that rural communities are served by broadband networks that are scalable and able to keep pace with growing consumer demands.

Let Your Voice be Heard

It’s important for every SVEC consumer-member to know about the challenges facing electric cooperatives and that we make sure our leaders hear our concerns. Here is their contact information:

U.S. Senators

Sen. Marco Rubio
300 N. Hogan St.
Suite #8-111
Jacksonville, FL 32202
904-354-4300
Website
Sen. Rick Scott
400 W. Bay Street
Suite 289
Jacksonville, FL 32202
904-479-7227
Website

U.S. Representatives

Rep. Kat Cammack
(Columbia, Hamilton, Lafayette
and Suwannee counties)
House District 3
5550 NW 111th Boulevard
Suite A
Gainesville, FL 32653
352-505-0838
Website
Rep. Neal Dunn
(Small portion of northern
Lafayette County)
House District 2
300 South Adams St.
Tallahassee, FL 32301
850-891-8610
Website

State Senators

Rep. Jason Shoaf
(Hamilton, Lafayette and
Suwannee counties)
House District 7
103 East Ellis St.
Perry, FL 32347
850-295-5680
Website
Rep. Robert Charles
“Chuck” Brannan III
(Columbia County)
House District 10
1262 Southeast Baya Drive
Lake City, FL 32025
386-758-0405
Website

State Representatives

Sen. Corey Simon
(Hamilton, Lafayette and
Suwannee counties)
Senate District 3
303 Senate Building
404 South Monroe St.
Tallahassee, FL 32399
850-487-5003
Website
Sen. Jennifer Bradley
(Columbia County)
Senate District 6
By Appointment Only
184 N. Marion Ave.
Lake City, FL 32055
904-278-2085
Website

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