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The
Municipal Electric Power Association of Kentucky known
as MEPAK, has been working for Kentucky's city-owned
power companies since 1975. These public
utilities are owned by citizens and exist solely to
provide essential services.
Because
more than half of these utilities also provide water
treatment and sewer services, it seemed like a natural
fit for MEPAK to partner with the Municipal Water and
Waste Water Association of Kentucky
(MWWAK).
A
younger, but equally important, association in its own
right, MWWAK had recently started looking for an
organization with which it could
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an organization that would strongly represent
"municipal water interests." After
striking out on its own, MWWAK began months of talks
and negotiations with MEPAK.
On July
27, 2007, the boards of MEPAK and MWWAK held their first
official joint meeting to ratify a Joint Operating
Agreement and create a Joint Operating
Committee. Not surprisingly, the partnership has
flourished ever since!
MWWAK
brought its 30-memberstrong association alongside
MEPAK's 29 members to form the Kentucky Municipal
Utilities Association (KMUA). The organization's
members take pride in providing low-cost, efficient
and reliable service to nearly one million citizens throughout
Kentucky.
The two
organizations agreed to a two-year trial period, after
which a full merger is expected in July 2009. In
the meantime, both organizations will retain their
respective boards of directors and remain separate
organizations. At the joint board meeting in
July 2007, MEPAK Executive Director Libby Marshall
retired, and Annette DuPont-Ewing was hired as executive
director of the new KMUA.
KMUA's
59 members provide essential services - electric
power, water, waste water, natural gas and
telecommunications - in their respective
communities. These locally owned, locally
operated utilities are governed by city officials or
independent utility boards appointed by city
officials, and they are now represented in Frankfort
and Washington by KMUA. Like its two
predecessors, KMUA continues to share knowledge,
support progress, and influence governmental affairs,
but now with greater grass roots support, strength and
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