3 groups, 1 goal: Oust Cobb EMC board of directors
by Kim Isaza
newseditor@mdjonline.com
September 15, 2011 11:52 PM | 5225 views | 13 13 comments | 22 22 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Three men head three different groups that all have the same stated goal in representing the Cobb EMC membership: Dump the current Cobb EMC board of directors. Above: Tripper Sharp, Cobb EMC Owners Association.<br>Staff/File
view slideshow (3 images)
MARIETTA — Saturday will be showdown day for members of Cobb EMC, who will meet for the first time since 2008. How members vote on the mail-in ballots issue on Saturday will likely indicate how long the tenure of the co-op’s 10 directors will continue.

Three groups — Cobb EMC Owners Association, Take Back Cobb EMC and Cobb EMC Watch — have been reaching out to members online and in person, all with the stated goal of ousting the current directors.

Leaders of all three groups are predicting that members will pack Piedmont Church for the meeting, which begins at 10:15 a.m. They are also optimistic that members will reject mail-in ballots for director elections, as they are urging.

The groups oppose mail-in ballots because there is no limit on how much money or other resources the EMC can expend in promoting its candidates, which the reform crowd sees as an unfair advantage.

Sam Kelly, a vice president at the cooperative, said turnout “is anyone’s guess.”

The cooperative is urging members to vote for mail-in ballots.

Piedmont Church is at 570 Piedmont Road, Marietta, 30066. Registration begins at 8 a.m. After the meeting concludes at 12:30 p.m., voting will be open until 5 p.m. The mail-in ballot issue is one of two on Saturday’s ballot. The second is whether to limit future compensation of directors.

Unofficial ballot results are expected shortly after voting ends on Saturday.

Here’s a look at each of the reform groups:

Cobb EMC Owners Association


All six members who filed the derivative lawsuit in 2007 formed this group earlier this year, said Tripper Sharp, one of those plaintiffs.

“We have no special purpose other than we are members getting involved in their EMC and standing up against the wrongs we believe have been committed against the members,” he said.

The group’s mission statement spells out its purpose: “To replace Cobb EMC’s incumbent Board with members who will place the interests of the members as their highest priority while assuring the well-being of the EMC’s employees and overseeing the prudent fiscal management of the corporation.”

On Saturday, Sharp said he expects the mail-in ballots amendment to be rejected by a wide margin, and the second question, on limiting future compensation of directors, to pass by a wide margin.

“If everybody who has said they’re coming on Saturday shows up, we’ll need three of those churches,” he said. He was also critical of the EMC meeting ads that highlight the voting portion, which is from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., and mention nothing about the members’ meeting, which begins at 10:15 a.m.

“They clearly don’t want people to attend the presentations. They don’t want people to hear the truth,” Sharp said. “It’s just another way they’re trying to manipulate things.”

Cobb EMC Owners Association has held two meetings, each attended by 40 to 50 people, Sharp said. The group’s email mailing list numbers more than 2,000 people, he said.

If successful in replacing a majority of board members, the Cobb EMC Owners Association wants, first and foremost, to see a full forensic audit done.

“And for that audit to be made available to the membership,” Sharp said. “We are definitely asking for more openness and transparency in how the board operates. This is a membership-owned cooperative. They need to be responsive to the members questions and needs.

“The board needs to get back to the basics: providing electricity to members at the lowest possible cost. That seems to have gotten lost over the years,” he said.

Sharp said the Owners Association does “agree on a lot of things” with one of the other reform groups, Take Back Cobb EMC.

“We have a similar goal, and we do talk about things,” Sharp said. “I don’t think we’ve done any events together, but we’re keeping the communication open.”

The Owners Association operates through donations.

“We have a donation form on our website, and we’ve received some donations that way,” he said. “The signs we’ve printed were donated. The website has been donated by actual members. And we (the plaintiffs) have all kicked in a little bit. We’re on a very tight budget. … We’re just a group of regular members trying to make a difference at Cobb EMC.”

Take Back Cobb EMC


Joel Mendelson, campaign coordinator of this group, says its “sole focus is rooting out corruption at Cobb EMC by electing a new and accountable board of directors.”

Although initially it was a project of the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, Mendelson said his group now has no environmental motives.

“We want whatever’s in the best financial interest of EMC members,” he said.

He also predicts a large turnout of reform-minded members on Saturday.

“My prediction is we’re going to have a whole heck of a lot of members, with the majority of them voting no on the mail-in ballots,” Mendelson said. “I think the church is going to be pretty packed.”

Mendelson said his group has about 1,000 people on its email list.

“I would say that’s our core base,” he said.

Take Back Cobb EMC also wants a forensic audit of the electric cooperative’s financials, if a new board is elected.

“We want to see the new board members hire a forensic audit firm that would go through every dollar that was spent by the previous board under the direction of Dwight Brown,” he said. “From that, we are hopeful that the current board will then make decisions that lead to the lowering of our electric rates.”

His group’s main goals are financial accountability, transparency and honesty with EMC membership.

“This is a community-based group for EMC members that want to root out corruption, clean up EMC, and bring it back into the hands of the members,” Mendelson said.

Like the Cobb EMC Owners Association, his group relies on donations, but has also securing grants from private foundations. And he was quick to make clear that the groups gets no money from the Sierra Club.

“We have nothing to do with the Sierra Club,” he said. “We are not their partner, nor are we getting one penny from (New York City) Mayor Bloomberg that was mentioned in the court filing.”

The directors, in arguing to the court last month why they should not be limited in spending for their preferred candidates, said they were up against vast environmental resources such as the $50 million Bloomberg pledged to the Sierra Club to fight coal-fired plants.

Cobb EMC Watch


This group, led by Tom Barksdale, is the smallest of the three, with core supporters numbering about 30 and an email roster of between 500 and 1,000.

It is an initiative of the Cobb Alliance for Smart Energy, which was formed in 2008 in reaction to Cobb EMC’s plans to build Plant Washington, a coal-fired plant in Sandersville.

“By 2009, CASE decided the time had come to commit ourselves to reform Cobb EMC by getting new members elected to the board, and that’s when we established Watch,” Barksdale said. “Elections are our best chance to change EMC for both the cause of the customers and the cause of environmentalism.”

Like the other reform groups, Barksdale expects a large turnout on Saturday.

“I am confident the members are going to reject mail-in voting,” he said.

His group likewise shares the others’ expectations for transparency and accountability from a new board.

“This board has become arrogant and disdainful in its approach to members,” he said. “At the 2008 meeting, a resolution was passed from the floor calling for the current leaders to resign, and it passed overwhelmingly. They said it was just an ‘advisory’ vote, and turned right around and introduced an amendment to make it more difficult for members to offer resolutions from the floor. We want that type of attitude done away with.”

But Cobb EMC Watch also wants board meetings open to members.

“Right now, you as a member, can’t go to a board meeting. That is a travesty. Cobb EMC could certainly allow its members to attend meetings, and go into executive session as needed. Plus, we’d like to see town-hall meetings now and then. We want more democracy, and more information on how they arrive at decisions.”

Cobb EMC Watch relies on donations from members.

“We do not get funds from the environmental groups, or any other special-interest groups,” Barksdale said. “We see ourselves as the real independent voice of the Cobb EMC reform movement.”
Comments
(13)
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Dan Davis
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September 18, 2011
@anonymous: You've missed the critical point here. If every current director was seated by appointment, and has always run unopposed after that, then we have a broken system that ensures that the seated board is a star chamber of career board members who are hand-picked by the board itself.

At this point, you need to ask yourself "Why immediately appoint a new board member when there is an open seat? There is a member meeting every year; why not have a special election and let the members elect a new director? Can the board not function for a few months with one empty seat?"

The answer is obvious. This system works for the company.

If I am appointed to my seat by the board, then run unopposed for 20 years, have I ever really been selected by the membership?
EMC Member
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September 17, 2011
Why is it not a secret ballot? Why do they require your name and address on the ballot? You've already shown your ID to get the ballot. It doesn't make sense to me.

EMC member
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September 17, 2011
DO NOT VOTE YES ON AMENDMENT # 1. IT IS FOR MAIL IN VOTES, THIS IS WHAT OUR CURRENT CORRUPT BOARD WANTS. IT IS

TOO EASY TO MANIPULATE THE VOTES IN THEIR FAVOR. THEY WANT TO STAY IN CONTROL , PLEASE DO NOT HAND THEM THIS WITH MAIL IN VOTES. DO YOU REALLY THINK THEY WANT MAXIMUM PARTICIPATION? HA, I THINK NOT!
anonymous
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September 16, 2011
So if they faced re-elction, then I guess they were re-elected. Thanks for making my point. Not trying to be sarcastic. But to imply that there is not an a election process to be on the board is wrong. I have atttended over 15 annual meetings and in those years there has been contested elections.
anonymous
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September 16, 2011
Remember to vote Yes on Amendment #1 to maximize participation in future elections.
Dan Davis
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September 16, 2011
@anonymous: No member of the current board was ORIGINALLY seated via an election. Each one was appoinred by the board due to the death or retirement of a sitting director. Kim Isaza, in an earlier article, reports that Sam Kelly confirmed this.

They were, of course, subsequently re-elected. They probably ran unopposed, and, though Cobb EMC now has nearly 200,000 members, the bylaws still state that only 100 members are required to constitute a quorum.

While it is unfortunate that member turnout for elections is historically low, the other side of that complacency coin is that members had no reason to believe that there was a need to replace current directors until certain facts began to come to light about 4 years ago.

It's strsnge. At multiple points across the past four years, that trust could have been restored through an open, transparent posture. Instead, the wagons were circled and an aggessive PR campaign began that sought to create an illusion of what all of us genuinely wished was the reality. Human nature wins: In the absence of facts, we assume the worst. And all too often these days, we are right.
EMC Hostage
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September 16, 2011
To clarify comments below. Not one of the current board members was initially elected to their seat on the board. All were appointed by the existing board. Some have faced re-election. Most were reelected by acclamation. In other words, most of the board has never been opposed in reelection. The Cobb EMC Board of Directors is a self-perpetuating board.
anonymous
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September 16, 2011
The notion that the current directors were not elected is completely wrong. The person saying this either doesn't know better or manipulating the truth. Cobb EMC held elections every year through 2007. To my knowledge there is only one director that has not been on a ballot. And, that is only because there has not been election since 2008.
Vote for Members
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September 16, 2011
Most people reading this article will show up to vote. But you can tell your neighbors, because most of my neighbors do not read the MDJ and are not natives of this county. They have no clue. Even offer your neighbors a ride to go vote.

Start the process of ridding Cobb EMC of this entire board. And hope that DA Pat Head finally gets his act together and has an indictment against D. Brown that will stick, so Cobb EMC's God, Brown, will go to trail.
EMC member
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September 16, 2011
Replace this current corrupt board. As it stands now it's like having the foxes guarding the hen house. The only house they need to be in is the big house (jail). Vote NO on THEIR plan for mail in votes!! Out with the old in with the new, get rid of them!
Sunday's NEWS
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September 16, 2011
Hopefully in the upcoming MDJ's Sunday issue, we will read some great news about the beginning of the fall of the so called "directors" of Cobb EMC. The ones who were never elected by Cobb EMC members/customers. They just elected themselves.

rjsnh
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September 16, 2011
If ever a complete overhaul of a board were necessary,this is it. It is the only way to restore credibility and confidence in this organization. Greed and corruption destroyed became the order of the day and it is high time for a new day and new leadership.
KSused
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September 16, 2011
All of these groups need donations. I have personally donated to Take Back Cobb EMC and Cobb EMC Owners Association by going to their websites since I can't volunteer. I realize money is tight for everyone, but it costs money to go against the 'Board'. If you haven't received the card in the mail like I did today, it was sent first class mail. If they did that for all 170,000 possible 'owners' then they have already spent about $3k on that mailing alone.......what do you think they will spend on the elections. Times are tight and that is what they are depending on.....keep up the pressure MDJ ! ! !
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