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East River Electric Restores Wholesale Power Supply Outages following Severe Weather

East River Electric Restores Wholesale Power Supply Outages following Severe Weather

On Sunday, East River Electric Power Cooperative restored power to all of the cooperative’s wholesale power supply substations after severe weather caused extensive damages on May 12 throughout much of eastern South Dakota and western Minnesota. East River Electric’s wholesale power supply service area covers eastern South Dakota and portions of western Minnesota, and high winds damaged the utility’s transmission power lines and substation infrastructure across much of their system. Although East River has reenergized its substations, some member consumers may remain out of power until their local distribution cooperative is able to repair power lines damages to their local distribution system.

At the height of the event on Thursday evening, 56 East River Electric substations as well as seven municipal customers served by East River were out of power across the cooperative’s service area. East River had over 200 transmission structures damaged spanning a range from Yankton, S.D. to Dumont, M.N. Repairs will continue on those broken transmission power line structures over the coming days. The cooperative’s transmission system is built such that, even if a transmission line is out of service, power can be rerouted to prevent power outages while the lines are being repaired.

“Thank you to the region’s cooperative consumers for your patience and understanding as we worked over the past few days to repair damages and restore power throughout the region,” said East River Electric General Manager and CEO Tom Boyko. “I would also like to thank our teams for their incredible work and dedication to safely restore our system following this severe weather event. As an example of the dedication shown by East River’s employees, in just a 12-hour span on Friday, employees energized 24 substations and restored power to more than 8,000 member consumers.”

The cooperative is reminding the public to never approach downed or damaged power lines and to always treat damaged lines as if they are energized.

East River Electric Works to Restore Power following Severe Weather Event

East River Electric Works to Restore Power following Severe Weather Event

East River Electric Power Cooperative continued making progress on restoring power to thousands of electric cooperative consumers on Friday after severe weather caused extensive damages throughout much of eastern South Dakota and western Minnesota. East River Electric’s wholesale power supply service area covers eastern South Dakota and portions of western Minnesota, and high winds damaged the utility’s transmission power lines and substation infrastructure across much of their system.

At the height of the event on Thursday evening, 56 East River Electric substations as well as seven municipal customers served by East River were out of power across the cooperative’s service area. East River also had at least 20 areas with significant transmission structure damages. Throughout the storm and overnight, East River Electric’s system operations personnel worked to reroute power and restore members as soon as possible.

As of 12 p.m. on Friday, 17 East River substations and 2 municipal customers remained without power, impacting approximately 9,100 member consumers. Crews are continuing to work diligently to rebuild damaged lines and repair impacted substation equipment.

“We would like to thank the region’s cooperative consumers for your patience and understanding as we repair damages and restore power throughout the region,” said East River Electric General Manager and CEO Tom Boyko. “Our teams are working diligently to safely restore our system following this severe weather event.”

As a reminder, never approach damaged or downed power lines.

East River Electric Power Cooperative Restores Power to 22 Substations, 5 Substations Still Without Power

East River Electric Power Cooperative Restores Power to 22 Substations, 5 Substations Still Without Power

As of 5 p.m. on April 11, East River Electric Power Cooperative has restored power to 22 substations that lost power due to the April blizzard. East River still has 5 substations without power. Those substations are located near Humboldt, Trent, Wentworth and Corsica. Crews hope to restore power to the Humboldt substation yet this evening, pending weather conditions. Due to extensive damages and poor conditions, the substations near Trent and Wentworth will remain without power overnight. The substation near Corsica in Douglas County will also remain offline overnight but crews were able to reroute power from that substation to another source. The cooperative’s substation near Alcester lost power shortly before 5 p.m. on April 11 and crews are mobilizing to assess the cause.

Along with the substation outages, there are downed powerlines on parts of the transmission system and crews are currently working to repair those structures. Consumers in the affected areas could see outages into Friday.

East River Electric is the wholesale power provider to 24 distribution electric cooperatives and one municipal electric system in eastern South Dakota and western Minnesota.

To view a map of outages affecting rural electric cooperatives in South Dakota, please visit the South Dakota Rural Electric Association’s online outage map: https://outages.sdrea.coop/outages/maps

East River Electric Power Cooperative Experiencing Power Outages due to April Blizzard

East River Electric Power Cooperative Experiencing Power Outages due to April Blizzard

The combination of ice, snow and wind due to the April blizzard is affecting the transmission system of East River Electric Power Cooperative. East River Electric is the wholesale power provider to 24 distribution electric cooperatives and one municipal electric system in eastern South Dakota and western Minnesota.

As of 8 a.m. on April 11, East River Electric has 27 substations without power. Most of the affected substations are located in Miner, Lake, Moody and Minnehaha counties. Clay, Lincoln, Union and Yankton counties in southeastern South Dakota are also experiencing outages due to the storm. The cooperative’s crews have mobilized to assess damages and start repairs where possible. Power to some of the affected substations has been rerouted to other sources. There are downed powerlines on parts of the transmission system but because of poor visibility and travel conditions crews have not been able to reach all areas to assess the full extent of the damage and make needed repairs. Consumers could see outages throughout the day today and possibly into Friday.

To view a map of outages affecting rural electric cooperatives in South Dakota, please visit the South Dakota Rural Electric Association’s online outage map: https://outages.sdrea.coop/outages/maps

East River Electric Presents Employee Service Awards

East River Electric Presents Employee Service Awards

East River Electric Power Cooperative recently presented service awards to 18 employees with years of service ranging from five to 40 years.

“I’d like to congratulate this year’s service award recipients and thank them for their dedication to East River Electric,” said East River General Manager Tom Boyko.

East River Human Resources Administrator Val Manthey, one of this year’s service award recipients, began working at East River 40 years ago. She started as a part-time printing assistant in 1977 and worked her way up in the cooperative from a personnel records clerk through a variety of human resources roles to her current position.

“I certainly never thought when I walked through East River’s doors on June 1, 1977 to start a part-time job while I went to college that it would lead to a lifelong career,” said Manthey.

She said that many things have changed at East River since 1977, particularly the cooperative’s campus. When Manthey started, East River’s operations were housed in a headquarters building, a service center and an old brick garage. At that time, the cooperative’s general manager lived in the headquarter building’s upper level. Today, East River operates eight service centers in eastern South Dakota and western Minnesota in addition to its main campus buildings in Madison.

“One thing that hasn’t changed over the years is the professionalism of our workforce and the desire of our employees to do great work,” said Manthey.

As for her advice on how to build a successful career with one company, Manthey said, “A coworker advised me many years ago that if I was offered an opportunity to learn new things or take on more responsibility, go for it. Things may not happen as fast as you’d like, but enthusiasm and good work is noted and rewarded.”

East River presented the service awards during an all-staff meeting and spouses of the recipients were invited to attend. After the awards ceremony, the group moved to Library Park for an employee appreciation lunch.

A listing of the awards is as follows:

  • Five years: Stephen Haider, Jacob Slaathaug and Logan Anderson
  • Ten years: Ken Clements, Devin O’Day, Nicholas Reiff and Michele Whitlock
  • Fifteen years: Larry DeKramer and John Ebsen
  • Twenty years: Janis Dailing, Bob Gale, Jamie Denne, Erik Traxler, Greg Hollister, Travis Olson and Joanne Lovro
  • Thirty-five years: Doug Engbrecht
  • Forty years: Val Manthey

Group photo caption: East River Electric service awards were presented to (back, left) Stephen Haider, Jamie Denne, Nicholas Reiff, Ken Clements, John Ebsen and Jacob Slaathaug; (middle, left) Travis Olson, Logan Anderson, Erik Traxler, Bob Gale, Larry DeKramer and Doug Engbrecht; (front, left) Janis Dailing, Val Manthey, Joanne Lovro and Michele Whitlock. Not pictured: Devin O’Day and Greg Hollister.

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