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REC acquisition could lower bills
Rappahannock Electric Cooperative's purchase of part of Potomac Edison should benefit customers and bring more jobs to the area

Date published: 5/15/2009

BY CATHY JETT

Rappahannock Electric Cooperative's customers will see results of its recently announced acquisition of a portion of Potomac Edison where it counts: their bills.

Fredericksburg-based REC should be able to stabilize rates because it will be able to spread costs for such things such as equipment over nearly twice as many users, said President and CEO Kent D. Farmer.

"REC decided to buy it because it gave us 50,000 more customers and not that many more miles of line," he said. "We believe in the long run it will mean lower rates for existing customers and, in the long run, for Potomac Electric customers as well."

The cooperative and the Mount Crawford-based Shenandoah Valley Electric Cooperative are buying Potomac Edison Co.'s Virginia electric distribution operation for $340 million. That's about 6 percent of Potomac Edison's current coverage area. Besides Virginia, it serves parts of Maryland, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

"The sale will enable us to focus on our core states and generation," said Mark Nitowski, spokesman for Potomac Edison's parent company, Pennsylvania-based Allegheny Energy. "Our Virginia territory is a good growth area, but it is a small part of our business."

REC will gain portions of Clarke, Frederick and Warren counties and the towns of Madison and Stanardsville once the Virginia State Corporation Commission approves the sale, as is expected, at the end of the year. It also will pick up additional areas in Albemarle, Greene, Fauquier, Madison, Orange and Rappahannock counties, localities in which it already operates.

The sale will affect about 102 Potomac Edison employees, but REC and Shenandoah Valley have agreed to offer them employment. REC will get approximately 50 of these, most of whom are linemen, Farmer said.

The company also will need to hire additional staff. Linemen and servicemen for the new areas will work out of REC's Culpeper office, while back-office jobs such as accounting, customer service and technical maintenance will be consolidated at its office in the Four-Mile Fork Industrial Park.

"We're still working on developing the details of integrating their system into ours, so we don't know the number at this point," Farmer said.


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Date published: 5/15/2009



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