About
Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corporation (AECC) and Arkansas Electric Cooperative, Inc. (AECI), along with the state’s 17 electric cooperatives, are known collectively as the Electric Cooperatives of Arkansas.
History
1932
In 1932, President Franklin Roosevelt created the New Deal program in the hopes of jump-starting the post-Depression economy. Within the New Deal program, President Roosevelt included funding for rural electrification, paving the way for Arkansas Governor Carl E. Bailey to sign legislation allowing the incorporation of electric cooperatives in Arkansas.
1937
In 1937, the first electric cooperative utility pole was erected in Arkansas by First Electric Cooperative in Jacksonville, marking the development of a system that now covers 60% of the state’s land area.
1940
In 1940, 112,050 people in Arkansas had electricity while the population of the state stood at 1.95 million. The majority of Arkansans with electricity lived in cities and large towns. The rural areas of the state had no electricity and most had no indoor water. Homes in rural Arkansas were not easily accessible and were also somewhat isolated. The state of Arkansas had several power-generating facilities. The obstacle was the problem of distribution. How could we get the much-needed electricity to the homes in rural areas?
1942
In 1942, the electric cooperatives pooled their resources to form a statewide association, Arkansas Electric Cooperatives, Inc., (AECI).
1949
The distribution cooperatives formed a generation and transmission cooperative, Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corp. (AECC), in 1949.
Today
Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corporation (AECC) is based in Little Rock and is proud to provide power for more than 600,000 members of Arkansas’ 17 electric distribution cooperatives.