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What
do 4th of July and co-ops
have
in common?
When Benjamin Franklin signed
the Declaration of Independence, he is credited with saying,
"We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all
hang separately."
No wonder Franklin was also the founder of the first successful
cooperative formed in the United States. He organized the
Philadelphia Contributionship for the Insurance of Houses
from Loss by Fire in 1752.
The
principles behind the Declaration of Independence that form
the basis of American democracy are also the beliefs that
form the basis of cooperatives. A cooperative is owned and
democratically controlled by the people who use its services.
Each consumer-owner has one vote regardless of his or her
equity in the company; that is, wealthy members can't buy
more control and everyone has an equal say.
The
cooperative's annual membership meeting provides the forum
in which members have a voice in the election of directors
to the board, and other cooperative business. This is in contrast
to investor-owned businesses where only shareholders have
a vote in how the business is run; and even among shareholders,
some have more votes than others depending on their shares
of stock. And shareholders may not even use the services of
the investor-owned company; their chief concern is its profitability.
All
25 electric power associations in Mississippi are consumer-owned
cooperatives, locally owned and controlled by the people they
serve.
The
Declaration of Independence also declared the equality of
rights of its citizens and that people had the right to organize
to secure their futures when their rights were infringed upon.
At
the time the Declaration was written, democracy was a pretty
untested idea but the founders of our country were
determined to make it work.
So
when you celebrate Independence Day with your families and
friends this year, think about those principles that inspired
our Founding Fathers. They also inspired the founders of your
electric power association, who were determined to provide
reliable, affordable power to secure the futures of their
rural communities.
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