Cherry Todd Electric Cooperative is dedicated to serving and supporting our member’s interest by providing the highest quality electric service available, while maintaining our electric rates at the lowest possible cost to the membership.
Imagine if everyone in your co-op made one small change. Now, stop imagining. Flip a switch. Seal some cracks. Screw in a CFL. Install a programmable thermostat and actually program it. Doesn’t take a lot of energy to save energy. But it sure pays off.
That’s the thinking behind TogetherWeSave.com(link is external), Touchstone Energy Cooperatives’ national energy-efficiency campaign.
Designed to inspire consumers to easily save energy by saving them money, TogetherWeSave.com(link is external)is filled with tips to help members becoming more energy efficient.
The site features more than a dozen energy-efficiency interactive web applications linked to a virtual home tour, all designed to encourage co-op members throughout the country to take energy-saving actions now. Plus Touchstone Energy TV, showcasing energy-efficiency videos and the Energy Saving Forum, where members can post their own energy saving success stories and learn more information on how they can lower their energy bill.
Safety
At your Touchstone Energy cooperative, member safety is important to us. Below are some links to important safety information to help keep you and your family safe
- Power Line Safety
- Power Lines and Cars
- Generator Safety
Power Line Safety
Accidentally contacting a power line can be dangerous and in some cases, even deadly. Your Touchstone Energy cooperative wants to help our members stay safe around power lines.
Keep a safe distance
Whether you are playing outdoors with your children or working on landscaping projects, keep a safe distance from power lines and other equipment your co-op uses to get electricity to your home.
Always remember to:
- Stay away from power lines, meters, transformers and electrical boxes.
- Don’t climb trees near power lines.
- Never fly kits, remote control airplanes or balloons near power lines.
- If you get something stuck in a power line, call your Touchstone Energy co-op to get it.
- Keep a safe distance from overhead power lines when working with ladders or installing objects such as antennas.
- Never touch or go near a downed power line.
- Don’t touch anything that may be touching a downed wire, such as a car.
- Keep children and pets away.