May 04, 2024

Great Bend man elected as Wheatland Electric trustee

Posted May 04, 2024 8:00 PM
Great Bend's John Sullivan was elected to the Wheatland Electric Board.
Great Bend's John Sullivan was elected to the Wheatland Electric Board.

BUSINESS NEWS

Members of Wheatland Electric Cooperative, Inc. (WEC) have elected a new trustee and two incumbents to its 10-member board, results which were announced at this year’s 2024 Annual Meeting, held April 24, 2024, in Great Bend, Kan., and at seven remote meeting locations across southwest and central Kansas.

Members of the electric cooperative, who voted by mail for the first time in cooperative history, voted to elect Kevin White (1682 Road Q., Tribune, Kan.) as their District 3 trustee. White ran against another candidate, John Niehues (612 Haskell St., Tribune, Kan.), and secured just over a two-thirds of the total vote: 1,065 vs. 508.

Both White and Niehues were nominated for their candidacy by WEC’s nominating committee, comprised of seven co-op members, each representing one of the cooperative’s seven districts across southwest and central Kansas.

White will replace outgoing trustee Mike Thon of Tribune, Kan., who was first elected to the board in 2018 and served two three-year terms. District 3 serves members across Greeley County, Kan., and portions of Kiowa and Cheyenne Counties in Colorado.

Co-op members also voted to elect John L. Sullivan (5906 16th Street Ter., Great Bend, Kan.) in District 6, which serves Great Bend, and re-elect Mark Arnold (203 S. Market St., Caldwell, Kan.) in District 7, which covers portions of Harper, Kingman, Sumner, and Sedgwick Counties.

Both Sullivan and Arnold ran uncontested and were also nominated by the nominating committee. Sullivan will begin his first three-year term; he was first appointed to the board to replace an outgoing trustee in 2022.

Arnold will begin his third, three-year term. He was first appointed to fill a vacating seat in 2016 and was later elected by the cooperative membership in 2018. Trustees are limited to six three-year terms on the WEC board.

This year’s ballots received by mail represent a total of 9.55% of the co-op voting membership overall (1,918 ballots received from an eligible 20,087 eligible voters).

A total of 1,918 ballots were cast in this year’s trustee election, managed by Survey and Ballot Systems, an independent third-party. Last year, a total of 654 registered members at the 2023 Annual Meeting cast their ballots in person or by proxy. The co-op membership approved bylaw changes at that time to allow trustee elections to transition to mail-in voting starting in 2024.

This year’s transition to mail-in voting has resulted in an 193% increase in voter engagement from last year’s trustee election.

A total of 527 individuals (including co-op members, special guests, and other non-members) were in attendance on April 24 at WEC’s 2024 Annual Meeting across eight meeting locations: Great Bend, Scott City, Leoti, Tribune, Syracuse, Garden City, Harper, and Caldwell. Of that total, 383 attendees were registered WEC members.

This year’s theme – “Illuminating Connections” – provided WEC with a unique and enlightening opportunity to share the CONNECTIONS the co-op works to create every day – not just through the energy it delivers, but through the partnerships it builds, projects it helps fund, and new programs it has implemented – all with the goal of EMPOWERING the communities it serves.

Additionally, members at every location were able to ask questions and offer comments in real time as they viewed the primary meeting location in Great Bend. Attendees enjoyed a meal at every location and took home a set of outdoor string lights as a thank you from WEC.

Alli Conine, WEC’s Director of Member Services and Corporate Communications, also presented awards to 14 high school seniors from across WEC’s service territory who were recipients of $1,000 scholarships. High school juniors who were selected to attend the Electric Cooperative Youth Tour in Washington D.C., and Cooperative Youth Leadership Camp in Steamboat Springs, Colo., later this year were also recognized.

In addition, Mark Arnold, trustee and board president, recognized several WEC employees and trustees for their dedication to the cooperative, ranging from five years to 30 years of service.

The primary new business discussed at this year’s meeting was the announcement of trustee election results.