Rural Electric Co-op Scorecard

Co-ops are modernizing their energy supply and how they communicate with their members. Here’s a look at how well Minnesota’s electric co-ops demonstrate online transparency.

How Rural Electric Co-ops are Evolving

CURE's Engagement Moved Co-ops in the Right Direction​

Over the past five years, Minnesota's 44 co-ops have made significant strides in the way they communicate with members. The graph below shows that the total number of RECs reporting "yes" has gone up in every category.

No Data Found

Most Improved

White Trophy
  1. NorthStar Electric (+9)
  2. Lyon-Lincoln (+8)
  3. Red River Valley (+7)
  4. BENCO (+6)
    Coop Light & Power (+6)
    Runestone (+6)

Perfect Scores

Bullseye Icon

Connexus

Crow Wing

Dakota Electric 

Kandiyohi

Lake Country

Lake Region

Lyon-Lincoln

MN Valley Electric (Jordan) 

Red River Valley

Renville-Sibley 

Sioux Valley

What's New?

  • The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 provides significant funding for co-ops to modernize their energy supply. Are they talking to their members about this huge opportunity?
  • Co-ops know how important transparency is. Our new scorecard asked co-ops to share this information with us and two-thirds of them delivered.

What We Learned in 2023

Green Thumbs Up Icon

93%

showed improvement since our last scorecard
Blue Calendar Icon

93%

post dates & times for upcoming board meetings
ONLY

27%

posted director or manager salaries

More Findings

Do co-ops post the following basic information?

Electric bill explanation
Yes 91%
No 9%
How to run for co-op board
Yes 100%
How to vote in co-op elections
Yes 91%
No 9%
Energy source mix
Yes 80%
No 20%
Board meeting notes/minutes
Yes 82%
No 18%
Contact info for board members
Yes 80%
No 20%
Board meeting dates
Yes 93%
No 7%
Co-op bylaws
Yes 93%
No 7%
Inflation Reduc. Act communications
Yes 64%
No 36%

How Does Your Co-op Stack Up?

The Full Scorecard

Read more about the ten topics we evaluated, and click the print button to view/print its individual report card.
* indicates that co-op participated by self-reporting.

CO-OP NAME Electric bill explained Energy source mix Director/ manager salaries Bylaws Board member contact info Board mtg dates Board mtg minutes/ notes How to run for co-op board How to vote in co-op elections IRA Comms
Agralite* X X
Arrowhead* X X X X X X
Beltrami X
BENCO* X X
Brown Co.* X
Clearwater Polk X X X X X X X
Connexus Energy*
Co-op Light & Power* X
Crow Wing Power*
Dakota Electric Association*
East Central Energy* X
Federated Rural Electric Association* X X
Freeborn-Mower* X X
Goodhue Co. Co-op Electric* X
Itasca-Mantrap Cooperative Electric Association* X X
Kandiyohi Power Cooperative*
Lake Country Power*
Lake Region
Lyon-Lincoln
McLeod Co-op Power* X
Meeker X X X X X X
MiEnergy Cooperative* X
Mille Lacs X
Minnesota Valley Electric Co-op*
Minnesota Valley Light and Power X X X X
Nobles Cooperative Electric* X X
North Itasca Electric X X X
North Star Electric Co-op* X
People's Energy Co-op* X
PKM X
Red Lake Electric Co-op* X X X
Red River Valley
Redwood X X X X X X X X
Renville-Sibley Co-op Power*
Roseau X X X X X X X X
Runestone Electric Association* X
Sioux Valley Energy*
South Central X X X
Stearns Electric Assoc.* X
Steele-Waseca Co-op Electric* X X X X X X X X
Todd-Wadena Electric Co-op* X
Traverse X X
Wild Rice X X X
Wright-Hennepin Cooperative Electric Assoc.* X

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You're a Co-op Member Owner.

Your Voice Matters!

Rural Family in Pasture

Electric cooperatives are based democratic ownership and governance by the people they serve, with every customer being a member and every member an owner. Your voice as a member-owner matters to the co-op board and staff. You can influence co-op decisions on how to boldly address the climate crisis and maximize cooperative potential as energy democracies. Your input can shape how co-ops implement the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, as well as local investments, job creation, and community savings.

When member-owners have the tools and information they need to make smart, forward-thinking decisions, our co-ops are better for it. CURE’s goal is to help provide co-op member-owners with the tools and information they need to engage with their electric cooperative and build energy democracy. Over the last 5 years, we have helped change the conversation around electric cooperatives and helped thousands of member owners across Minnesota and the USA change their cooperative for the better.

Join the movement for cooperative democracy and build an energy future that prioritizes people and the planet.

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Keep up to date on our latest REC work & learn how you can have a voice.

REC Resources

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Kelsey Olson

Kelsey Olson

Director of Environmental Stewardship

Kelsey Olson (she/her) joined CURE in 2025 as its Director of Environmental Stewardship. As a skilled environmental naturalist, Kelsey’s work focuses broadly on environmental education and advocacy with a keen focus on rural land use and how that use impacts our environment and climate. Working Lands, how land is used to support agriculture and forestry, is a key focus of her work. She brings 15 years’ experience in public communication, environmental education, and rural community engagement – strong communication strategies are core in her work. This includes two terms of service with AmeriCorps in the VISTA program in Oregon and Maryland and a nearly 10-year career as a naturalist followed. She recently worked on communications and marketing for rural economic development.

Kelsey lives in New London, MN, with her young children, husband, dog, and two cats. They enjoy spending time together outside and finding small treasures in nature. Visits to Minneapolis often include visits to one of their favorite historical museums, the Minnesota Swedish Institute. Kelsey enjoys experimenting in the kitchen, whether this is canning local produce, making kombucha, or other treats!