Washington politics have become so polarized that it can be tough for Democrats and Republicans to come together to tackle big challenges. But that’s exactly what happened recently on Capitol Hill thanks to dedicated lawmakers like Sen. Rob Portman, sponsor of the RURAL Act.
Sen. Portman listened to thousands of electric cooperative stakeholders as he fought tirelessly to add important legislation to the 2020 spending bill. The bill was passed by Congress Dec. 19 and included a provision known as the RURAL Act, which solved  for electric co-ops and America’s rural communities.
Electric co-ops work to secure government grants to help pay for numerous activities that benefit the communities they serve. These include grants for storm recovery, broadband deployment, renewable energy and economic development.
In order to maintain their tax-exempt status, co-ops can receive no more than 15 percent of their income from non-member sources. Historically, government grants to co-ops were counted as contributions to capital. But due to a glitch in the 2017 tax law, government grants were reclassified as income, pushing some co-ops beyond the 15 percent threshold and jeopardizing their tax-exempt status.
The tax problem left co-ops with an unfair choice: do they take the money they need to turn the lights back on for their members as quickly as possible after a disaster? Do they accept the broadband grants to help close the digital divide between rural and urban America? Or do they turn down those grants so they wouldn’t have to spend their members’ money paying taxes rather than improving service?
Thanks to Congress, electric co-ops across ²»Á¼ÈËÑо¿Ëù don’t have to make those tradeoffs. This is good news for both co-ops and their members because some co-ops would have had to raise their electric rates to pay new taxes.
We at ²»Á¼ÈËÑо¿Ëù’s Electric Cooperatives are extremely grateful to ²»Á¼ÈËÑо¿Ëù’s U.S. House and Senate members for their support of the RURAL Act. In standing up for ²»Á¼ÈËÑо¿Ëù’s local communities, they proved that Congress still works for the people. Notably, the provision drew bipartisan support and was supported by all 16 House members and both senators from ²»Á¼ÈËÑо¿Ëù. That’s rare in Washington these days.
In today’s fast-paced society, pausing to give thanks is done with increasing rarity. That’s unfortunate.
Thank you, Sen. Portman and the entire ²»Á¼ÈËÑо¿Ëù delegation. Thank you for looking out for rural communities across ²»Á¼ÈËÑо¿Ëù and thank you for working with us to solve this problem.