Photo Courtesy CAN-DO organization

Crow Creek tribal members share their struggle with Central Electric Cooperative with Eric Klein, founder of the CAN-DO organization. Central Electric has been accused of shutting off power to families who are struggling to pay their bills during one of the areas harshest winters.

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Black out during white out

Crow Creek residents treated unjustly by utility company during blizzard, CAN-DO helps

By Vincent Schilling, Today correspondent

MITCHELL, S.D. – South Dakota-based Central Electric Cooperative has a policy in effect to provide electricity to its customers in the winter months regardless of their ability to pay. However, Crow Creek Reservation tribal members are getting their power turned off by the company in the midst of extreme blizzard conditions.

In numerous instances, Crow Creek residents have medical conditions that require the use of electricity, and many other residents have small children and/or elderly in the home.

In a place where tribal members remember promises from Central Electric to provide electrical power free of charge, tribal residents’ pay electricity rates one-third higher than the national average.

In 1955, Central Electric displaced an entire town of American Indians on the Crow Creek Reservation with the construction of the Big Bend Dam, built to provide a source of electricity.

 

Photo Courtesy CAN-DO organization

Eric Klein and the CAN-DO organization have been working to help American Indians on the Crow Creek Reservation during the harsh winter. Many Natives on the reservation had their electric turned off during some of the coldest weather the area has seen. CAN-DO is a direct outcome organization that provides aid and relief in emergencies, the organization helped families after Hurricane Katrina.

Upon the dam’s completion nine years later, tribal members remember the company promising to rebuild schools and other buildings abandoned because of the tribes relocation. According to tribal members, the company also promised free electricity to residents living on the reservation.

None of these promises have ever been fulfilled.

Central Electric has denied claims of unfair treatment, but recent video footage from resident and former Marine Peter Lengkeek proves the company is not being forthcoming.

Lengkeek admits he did not initially know why he should film the footage, he simply felt that Central Electric was unfair to tribal members.

“I don’t know what prompted me to get a video recorder. Something just told me I had to. I hung onto the footage for almost a year until I had met Eric Klein, and when I met him, something inside me told me that I was supposed to give it to him. So I gave it to him, and unbelievable things are happening now.”

Klein is the founder of CAN-DO, a direct outcome organization that provides aid and relief in emergencies.

In June 2008, the organization delivered relief supplies to the residents of the Crow Creek Indian Reservation in South Dakota. During this time, Klein learned from Lengkeek that for years, the local utility company had been discontinuing electric service to residents during the coldest winter months for inability to pay.

Klein took the footage from Lengkeek and posted it on his organization’s Web site.

In response to Klein’s assertions and posting of Lengkeek’s video, officials from Central Electric denied that electric service has been discontinued in extreme winter conditions.

 Getting a hand up

Fort Thompson and the surrounding tribal communities in South Dakota are challenged with even the most basic needs, most of which the rest of the United States takes for granted. Senator Johnson has long believed that tribal nations need a hand up, not a hand out, which is why he continues to advocate for improvements to Indian education, as well as resources for community programming,” said Julianne Fisher, communications director for South Dakota Sen. Tim Johnson. “It is only when everyone works together towards common goals that the real work of communities is effective.

“The difficult situation at Crow Creek is real, but Senator Johnson very much believes that the people there are rising to the occasion and are taking back their lives. Issues like heating and cooling individual’s homes and negotiating with local electric cooperatives take time and work, and he applauds the efforts of those who are working for change.”

To contact the senator’s office call (202) 224-5842.



“The video that you recently watched is not a true description of what actually takes place to collect delinquent accounts on the Crow Creek Reservation. Central Electric follows the South Dakota Public Utility laws for disconnecting electric services for non-payment, which means we will disconnect a service for non-payment at the appropriate time,” reads a statement from the company.

“Central Electric does have a winter disconnect procedure whereby no meters are disconnected in cold or inclement weather. Also, Central Electric does not disconnect services when there is a medical necessity for electricity. Central Electric works very close with the tribal leadership groups and tribal members to minimize the need to disconnect services. In fact, there have not been any disconnects for the past three months.”

“The electric company says that they are not going to cut you off in inclement weather, but they’ve been doing it,” Klein said. “We have proof that the company has been doing it since 2006. The housing board gave me all of the information.”

Klein’s claim in opposition to Central Electric appears true. On the CAN-DO Web site there are copies of customer utility discontinuation notices dated within severe winter timeframes.

On a reservation that has an unemployment rate of 80 percent and which lies close to Central Electric, Klein wonders why residents pay one-third higher rates than the rest of the country.

“We were told originally that the electricity came from Chicago, but it does come from Central Electric Cooperative. They do have the power to give them the free electricity. They said there are 500 meters on the reservation and we are only a small operation. That is not true because the electric company supplies electricity to eight states. The senators from those eight states would probably be interested to know that the power that is coming to the states is actually originating from the reservation.”

Lengkeek praised the work of Klein and CAN-DO.

“I have no words for what Eric Klein and CAN-DO have helped us do. It took awhile for us to trust Eric because of people who have come here in the past. We prayed on it and were told that Eric is the man who will help us. CAN-DO is providing hope in a place where there is no hope.”

Additional comments from Central Electric Cooperative are currently being sought.

To express your concern on this matter contact Central Electric Cooperative at (541) 548-2144.

 

Tuesday, Jan 19 at 1:40 PM Lazy Wolf wrote ...

It is coming to that point in time, when the treatment of our people has got to change, we have dealt with policy and procedure wrangling long enough. The whiteman get to have his pie and eat it too and what do us natives get, the short end of the stick. White privilage needs to be addressed and changed. It time to say that we have had enoungh, and find solutions to help our people,Time to quit the in house fighting and start working together to benefit all of our people get head out of sand.

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Monday, Jan 4 at 12:16 PM Doc Larry Milham wrote ...

Sone one once said that the white man made us a lot of promises but they only kept one...They said they would take our land and they did. Looks like one more broken promise. I guess we need to stop sitting on our butts and get some education and fight back on paper. That seems to be where the most of the lies are anyway.

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Tuesday, Mar 31 at 5:34 PM Kelsey,SD wrote ...

No matter how tragic the situation at the CCIR, one shld remember these community have live in these situation of "cold" long before this org has come into the picture. In fairness to this present administration, POTUS, there is an allotment fro the NATIVE AMERCIANS at the stimulus bill, you have ask what is their SD Senator Thompson doing - he didn't ask anything for CCIR. As asking for Oprah? just because the Eric Klein was in Oprah, she too shld be ask for responsibility! com'on guys!

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Wednesday, Mar 25 at 12:48 AM Desatoya wrote ...

Another example of the non-existent trust protection skills of BIA. Surely, this was trust land being covered in water and people displaced, not by natural causes, but by planned economic progress. The tribal leaders at that time, must have compromised the members concerns for monetary gain or the project would have been stalemated for many years. This example is what made America great - big business exploitation.

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Tuesday, Mar 24 at 5:11 PM sandy valencour wrote ...

I am sorry to say this is pretty typical on the rez. I was in a big town and they cut me off of electic and water and I had 2 small kids. I worked but just didn't have any money for any of this. Go after free electric and make them keep all promises they made or keep yelling and (for what good it would do) write the BIA and the WHITE HOUSE. Time for Obama to own up to promises to help natives.

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Saturday, Mar 21 at 2:33 AM David wrote ...

next time they make a promise,make sure it's in writing.So if he tries anything funny,you can sue the whiteman!!

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Friday, Mar 20 at 6:13 PM John W. Blair wrote ...

johnwb@cableone.net Whenever one group of people is mistrreated by a company or government group it is a trvesty! I believe Chaska Denny's onto a great product that will free any individual or group from this type of mistreatment. Call are write your local politicians and representatives and senators and flood them with your complaints and demand they meet with you to solve this problem. I am a white man with empathy toward mistreatead and wronged peoples.

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Friday, Mar 20 at 3:39 PM itwasme wrote ...

well said shay,,, thats the whitemans way lie and steal from the indians

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Friday, Mar 20 at 10:30 AM CLP wrote ...

For those rez folks who want freedom please contact Chaskadenny@yahoo.com, this product he has can not only provide low low cost electricity but also low cost fuel and clean water. Tribes, this is something that your people deserve and need NOW!

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Friday, Mar 20 at 10:10 AM Chaska wrote ...

There is new Technolongy available that can eliminate the vampirisms of these utility companies, ALL these broken promises are typical of Washichu's...IF anyone is interested in this new technology, they may contact me at "chaskadenny@yahoo.com"...WE believe NDN's FIRST.......

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Thursday, Mar 19 at 4:33 PM Chris wrote ...

What happen to the lower engery assistance to help those in need? People with medical or minor children should not be subject or should not have to go through no electric in the extreme old weather-whats wrong with the human beings in the electric business

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Thursday, Mar 19 at 4:28 PM Chris wrote ...

Where are the Tribal Leaders; they should be advocating for their people; thanks to CAN-DO for exposing the typical american electric company. This is sad and does not have to be but money talks to the greedy whites.

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Thursday, Mar 19 at 12:33 PM Anonymous wrote ...

where's oprah? way to bo Brother Pete!!! and all the rest who bring this situation to life-may creator send many blessings on your families.

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Thursday, Mar 19 at 11:40 AM Wanbli wrote ...

Crow Creek must come to a collective undersanding that unless they are willing to learn humbling what they can do to stop the cycle of U.S sponsored violence and are willingly ready to do everything to free themselves from their domestication, repression, oppression and U.S. dependency and are willing to die for the future of their children, then, they will have many nights ahead without the basic need to substain their nations like the rest of us. Its time to unite!

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Thursday, Mar 19 at 11:17 AM Anonymous wrote ...

This is discusting and heartbreaking. They need to be held accountable!

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Wednesday, Mar 18 at 5:08 PM D. Shay in Fort Hall, Idaho wrote ...

So what else is new here? Central Electric is a typical american corporation, with greed as the ulitmate motivation and profiting off an Indian reservation.

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