{"id":24795,"date":"2017-06-30T17:17:44","date_gmt":"2017-07-01T00:17:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/aelp-president-looks-back-at-34-years-of-challenges-memories\/"},"modified":"2017-06-30T17:17:44","modified_gmt":"2017-07-01T00:17:44","slug":"aelp-president-looks-back-at-34-years-of-challenges-memories","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/aelp-president-looks-back-at-34-years-of-challenges-memories\/","title":{"rendered":"AEL&P President looks back at 34 years of challenges, memories"},"content":{"rendered":"
On one of his final days as the president of Alaska Energy Light &Power, Tim McLeod was talking about eagle poop.<\/p>\n
He was reflecting on the highlights of his 34-year career with the company Thursday, speaking to a full house at the Juneau Chamber of Commerce luncheon. He spoke of working long hours during snowstorms, the advent of new technology along the way and the projects that the energy company has completed.<\/p>\n
The biggest crowd reaction, however, came from what McLeod called “the mystery outages of ’83 and ’84.” One area of wiring kept sustaining damage over and over, but nobody could figure out what it was. One manager suggested to McLeod, who was an engineer at the time, that it might be an eagle defecating on the wire.<\/p>\n
“It’s gotta be something else,” McLeod told him.<\/p>\n
AEL&P employees camped out near the area, which had to be repaired 11 times due to the mysterious damages. One day, a fisherman called. Sure enough, he had seen an eagle perch above the wire and, as McLeod described it, “let loose.”<\/p>\n
As a result, AEL&P installed spiky coverings for the wires in that area to dissuade eagles from perching there anymore. The poop would disturb the community no longer.<\/p>\n
Though not all of the outages and issues in McLeod’s 34 years at AEL&P were quite as humorous as that one, they all required a little problem solving and a lot of teamwork. Leaving that team after 15 years as the President and General Manager is bittersweet for McLeod, whose last day at work is Friday.<\/p>\n
McLeod spoke for nearly an hour at Thursday’s luncheon, reflecting on decades of memories with the company. The presentation became interactive after a while, with McLeod asking the crowd of about 60 people if they remembered various events of the past three decades.<\/p>\n
Many nodded their heads in approval, including former AEL&P President Bill Corbus, who smiled through much of McLeod’s presentation. Also in attendance was Connie Hulbert, who is taking over for McLeod. She has been the Vice President and Secretary\/Treasurer since 2002, and said it was an honor to work alongside McLeod for as long as she did.<\/p>\n
“It’s bittersweet,” Hulbert said. “He’s obviously been there a lot longer than I have, but we have been through a lot together.”<\/p>\n