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When Taunton Municipal Lighting Plant (TMLP) began
operating as a municipal electric utility in 1897, it
already had 15 years experience providing electricity
to customers in the business section of Taunton.
TMLP's predecessor, the Taunton Electric Lighting Company,
was created as a business venture by several Taunton
entrepreneurs who provided the funding for a 100' x
75' wooden structure on Mechanics Lane which contained
a 60-horsepower engine, boiler and dynamo machines to
illuminate 35 to 40 lights in the Main Street/City Square
area.
Service began on a small scale, with 22 customers with
one, two or three arc lights. Electricity was available
from one hour before sunset until 10 p.m. each night
except Saturday when electricity was provided until
11 p.m. By September 1892, 18 stores around the Green
had electricity and streetlights were lit on Broadway,
Main Street and City Square.
Taunton Electric Lighting Company made it possible
for the first electric cars to start service from the
Green to Whittenton and back on April 30, 1893. Service
was later extended to Weir Street and back. By then,
the company was generating enough power to illuminate
84 streetlights and 2000 incandescent lights throughout
the city.
Demand for electricity increased and an addition to
the generating station was constructed in 1890. As the
demand for electricity increased, so, too, did the company's
debt. In December 1896, the stockholders voted to sell
the company.
The city of Taunton came to the rescue in 1897, and
decided to purchase the floundering company, making
it a publicly-owned electric utility. In June 1897,
the city of Taunton purchased the electric light company
for a total $125,000.
Renamed Taunton Municipal Lighting Plant, the utility
continued to generate power at the Mechanics Lane Service
Station. The Mayor appointed a Board of Commissioners
to help govern the utility. By 1918, TMLP was in financial
disarray due to the lack of a permanent manager or commission.
With the insistence of the Taunton Central Labor Union
and the Taunton Chamber of Commerce, the state legislature
passed a bill that created a three-person commission
to oversee TMLP. Governor Calvin Coolidge signed a bill
establishing the Taunton Municipal Lighting Plant Commission
in April 1919.
Today, TMLP provides electric service to 34,000 customers
in Taunton, Berkley, Raynham, and sections of Dighton,
Lakeville and Bridgewater. TMLP is governed by a three-member
Board of Commissioners, which is elected by the citizens
of Taunton.
TMLP employs 165 associates and has an office location
at 55 Weir Street and the Cleary-Flood Generating Station
at 1314 Somerset Ave, Taunton, Massachusetts. The Generating
Station, which has two units (#8 and #9), is capable
of generating 136 mW. Unit #8 burns fuel oil (#6), and
Unit 9 is a combined-cycle unit that burns natural gas
and #6 fuel oil.
In 1998, TMLP began offering Internet service for its
customers. Nearly five years later, the organization
is exploring offering cable television, high-speed Internet
and telephony services as part of its fiber-to-the-home
pilot project.
TMLP and its associates are active members in regional
and national organizations such as the Northeast Public
Power Association, American Public Power Association
and the Municipal Electric Association of Massachusetts.
Locally, our employees sit on a number of Boards and
participate with civic organizations including the Taunton
Chamber of Commerce, Taunton Area School to Career,
Taunton Boys and Girls Club, Rotary, Project Best, United
Way and American Cancer Society.
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