About HUEE
Background
Organized in 2002, Heartland Utilities for Energy Efficiency (HUEE)
is a vehicle for participating electric and gas utilities to “promote
energy efficiency in the Greater Kansas City marketplace through
energy education, resources and actions to help assure a secure energy
future for area residents.” As such, it is one of the only
local utilities collaborative in the nation working together on residential
energy efficiency issues. In furtherance of this mission, member
utilities contribute staff time to HUEE and charitable dollars to
the “Energy Efficiency Education Fund” established at
the Greater Kansas City Community Foundation. HUEE
members include:
HUEE currently works within the Mid-America Regional Council’s “Tier
One Region” which includes eight counties: Jackson, Platte,
Clay, Ray, and Cass in Missouri and Johnson, Wyandotte, and Leavenworth
in Kansas. The organization devotes its efforts to activities that
promote and support the overall goal of improved energy efficiency
without endorsing particular products, equipment, or fuel. On
an annual basis, HUEE makes grants to nonprofit organizations to
implement specific education projects and seeks other community opportunities
for achieving its vision of “a community that continuously
strives for the intelligent use and management of its energy resources
within the marketplace. A Board of Directors, whose members are drawn
from the participating utilities, makes funding decisions and provides
overall governance.
Annual Reports:
- 2004 (provided in PDF format)
- 2006 (provided in PDF format)
|