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About Us
About Tennessee Council of Cooperatives
The Tennessee Council of Cooperatives (TCC) is a non-profit organization established
to promote "the cooperative way of business" through education and promotion of all types of
cooperatives.
The Council is comprised of member representatives from various cooperative
organizations in Tennessee. The TCC has two types/levels of membership including "parent
cooperatives" and "individual cooperatives." The total Council membership is
approximately 60 members consisting of eight parent cooperatives and 52 individual cooperatives. The
total TCC membership can be further segmented into 19 electric cooperatives, 29 Tennessee Farmer Co-ops,
five telephone cooperatives, three financial institutions, two milk cooperatives, one tobacco cooperative,
and the Tennessee Farm Bureau Federation.
The TCC functions as the state's flagship organization for coordinating, promoting,
educating and extending cooperative development in Tennessee. TCC often serves as a clearingshouse for
the open exchange of information and experiences among cooperative businesses; as a sounding board for
new ideas; and as a forum for discovery, discussion, and dissemination.
The Council is also positioned to be a springboard for initiating and implementing
plans and programs relevant to cooperatives. TCC sponsors five college scholarships for agricultural
students at each of Tennessee's four-year agricultural programs, and hosts an annual leadership
conference with emphasis on cooperatives for approximately 35 young leaders across the state.
The TCC also provides leadership, cooperation, and support to various other programs, seminars and conferences.
What's a Cooperative — And Why Should You Care?
A cooperative is …a business financed, owned and controlled by the people
who use it.
Cooperatives are made up of citizens with similar needs, goals and problems. By working together, they
combine their investments and influence to accomplish much more than any one person in the group could
accomplish alone. Cooperation gives a group financial strength, greater independence and a stronger
voice in their own business affairs. Cooperatives stimulate free enterprise while helping to protect
the individuals involved. About 45,000 cooperative organizations are in business today in the U.S.,
with more than 9 million members.
Co-ops are particularly important to rural Americans.
About 5,000 co-ops are farmer-owned and provide marketing, purchasing and related services for
farmers and producers. Cooperatives market about 25 percent of all agricultural products and
provide about 25 percent of all production supplies used on American farms each year. Forty
million rural people–and their businesses–get their electricity from more than
900 million electric cooperatives and their telephone service from about 250 telephone cooperatives.
Dairy producers have organized about 1,100 cooperative dairy herd improvement associations, 30
percent of all irrigated farmland is supplied water by cooperative irrigation associations.
Fire and insurance coverage on farm buildings in the U.S. is carried by more than 1,000 farmers’
mutual fire insurance associations. Sound credit is extended to agricultural cooperatives and to
farmers to help finance land, crops, livestock and equipment though cooperative banks. Additionally,
about 1,000 rural credit unions chartered under federal and state statutes provide savings and
loan services to many thousands of their members.
Co-ops should matter to you because…they mirror the very best of the
American Way.
Co-ops are a true democracy where membership is voluntary and members have “democratic control”
with each member having one vote. They operate not for profit, but at cost to the benefit of their members.
They are not in business to make money for their investors or owners – they exist to meet the needs
of their members for products and services, as economically as possible. Excess funds are returned to
members in what is called a “patronage fund, ” or reserved to purchase new equipment, construct
new buildings or acquire property as needed.
Cooperatives are a Tennessee Tradition.
Some of the first cooperatives in the U.S. sprang up in Tennessee. Cooperatives began taking root in
the U.S. in the 1920’s, but in 1935, President Franklin Roosevelt’s Rural Electrification
Administration changed the course of Tennessee history, and power truly came to the people of Tennessee
though electric cooperatives. Today, rural electric cooperatives still deliver power to more than
three-quarters of all the state’s land area.
Cooperatives may be the key to the future for many Tennessee businesses.
Americans face new challenges. To be a farmer or small businessman in today’s economic and political
climate takes large amounts of capitol, polished managerial skills, high levels of information and resources
and cooperation. Through the formation of and participation in new co-ops, the American people may once again
find the power in themselves through a “new generation” of co-ops to provide for themselves,
maintain or improve their lifestyles.
Number of Cooperatives in Tennessee
When the TCC set out to identify the number of cooperatives in Tennessee, we
faced several obstacles. We found that several classifications of co-ops have up-to-date and accurate
listings of businesses (including TFC, electric co-ops, and telephone co-ops). We also found that USDA
maintains a list of cooperative businesses considered “farmer” co-ops and that the Tennessee
Secretary of State maintains a list (dating back to 1921) of all businesses legally registered/organized
as a cooperative. This list, however, is not updated when businesses dissolve and/or merge. We also found
several businesses that include the term “cooperative” in their name but are not actually
organized as a cooperative.
Although the most recent USDA data indicates that Tennessee has 79 farmer cooperatives
and the list of “cooperative” business formations filed with the Secretary of State shows
160 cooperatives have been formed in Tennessee from 1921 to 1998, only 196 Tennessee cooperatives are
included in the TCC “Directory of Cooperatives” published in January 2003.

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