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McDonough Power Cooperative: your west-central IL co-op, decoded

By James Pochez Updated 3 min read

McDonough Power Cooperative is a member-owned rural electric co-op headquartered at 1210 W Jackson St in Macomb, IL. It serves around 6,300 member-accounts across McDonough, Henderson and Warren counties in west-central Illinois. Members do not pick a competitive supplier: rural co-ops were excluded from the 1997 IL deregulation law.

~6,300 meters Member-owned co-op
3 counties McDonough · Henderson · Warren
Macomb HQ 1210 W Jackson St

Headquarters and contact

Street address
1210 W Jackson St
PO Box 352
Macomb, IL 61455
Office hours
Monday to Friday, 7:00 AM to 4:00 PM. Closed weekends and federal holidays.
Member email
[email protected]
Fax
1-309-833-2104

Call McDonough Power

Bring photo ID and a recent utility bill or lease to open a new member account. McDonough Power is electricity only: no gas service.

Activate or transfer your account

What to have ready

  • Full legal name and date of birth;
  • New service address (street, apt no., city, ZIP);
  • Previous address and account holder details;
  • Date you need service to start;
  • Phone number and email for outage alerts.

How to open the account

  1. Call 1-309-833-2101 at least 5 business days before your move;
  2. Confirm if your address is on the co-op grid (use the IL utility directory if you are not sure);
  3. Pay any required member deposit and connection fee;
  4. Schedule the meter activation date;
  5. Sign the member agreement (delivered by mail or in person).

Pay your bill

Auto-pay

Recurring bank-account transfer (ACH). The simplest option, set up by phone or in person.

Check by mail

Mail a check or money order to 1210 W Jackson St, PO Box 352, Macomb, IL 61455.

Phone or online

Credit or debit card by phone via member services, or through the co-op's online portal.

In person

Cash, check or card at the Macomb office during business hours. Drop-box for after-hours payments.

Why McDonough members do not pick a supplier

The law

The 1997 Electric Service Customer Choice and Rate Relief Law opened residential retail competition for ComEd, Ameren Illinois and MidAmerican customers in 2002. Rural electric cooperatives and municipal electric departments were explicitly excluded.

Your supply rate is set by the member-elected board, not by an ICC procurement or by an ARES auction.

What that means in practice

  • One bill, one company: McDonough owns the wires AND the supply;
  • Rate changes go through a public member vote, not the ICC;
  • No Price-to-Compare, no Uniform Disclosure Statement;
  • Capital credits: any margin above cost is allocated back to members;
  • If you move to ComEd or Ameren territory, you regain ARES choice.
Article reviewed by Cornelia Zavoianu, Selectra energy expert

Written by

James Pochez

U.S. lead, energy markets

Read more from James

Biography

Master's in Energy Strategies from the École des Mines de Paris and a university exchange at the University of Chicago. Two years with GE Renewables on the Commercial Leadership Program before joining Selectra in November 2014 to build CallMePower from scratch.

Expertise

U.S. energy markets Deregulation Renewable energy