Tag Archive for: AR employees

Entergy Arkansas focuses grant money, volunteer hours on improving literacy and education
Literacy and education efforts

Meet the nuclear professionals: Nathan McElhaney
MeetNathan McElhaney, an Arkansas Nuclear One Unit 1 control room supervisor who has worked at ANO for 13 years.

Arkansas Nuclear One begins 29th Unit 2 refueling outage
Contract workers boost local economy; work ensures continuation of clean, reliable energy

It’s a WIN win: Entergy Women in Nuclear named “most reactive” chapter
National award recognizes excellence in promoting nuclear science in the communityn

Entergy Nuclear CNO Cook-Nelson on the future of nuclear energy
Kimberly Cook-Nelson, Entergy Nuclear executive vice president and chief nuclear officer, recently spoke to more than 400 attendees at the annual EnergySolutions conference in Salt Lake City.

Entergy scholarship powering dreams for five Arkansas students
This fall, five Arkansas students who are dependents of Entergy Arkansas employees will further their education with the help of a $5,000 scholarship from the company.

Arkansas Foodbank recognizes Entergy Arkansas volunteers
Entergy Arkansas was recently awarded as the top Arkansas Foodbank Corporate Volunteer Group for the second consecutive year.

Entergy Arkansas names Considine, Thompson to VP positions
Entergy Arkansas officials recently announced the promotion of Michael Considine and Ventrell Thompson to vice president positions.

From Sawdust to Sunshine: A Brief History of Entergy Arkansas Power Generation
Arkansas Power and Light founder Harvey Couch made a deal in 1913 to purchase sawdust – the company’s first fuel source – to burn and power a steam-powered turbine and send power through a 20-mile transmission line to customers in Malvern and Arkadelphia. That was the beginning of what would become Entergy Corporation, an integrated energy company engaged in electric power production, transmission and retail distribution operations across four service territories for 3 million customers. A little more than 10 years later, Mr. Couch’s Sterlington natural gas-powered plant in north Louisiana was placed online in November 1925. As the demand for electricity grew, so did the company’s fleet of power generation resources. Couch built Remmel Dam, the first hydroelectric dam on the Ouachita River, near Hot Springs in 1924. Just upstream in 1931 came Carpenter Dam, and both dams still generate emission-free power today.

Entergy Arkansas Announces New Communications Staff, Promotions
New hires include veteran utilities expert, local PR pro