Skip to main content
Moved and seconded – Black Hills Energy sponsors Casper Youth Council
cyc

We’re proud to sponsor the newly formed Casper Youth Council (CYC).

The CYC works to spark interest in city and county government and provide local youth a voice in the shaping of our community by creating an accessible channel for open communication between the Casper City Council, youth, and the citizens.

Just like the Casper City Council, the CYC has a mayor and other officials who consider policy and discuss issues. Our own Black Hills Energy Community Affairs manager Michael Howe volunteered to serve as an advisor to the CYC. His job will be to help the group learn parliamentary procedure and how the policy making process works at local levels of government.

We partner with our communities and customers, providing the kind of energy that fuels those areas and the lives of those we serve. Feel free to share the stories and photos. Make sure to tag us on FacebookInstagram, LinkedIn and Twitter.

Positive Energy

  • Our team in Laramie, Wyoming, banded together for the holidays and donated a box of toys for the Toys for Tots program. Toys for Tots is a nonprofit organization that has provided toys to children in need during the holidays for more than 75 years and has supported over 281 million children to…
  • On Wednesday, Dec. 21, our technicians volunteered their evening to run the concession stand during the Coulter Celebration of Lights in Mountain Home, Arkansas. The Mountain Home technicians served approximately 400 people who were eagerly waiting their turn for a picture with Santa and Mrs.…
  • The Arkansas team hosted the Springdale Chamber of Commerce Morning Brew, a networking breakfast, at the NorthWest Arkansas Community College (NWACC) - Washington County campus. Chad Kinsley, vice president of gas operations in Fayetteville, announced that this year Black Hills Energy completed a…
  • It's estimated that about 13 million tons of plastic and debris are dumped into the ocean yearly. A 2015 study found that at some point, 52% of the world's sea turtles have consumed plastic. To help combat these disturbing facts, one student in O’Neill, Nebraska, organized a school-wide recycling…