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Title
The Brotherhood
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By Janet Wilson

For a sliver of a second, there was silence. Then the words from the loudspeakers rang out.
                
Three new champions leapt to their feet. High-fives and hearty cheers gave way to shrieks of joy and raucous shouts that rippled like a wave through the crowd of several hundred. Despite aching muscles, the men bounded up the stage, their own joyous hollering adding to the din.

Gary Barabas, Kenny Roland and Jeff Hohlt had just proved they were the best electric linemen in the big state of Texas. And they did it in the senior age group — 45 and older — at the annual Texas Lineman’s Rodeo. It’s the Lone Star State’s version of the Olympics for electric line workers and they had won gold for Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative, a first for the co-op in that prestigious event.

During the day, the trio had put their cumulative 85 years of experience to the test. They scrambled to the top of unelectrified power poles to demonstrate how to rescue hurt colleagues. They tag-teamed to hoist equipment and restore mock outages. They raced against judges’ timers to repair or replace heavy equipment, simulating tasks they do daily. 

Bluebonnet’s senior linemen team had just showed the professional excellence that comes from decades of work on the lines.

Under the tall pecan and oak trees at Nolte Island Park along the Guadalupe River outside Seguin, they held their shiny 2½-foot trophy aloft. There was no end to their infectious grins.
No one had any idea that day — July 19, 2014 — that this winning brotherhood would never compete together at the Texas rodeo again.

Things were going to change, in dramatically unexpected ways. Life was going to turn triumph into turmoil and loss.
 
Kinship in dangerous work

There are an estimated 117,670 line workers nationwide. The 80 at Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative help keep power flowing to more than 71,000 Central Texas homes, businesses, schools and churches in a 3,800-square-mile area that stretches from Austin's eastern edge to less than 100 miles from Houston.

Electric line work is routinely listed by the U.S. Bureau of Labor as one of the top 10 most dangerous jobs in America. Bluebonnet linemen typically work around lines carrying 25,000 volts of electricity — often 30 or 40 feet in the air. A single misstep or a failed piece of safety equipment could be fatal.

Like firefighters and police officers, line workers are first responders. If the power goes out, they go out. These often unseen wizards of the wires work in harsh and dangerous conditions — downpours, lightning storms, hurricanes, heavy winds, floods, wildfires and icy blasts. They race to restore electricity — and our comfort — as fast as possible.
 
Some consider them the rock stars of the utility industry, but the lineman brotherhood doesn’t seek the limelight. Like firefighters, they don’t work alone. They have one another’s trust and respect, and that keeps them going. It’s a kinship forged in a life-or-death job, day after day, month after month, year after year.
 
Because they put their lives in one another’s hands, the bonds and friendships that form among them can become unbreakable. They live the slogan “one for all and all for one.”
 
Safety is paramount in the Bluebonnet culture and one of the cooperative’s six foundation values. Safety training is ongoing, and not just for line workers. At Bluebonnet, regular safety meetings are mandatory and every employee learns how to use CPR to save a life.
 
Like so many in the electric utility industry, Bluebonnet’s Jeff Hohlt has a personal motto: “Everyone goes home at the end of the day.”

‘He wasn’t breathing’

Jeff was a teenager in 1977 when he got his first job in the utility industry. He was a lineman’s helper with the Lower Colorado River Authority, the primary wholesale power provider in Central Texas. He joined Bluebonnet just months later when the co-op took over LCRA’s Brenham-based operations.
 
Jeff grew up in Brenham, in Washington County, and never left. He learned to climb power poles before there were trucks with hydraulic buckets to lift a line worker into the air.  When he was 21, he became a lineman.
 
He and his wife, Pam, raised two daughters, Kayla and Hannah, and a son, Dylan.
 
More than four years ago, on Christmas night in 2013, the family was together and had just returned home from a holiday celebration. Pam, Jeff and their daughters went to bed around 10:30 p.m.
 
Jeff was thirsty. He sat up, swung his feet to the floor, but collapsed back onto the bed.
 
“He wasn’t breathing,” Pam said.
 
She cried out to 21-year-old Hannah, who was trained in CPR. Hannah performed chest compressions for a couple of minutes to keep her dad alive until Washington County EMS arrived.
 
“They shocked his heart four times,” Pam said.
 
The emergency crew stabilized Jeff and transported him to St. Joseph Hospital in Bryan.
 
The diagnosis: sudden cardiac arrest — when the heart suddenly stops beating and blood stops flowing to the brain and other vital organs. Death can occur in minutes.
 
Against all odds, Jeff was alive, thanks to Hannah and the rapid EMS response. Hannah was later awarded a prestigious American Red Cross Certificate of Merit — the organization’s highest lifesaving honor — for her actions. 
 
A defibrillator was placed in Jeff’s chest by doctors in Bryan. After three days in the hospital, Jeff returned home to a low-sodium diet and daily exercise. He went to the gym and walked on a treadmill. Winter faded, and he and Pam walked the neighborhood together, slowly increasing their time and distance.
 
A stoic man, Jeff loved being a lineman. He had risen through the ranks to become a supervisor over crews that built electric lines to new homes and businesses, and restored power during outages. He was a respected adviser, mentor and friend at Bluebonnet.
 
By mid-March, Jeff was back on the job. He had lost 50 pounds, was walking 3 miles a day and doing resistance training with weights. He knew some people doubted he could return to work, but he was up for the challenge. 
 
He kept one secret from his cardiologist. He was determined to compete in the 2014 Texas Lineman’s Rodeo in July.
 
And he planned to win.

A natural leader

Officially he was Kennedy C. Roland (named for President John F. Kennedy), but everyone knew him as Kenny. He grew up in Lockhart and played football, basketball, and ran track — a natural athlete. But what really drew people to Kenny was his ear-to-ear smile and infectious laugh that bounced off walls and tickled everyone within earshot.
 
He was a teenager when he got a job at Bluebonnet in 1980 in Lockhart and started from the ground up — literally. Kenny was a novice utility worker, meaning he stayed on the ground and supported co-workers climbing poles. He handed up equipment, ran errands and did whatever he was asked to do until he had the experience and know-how to climb poles himself.
 
Kenny wanted to be one of those rock star linemen.
 
In 1982, Kenny could often be found two-stepping and jitterbugging at Footloose, a San Marcos nightclub. That’s where he met Cathy Howshan. This dancing, laughing Texas man impressed the young woman from Massachusetts. He was sporting his favorite colors: red, white and black. He wore red-and-white glasses, a black tie with white polka dots, an argyle sweater vest, pinstriped slacks and red-and-white wingtips. And he drove a 1962 red-and-white Chevy.
 
Cathy, who was attending Southwest Texas State University (now Texas State University), remembers every detail.
 
“He was an awesome dancer,” she said. “All the girls wanted to dance with Kenny.”
 
They dated off and on, but got serious in 1996. Kenny proposed to Cathy while they sat on the front porch of the house he had built in Lockhart, the house they made their home. Their daughter, Kennedy Cecelia Roland, was born in 2005. Kenny adored her. “Our little angel baby,” Cathy remembers.
 
Kenny loved life, his family and his job. When he walked into a room, the atmosphere changed. That smile arrived first, then he enthusiastically — and loudly — greeted everyone with a hug and a pat on the back.
 
He always tried to make other people’s lives better and to put a positive spin on hard times. “It ain’t nothing but two tears in a bucket,” he would say to friends. “Why you stressing? Them two tears ain’t going to fill it up.”
 
Kenny worked for Bluebonnet for decades and his career mirrored Jeff’s, though they were at opposite geographic sides of the co-op’s service territory. He rose from apprentice to lineman to crew supervisor, a natural leader and patient mentor at the co-op’s Red Rock Service Center near Lockhart.
 
Like Jeff, Kenny was a key member of the lineman’s rodeo team, competing every year since 2007. Cathy and Kennedy joined the audience of well-wishers as Kenny climbed poles and encouraged his fellow linemen. Kenny and Jeff and Gary Barabas had competed together on the senior team since 2011, when the team placed second and qualified for the International Lineman’s Rodeo in Kansas.
 
But the 2014 Texas Lineman’s Rodeo was special. Kenny knew what Jeff had overcome to be on the roster and Kenny was determined to do his best to honor his teammates, who by then included alternate James Jordan.

High hopes for winning 
 
Gary grew up in Luling, working in oil fields on drilling rigs for 20 years before coming to Bluebonnet at age 39.
 
The father of a boy and girl — Blain and Bliss — Gary is an outdoors enthusiast who hunts, fishes, floats the San Marcos River and barbecues with friends and family on his days off. He began his Bluebonnet career in 2000 as a line worker and moved up through the ranks as an apprentice, then a journeyman lineman. 
 
Gary joined Jeff and Kenny on the senior rodeo team in 2011, the year they won second place. The three joined ranks again in 2012 and 2013.
 
“It was fun,” Gary said. “We three were a good team and worked great together.”
 
In 2014, with Jeff competing again and Gary’s longtime life partner Jaime Garner cheering him on, Gary had high hopes of returning to the winners’ stage.

‘It’s an adrenaline rush’  

James was the fourth member of the crew of Bluebonnet senior linemen. He grew up in Houston, then moved to Giddings — his wife Pshaun’s hometown — when the young couple were expecting Dominique, the first of their two sons. They wanted to raise him and, later, brother DeVonte, in the country.
 
Soon after arriving in Giddings in 1991, James got a job as a meter reader at Bluebonnet.
 
James was an eager participant in his first lineman’s rodeo in 2005, winning first place in an apprentice division event. He won second and third place on a journeyman lineman team in 2009. “I just fell in love with it,” he said of the rodeo competition. “It’s an adrenaline rush."
 
In 2013, when he turned 45, James joined the senior rodeo team as the alternate member. Training and competing with career linemen Jeff, Kenny and Gary was a thrill.
 
After the sudden cardiac arrest sidelined Jeff in December 2013, James was prepared to take Jeff’s place on the team if he needed to. But Jeff was relentless in his rehab and his doctor cleared him to compete.
 
“Everyone was excited about Jeff’s return,” James said. “We were all hoping for a big win.”
 
Most people didn’t know that James had been in pain for months by the time the rodeo rolled around. His left leg tingled and he couldn’t stand for long. He knew what it was; he’d had surgery for a herniated disc before. But James told his doctor to postpone a second surgery until after the competition.
 
He was a member of the senior team, and he wasn’t going to let his teammates down.

A day at Nolte Island Park

The sky was pitch black when Bluebonnet employees arrived at Nolte Island Park on the morning of July 19, 2014. Flashlights provided just enough light to collect and inspect equipment needed to compete in the 18th annual Texas Lineman’s Rodeo. It was Bluebonnet’s 10th consecutive trip to the competition.
 
The event, held every July, was created by the Texas Lineman’s Rodeo Association. It’s a chance for families and friends to watch linemen from utilities across the state display their skills. The weather is usually sweltering as line workers race against the judges’ stopwatches to prove they are the best of the best.
 
Well over 100 competitors showcase their skills in three divisions: apprentice, those studying to become line workers; journeyman, those who have completed classroom and apprenticeship programs; and seniors, who are journeymen 45 or older. It’s not glamorous. Across a field of 40-foot poles, sweaty men weighted with leather equipment belts pull wagons heavy with tools from one event to another.
 
Jeff, Kenny and Gary competed in five categories that showcased how they would rescue an injured lineman, how fast they could ascend and descend a pole and how well they changed and repaired equipment. They felt good about their performance, but they had a tough close competitor — Farmers Electric Cooperative from Northeast Texas.
 
“Every year we’d be on edge because it’s hot out there and we didn’t know how things were going,” James remembered.
 
As always, Kenny kept everyone’s spirits high during competition, chiming in with his motto:  “Stick with me, I’ll make you famous.”
 
It’s a phrase he and Cathy shared – she to inspire students at her dance studio (“If you listen to me, I will make you famous”), he as a constant mantra with colleagues during and after work.
 
“We’d say ‘Are you serious?’ ’’ James said. “Then we would sit back and laugh. He always made everyone at ease.”
 
Family, friends and colleagues gathered that evening at picnic tables under a pavilion as the winners were announced. When the Farmers Electric team was called to the stage for a second-place win, Bluebonnet fans knew their team would take home the flashy first-place trophy.
 
“Finally,” James told himself, “we did it!”
 
“We were so tickled,” remembers Randall Bownds, a lineman and coach of Bluebonnet rodeo teams. “Everybody wants to win, but everybody really wanted that senior team to win.”
 
Randall searched for the proper words to congratulate the team that night.
 
“We had so many obstacles this year. But there was one man who overcame a big obstacle and he’s here today. He trained and practiced with us in the hot sun. He didn’t miss a step. The dedication Jeff showed, he was gonna rodeo no matter what.
 
“He was a real inspiration. The whole senior team has been an inspiration. Watching them compete — not due to age but their dedication, their fun, their loyalty to each other and the rodeo.”
 
Jeff was 55, Gary was 53, Kenny was 51 and James was 46 when they celebrated with their friends that night.
 
That was the last Texas Lineman’s Rodeo for the champion senior team.

Six months later

Kenny was busy in January 2015 putting the final touches on Lockhart’s Martin Luther King Jr. March — arranging food donations and lining up speakers. The march was a huge success and one of many community events Kenny had started, or been involved with. Bluebonnet was even one of the sponsors.
 
The Monday march was followed by a Bluebonnet workday on Tuesday, and then Kenny, a Lockhart city councilman, attended a public meeting that night. He was tired but said he felt good. It was Jan. 20, 2015.

A chair saved for Kenny

Joyce Buckner was 15 miles from her home in Lockhart, driving to Bluebonnet’s Service Center in Red Rock early that Wednesday morning, Jan. 21. She saw an ambulance in a neighborhood along the way, but didn’t pay much attention. It was 6:20; she had a 7 a.m. meeting, and she was never late.
 
Joyce, one of Bluebonnet’s community representatives, picked her usual chair at the back of the meeting room, set her purse on the floor and saved a chair for her longtime, dear friend Kenny Roland.
 
The weekly meeting is mandatory for linemen and others to learn about safety issues and topics of interest. Joyce waited for a text from Kenny so she could open the back door, a small workplace tradition for the two.
 
The phone in Joyce’s purse vibrated. She stepped away to answer. Suddenly, the others in the room heard her scream “No!”
 
The ambulance she had seen that morning was at Kenny’s house, and she had just learned that she would never see him again. A friend of Cathy Roland told Joyce that Kenny had died peacefully in his sleep. He was just 52.
 
The devastating news spread quickly. Linemen and employees working in Bluebonnet’s Brenham and Giddings offices were in similar safety meetings when the calls and texts started.
 
Overwhelming grief turned the morning’s mood dark and tears flowed. It was like a missing man formation. Everyone was in his or her place except Kenny. His chair was empty.
  
Randall Bownds, the lineman rodeo coach, was leading another safety meeting 50 miles away in Giddings. “It got real silent and I had to get up and walk out and leave the room. I couldn’t hold it back,” he said.
 
“Linemen form a bond. You laugh with them, cry with them and work with them. It’s devastating when you lose one.
 
“I have to say losing Kenny was the hardest,” Randall said.

Celebration turns somber

The day after Kenny’s death was supposed to be a celebration for Bluebonnet. Once a year, the cooperative has a company-wide meeting to honor employees for their achievements and community service during the previous year as well as their years of service, including those who retired in the past 12 months. It’s the one day when almost all employees are gathered together.
 
But Jan. 22, 2015, was somber. Tears fell on round tables that filled the big room at the Bastrop Convention & Exhibit Center. Numb disbelief hung in the air.
 
Just a year earlier, Kenny had walked across the stage at Recognition Day to receive the co-op’s Foundation Value Award for Love. That, along with safety, courage, respect, reliability and community, are the six guiding principles for Bluebonnet employees. It was a fitting tribute to a man who loved, and was loved, by so many.
 
He was scheduled to walk the stage again, to present the coveted award to another employee. The co-op’s rodeo team members — linemen, apprentices, judges and others who helped produce the rodeo event — sat together at a table watching as another employee took over Kenny’s duties. Almost all were wearing the 2014 Lineman’s Rodeo logo shirts in Kenny’s honor, and when the meeting ended, the rodeo team collected donations to buy a memorial for their fallen friend.

Farewell to a friend
 
Over the next two days, thousands attended Kenny’s visitation and funeral in Lockhart. The funeral was at the First Baptist Church because it has the largest sanctuary in town, but it couldn’t hold all the tearful mourners who crowded into adjacent rooms and spilled onto sidewalks.
 
A seemingly endless line of family members, elected officials, Bluebonnet colleagues, church friends and community activists hugged and comforted Cathy and Kennedy Roland, who was 9. They didn’t know who all of these people were, but they saw that Kenny had touched more lives than they ever imagined.
 
He had been the first African-American elected to the Lockhart City Council and he was the key organizer of that city’s first MLK Jr. March in 2004. Two months after Kenny’s death, the Texas House of Representatives passed a memorial resolution that recognized his contributions to community, church and the thousands of lives he touched.

Words to set in stone

Six months later, line worker teams from all over Texas stood with hard hats in hands at the opening ceremonies of the 2015 Texas Lineman’s Rodeo outside Seguin. For a silent moment they honored Kenny. Jeff, standing in the bucket of a work truck, raised the American flag during the emotional tribute.
 
Cathy told Bluebonnet’s team: “Win or lose, you are all champions in his heart and mind. So just do it Kenny Roland style — living it and loving it. I know he will be watching over all of you with that great big smile.”
 
A year after Kenny’s death, the senior rodeo team and coaches piled into a Chevrolet Suburban and drove to Lockhart. They unloaded a dark gray granite footstone and carried it to Kenny’s grave under shade trees in the Lockhart Municipal Burial Park. Cathy and Kennedy Roland and Joyce Buckner joined them. The marker is engraved with a Bluebonnet logo and the words “In Honor of Our ‘Brother’ Kenny Roland, 2014 Bluebonnet Electric Rodeo Team.”
 
The first year after Kenny died, Cathy said she and Kennedy were on autopilot, and just “got by.” The second year they “got through.” Last year, the enormity of his death sunk in.
 
“We’ve cried more,” Cathy said. “It’s been harder on us both.” Kennedy misses her dad.
 
He was teaching her how to ride her horse, play golf, throw a football, rollerblade and hop on a pogo stick. The two often wrestled in the living room and Kennedy loved sneaking upstairs on Saturday mornings and waking her dad by jumping on the bed.
 
Rituals have turned to memories. “He was so much fun,” Kennedy said.
 
Cathy still owns The Dancing Center Unlimited, the business Kenny encouraged her to start in 1999. Kennedy is 12, in sixth grade at Lockhart Montessori School.
 
Cathy continues to design a headstone for Kenny’s grave. “It took me a year to be able to walk into the monument business in Lockhart,” she said. “That stone is final. I’m not ready.”
 
The headstone will be shaped like Texas in black marble with flecks of blue. Flower urns will adorn each side.
 
“It will have the Bluebonnet (logo) and foundation values because Kenny represented those well,” Cathy said. “If you took those values, it would describe Kenny to a T.”
 
More importantly, there’s a lot of space on the back for an epitaph and Cathy is still thinking about what it should say.
 
“It has to depict Kenny — his life and what he represents,” she said. “If someone walks by, I want them to say, ‘Wow, that’s a great guy.’ ”

The rodeo team today

Bluebonnet's three senior rodeo team members — Jeff, Gary and James — gathered recently for lunch. It was the first time the three had been together alone since Kenny’s death. They thought back to the rodeo championship several years ago. Just seven months before that victorious day, one of the team members had almost died, and six months later one would. Their tight-knit fellowship, part of the bond between Bluebonnet linemen, helps keep them going in the wake of tragedy.
 
Their memories are filled with laughter tempered by sadness. Losing Kenny was devastating personally, but was a huge loss professionally, too.
 
“He was a good teacher and a good influence (with new employees),” said Gary, a journeyman at the Red Rock Service Center who today works service orders in the San Marcos, Lockhart and Luling areas. “He was a peacemaker and if there was a problem, he knew how to de-escalate it.
 
“Kenny was knowledgeable about everything and knew how to talk to people the way they wanted to be talked to,” he said. “He was great with (Bluebonnet) members and had a work ethic he passed along to younger employees.”
 
Then, thinking about that work ethic, all three burst into laughter. They recalled how at the end of a shift, Kenny’s clothes were often cleaner than theirs.
 
“Learn how to work smarter, not harder,” Kenny would advise them.
 
There was a lot of soul-searching after the 13 months between Jeff’s sudden cardiac arrest and Kenny’s unexpected death. (The official cause of his death was “undetermined,” but the coroner's report noted blockage of the arteries.)
 
“It changes your priorities,” Jeff said. “I used to think about having money – now I think ‘It’s only money.’ I’m thinking more about how good it is to wake up each morning.”
 
 Jeff is still a crew supervisor and walks 3 to 4 miles a day (6 or more on the weekend.) He’s following a fairly strict diet and wears a Fitbit exercise band to make sure he takes 12,000 steps a day.
 
Gary made some lifestyle changes, too.
 
 “Since then I’ve quit smoking and (am) doing better with exercise,” he said. “Still haven’t gotten the eating down right yet,” he added, laughing.
 
James has fully recovered from herniated disc surgery in 2015. Today, he supervises Bluebonnet’s metering department.
 
“This has brought us all closer together,” James said, “because we know at any given time, any one of us could pass. So we know we should cherish the time we have together. Let’s make the best of it and talk. Let’s not lose touch.”
 
Jeff’s daughter Hannah married last year, and Kayla is getting married this month. He and Pam keep in touch with Cathy and Kennedy Roland, sending cards for holidays and special events.
 
Gary and James were each expecting their first grandchild in March.
 
Jeff joined one of Bluebonnet’s journeyman teams for the 2017 Lineman’s Rodeo. James and Gary haven’t competed since 2014.
 
There hasn’t been another senior Bluebonnet rodeo team since Kenny’s death. Bluebonnet will compete at the 2018 Texas Lineman’s Rodeo on July 21, but there won’t be a senior team this year, either.
 
The Texas Lineman’s Rodeo, the three friends agree, isn’t the same without Kenny Roland’s boisterous personality and magnetic smile.
 
“We lost a friend,” James said.
 
“We lost a family member,” Jeff adds.
 
“Anyone who met Kenny knows what we lost,” Gary said.

Card Teaser
Their profession is dangerous and their bonds are unbreakable. But for this team of Bluebonnet linemen, life’s toughest test is only a heartbeat away.

Title
Lineworker legacies
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At Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative, many have followed in the bootsteps of their family members. Today, the next generation of lineworkers keeps the lights on, builds new power lines, maintains the electric system and watches out for each other. It’s not just a job — it’s a calling.

Story by Alyssa Meinke
Photos by Sarah Beal

The Lockhart lineage

Four generations in this Central Texas family have carried on a tradition that began in 1917 and continues today at Bluebonnet.

Growing up, Joe M.T. Lockhart briefly dreamed that he might become a second baseman for the Texas Rangers. As they typically do, childhood dreams usually give way to adult realities. “I needed a career that would support a family. It didn’t take long for me to realize that career was line work,” he said.

Line work is what the Lockhart family does. The young man would follow the same path as his father, grandfather and great-great-grandfather. 

He is the fourth generation of the Lockhart family to work on electric lines in Texas. The first was Tom Womack, a veteran of the Spanish-American War who got a job in 1917 stringing lines at a Waco military base. Joe M.T.’s grandfather, Joe P. Lockhart, was a lineworker and his father, Joe M. Lockhart, began his career as a lineworker. Now, Joe M.T. Lockhart, 32, is a journeyman lineworker at Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative. 

Finding several generations of lineworkers in one family isn’t rare. Bluebonnet employs 118 lineworkers who restore power and help maintain more than 12,800 miles of power lines, and of those, 18 are following in their father’s — or grandfather’s or father-in-law’s — bootsteps.

“It’s an act of service that fosters a sense of pride and connection,” said Joe M.T. Lockhart,  who works out of Bluebonnet’s Maxwell service center in Caldwell County. 

The work is complicated and dangerous, and, as with police, firefighters and other first responders, line work can become part of who you are. Not many can do it. Communities and rural residents cannot function without the work of people who build, repair and protect the power lines that snake across Bluebonnet’s 3,800-square-mile service area. The lineworkers keep electricity flowing  to homes and grocery stores, farms and hospital emergency rooms, small shops and big factories.

Joe Lockhart tattoo
Joe M.T. Lockhart is proud of his lineworker heritage, sporting a tattoo on his right forearm that reads ‘Lineman 4th Gen.’

Still, the Lockhart family history is remarkable. In a rapidly changing world where fewer and fewer children step into their parents’ professions, four generations in the same challenging career is unusual. The Lockharts also reflect not just one family’s work, but that of the thousands of men and women, companies and politicians who brought electric power to Texas.

The story has played out for more than a century, beginning during World War I with a man named Foster Boone “Tom” Womack, skipping a generation and continuing through three generations of Lockharts, each named Joe.

The fourth generation: 
Joe M.T. Lockhart

As a child, Joe M.T. Lockhart would occasionally go to work with his dad. At age 6, he saw his father on the equipment loading dock as a lineworker. When he was 11, he watched his dad in a control center of  Texas Power & Light as power lines were monitored and crews dispatched where needed.

Joe M.T. was 21 and working in the kitchen of the H-E-B Center at Cedar Park, an arena for sports, concerts and shows about 20 miles north of Austin, when he got the call. Heart of Texas Electric Cooperative, based in McGregor, wanted him in for an interview. He immediately told his supervisor, “Man, I’ve got to go. My dream job just called.” 

He accepted the job the day after his interview. 

Joe M.T. started linework at Heart of Texas in 2013, then spent four years with Nueces Electric Cooperative near the Texas Gulf Coast. After that, he worked for private power-line contracting companies until 2021, when he joined Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative’s apprentice lineworker program.

He completed training and received his journeyman lineworker certification from the Department of Labor in 2022. 

On good days, Joe M.T. repairs streetlights and installs new meters and transformers. He connects new service and repairs electric equipment on Bluebonnet’s system. On bad days — when the weather is raging, wind is blowing and outages are occurring — he and other lineworkers brave harsh conditions to inspect lines and equipment, identifying and addressing issues to restore power to the cooperative’s members.  

The work is more than just a family legacy. It’s about community, and one story in particular illustrates that. 

He was working at Nueces Electric Cooperative, based in Robstown east of Corpus Christi, when Hurricane Harvey hit Texas in August 2017. It is one of many major storms Joe M.T. has worked over the years.

At the end of one 16-hour shift, he and co-worker Robert Vasquez had just finished restoring power to about 100 people on a county road in Orange Grove, 36 miles west of Corpus Christi. “As we were coming down this county road, all the cars had stopped and there were about 40 people on the road, blocking our way out,” Joe M.T. recalled. 

The two men were worried that they were about to confront a mob of people angry because they had been without electricity for four days. “We slowly get out of the truck, thinking, ‘What’s about to happen to us?’ ” But to Lockhart’s and Vasquez’s surprise, they were met with water, brisket sandwiches, chips and smiles. 

“They gave us their last food and water because we had just gotten their lights back on, and they didn’t let us leave until we finished,” Joe M.T. said. “It made me feel very special. These people just wanted to thank us. That was a big deal.” 

Joe M.T. carried that connection to community with him when he joined Bluebonnet. He  lives in San Marcos with his 10-year-old daughter, Faith. His parents, Cissy and Joe M. Lockhart, stay with Faith when her father is at work. Joe M.T. Lockhart’s parents understand the demands of the job, because his father worked at electric utilities for 39 years. 

The third generation: 
Joe M. Lockhart

Joe M. Lockhart in an undated photo
Joe M. Lockhart, in 1994 when he worked for Texas Power & Light, based in Irving. Family photo

Cissy Lockhart, 64, remembers meeting Joe M. Lockhart in Bedford, 24 miles west of Dallas, in 1985. Joe M. was working for an electrical contractor. “He fell madly in love with me,” she said. Joe M. wanted to marry Cissy right away, but she told him he was crazy and needed to give it a year. So he did. 

The couple married in 1986.

At the time, Joe M. was early in his lineworker training, and “line work was all he talked about,” even talking about it in his sleep, she said.  

“His father talked about it when they got together,” she said. “It’s just part of their DNA.”

Joe M. became a lineworker in 1985 at Texas Power & Light — now a part of Oncor, an investor-owned electric provider based in Irving. Over time he became a dispatcher, then supervisor of the West Distribution Operations Center. Eventually, he became a district manager for Johnson City-based Pedernales Electric Cooperative, the largest electric cooperative in the United States. He retired in 2022, at 58 years old. He and Cissy now live in Spring Branch, west of San Marcos. 

In his time, Joe M. saw advancements in personal protective equipment, fire-retardant clothing, and the shift away from manual and corded tools. But it remained — and remains — tough work.

“You could just about bet by the time a lineman hit his mid-to-late 40s, his shoulders were going to be gone, his elbows were going to be gone and his knees were going to be gone,” he said.

Some aspects of linework remain timeless: stringing power lines, positioning poles and restoring power in the wake of outages. “You still have to plan,” Joe M. emphasized, stressing the unchanged importance of preparation and foresight in the trade.

He learned it from his dad, Joe P. Lockhart, the second generation to carry on the family legacy. 

The second generation: 
Joe P. Lockhart

Joe P. Lockhart
Joe P. Lockhart died in 1999 at age 59.

Joe P. Lockhart started as a lineworker in 1957 at Texas Power & Light and spent 35 years with the company. He was an assistant superintendent in Tyler from 1969 to 1971, superintendent in Hillsboro from 1971 to 1976, and then held jobs in Waxahachie and Euless from 1976 to 1985. 

Joe P. Lockhart
Joe P. Lockhart, left, walks with a colleague in downtown Waco in the 1950s.  Family photo

Before he retired in 1992, he was the fleet manager for Texas Power & Light’s eastern region in Tyler. He passed away in 1999, at 59, in Tyler.

Service came naturally to his household. While Joe P. did linework and volunteered in the community, his wife, Kathryn, was an occupational therapist helping mentally disabled adults. 

The couple had three children, all of whom would find jobs centered on helping people.

At home, father and son liked to duck hunt together, but Joe M. also got to go to work with his dad. 

At that time, lineworkers still mostly scaled poles the hard way, digging spurs into the wood and climbing.

Joe M. recalls the moment, sometime around 1971, when his father, who by then was overseeing all lineworkers at Texas Power & Light in Hillsboro, brought home a new piece of equipment — one of the company’s first bucket trucks. 

“They set it up in the middle of the street. We got in the bucket, and I figured out real quick that that was pretty fun,” Joe M. said, likening it to a carnival ride. 

Bucket trucks marked a turning point in linework, heralding a new era of efficiency and safety. And the one parked on Joe P. Lockhart’s street more than 50 years ago helped give rise to his son’s career, continuing the legacy started by his grandfather-in-law Foster Boone “Tom” Womack. 

The first generation: 
Foster Boone ‘Tom’ Womack

In 1917, electric lines were just creeping into major Texas cities, often constructed by the military to power streetlights.  

After serving in the Army during the Spanish-American War, Foster Boone “Tom” Womack got a job building power lines at Camp MacArthur in Waco, a military training facility created for World War I. The sprawling camp closed down after the war in March 1919, but the power lines Womack built laid the groundwork for Waco’s electric system. 

Womack’s daughter, Mary Billon Womack White, told later generations some details of her father’s work. Tom Womack went on to become an engineer, helping design a power plant in Robstown, according to family records. 

In the mid-1930s, the Rural Electrification Act unleashed millions of dollars in federal loan guarantees, and power lines began stretching into the rural reaches of Texas. Within a decade, cooperatives, including Bluebonnet, were formed to get power to communities where private utilities saw little chance for profits.

Back then, a house was typically wired for a few appliances, and one overhead light and outlet per room.

Womack passed away in 1938 in Waco. At some point in his career, he started electrical contracting work, wiring Waco homes for electricity for the first time. “My grandmother said these people used to think the house was on fire because of all the light,” Joe M. said. “They weren’t used to that.”

Mary also remembered some unique memorabilia, including the metal hooks her father attached to his shoes to climb poles. Little did she know that the next iteration of these tools would resurface in the hands of her son-in-law, Joe P. Lockhart, bridging the gap between past and present as key to the family tradition of line work. 

The evolution and allure of line work

Work on power lines demands a unique blend of physical prowess and technical expertise, and constant attention to life-threatening hazards. Over the years that the Lockharts have been tending the lines, some traditional tools, like Klein Tools’ lineman’s pliers and Super 33+ electrical tape are still in use. 

Lineworkers have come to rely on specialized equipment to ensure their safety. This includes fire-retardant clothing, fiberglass tools designed for electric work and battery-powered drills that replaced manual and corded drills. 

Hydraulic machines have replaced spears for drilling holes for power poles, further enhancing efficiency while keeping workers safe.

Training and equipment have improved, but lineworkers still must prioritize safety and focus on details to keep them and their coworkers safe.

“It’s a dangerous job and it’s not for everyone,” said Joe M. Lockhart, whose father always told him to “be careful.” That simple, gentle reminder of the challenges of line work is one that has been repeated hundreds – perhaps thousands – of times in the Lockhart family, from generation to generation.

***

Eckerts
Trevor Eckert, left, started as a Bluebonnet lineworker in 2020. Johnnie Eckert, right, is pictured in 2003.

Johnnie and Trevor Eckert

Father: Johnnie Eckert, 64

Lives in: Brenham

Years at Bluebonnet: 2000-2020

Previously: Journeyman lineworker

“I had been wanting to start working at the cooperative for a while, but I didn’t want to leave my work with my dad. So when he sold the business, I knew it was time to go to Bluebonnet. I enjoyed being a lineman and learning all I could in my time there.”

Son: Trevor Eckert, 35

Lives in: Brenham

Years at Bluebonnet: 2020-present

Currently: Journeyman lineworker

Previously: Seven years as lineworker for the city of Brenham

“I knew that it was in my blood. I knew what the reward was, as well as the sacrifices.”
Bubba and Trey Townsend
Trey Townsend, left, and his dad, Bubba.

Bubba and Trey Townsend

Father: Bubba Townsend, 52

Lives in: Bastrop

Previously: General electrician helper in high school, worked two years at Bluebonnet; lineworker crew supervisor for Austin Energy; lineworker crew supervisor for city of Bastrop

Years at Bluebonnet: 2022-present

Currently: Lineworker crew supervisor

Son: Trey Townsend, 23

Lives in: Rockne

Years at Bluebonnet: 2019-present

Currently: Apprentice lineworker

Previously: Worked on a ranch in Bastrop

“I would tell (would-be lineworkers) what my dad told me when I said I wanted to do this work: You have to be willing to work hard, but it is a very rewarding career. It is great to be able to see a problem through until the lights are back on for members.”
bittner kasper
Monroe Bittner, left, died at age 80 in 2013. Larry Bittner, center, shown in 2006. Kyle Kasper, right, started at Bluebonnet in 2005.

Monroe Bittner, Larry Bittner
and Kyle Kasper

Father: Monroe Bittner, died at 80 in 2013

Worked in: Giddings

Years at Bluebonnet: 1957-1993

Worked as: Journeyman lineworker

Previously: Built telephone lines for U.S. Army

Son: Larry Bittner, 63

Lives in: Giddings

Years at Bluebonnet: 1978-2022

Previously: Journeyman lineworker

“My dad taught me the most out of anyone at Bluebonnet. I worked with him as a helper from a young age. He taught me how to climb on a pole outside of our house.”

Son-in-law: Kyle Kasper, 40

Lives in: Giddings

Years at Bluebonnet: 2005-present

Currently: Lineworker crew supervisor

Previously: Member of Bluebonnet’s first class of apprentice lineworkers

“Larry has taught me how to manage the time away from family, the sacrifices your family has to make because of your job, and how to be there for them. I got pretty lucky with a wife who understands the nature of the job.”
Izaac and Ernest Estrada
Ernest Estrada, right, became a Bluebonnet lineworker in 2010. His son, Izaac, joined Bluebonnet in 2023.

Ernest and Izaac Estrada

Father: Ernest Estrada, 45

Lives in: Gonzales  

Years at Bluebonnet: 2010-present

Currently: Contractor inspector

Previously: Lineworker crew supervisor, electrician

“When I joined Bluebonnet, I knew I would be home almost every night. My boys could count on that.”

Son: Izaac Estrada, 24

Lives in: Gonzales  

Years at Bluebonnet: 2023-present

Currently: Apprentice lineworker

Previously: Army Reserves

“You have to sacrifice being comfortable. When it is hot, cold, raining, snowing, or any other kind of bad weather, the linemen are out in it.”
Urbans
Walter Urban, left, around 1944. His son, Vernon Urban, center, worked alongside him for Lower Colorado River Electric Cooperative, which became Bluebonnet in 1965. Garett Urban, right.

Walter, Vernon and Garett Urban

Great-grandfather: Walter Urban, died at 62 in 1965

Lived in: Giddings    

Years at Lower Colorado River Electric Cooperative (the co-op's name before it was Bluebonnet): 1939-early ’50s

Worked as: Lineworker

Grandfather: Vernon Urban, died at 42 in 1966

Years at LCREC (Bluebonnet): Mid-1940s-early 1950s

Lived in: Giddings    

Worked as: Lineworker

Lineage: His son, Gene Urban, 66, has worked at Bluebonnet for 33 years, and today is the cooperative’s manager of facilities

Great-grandson: Garett Urban, 36

Lineage: Gene’s son, Vernon's grandson and Walter’s great-grandson

Lives in: Giddings  

Years at Bluebonnet: 2020-present

Currently: Journeyman lineworker

“It is a great trade to learn, and the field is ever-growing. It’s rewarding when you can get members’ power restored during a storm, but it is also a challenge. You have to be willing to work hard in bad weather.”
David, Douglas and Tyler Grimm
Douglas Grimm, left, and his nephew Tyler Grimm. Douglas holds a photo of his father, David, who died in 2020.

David, Douglas and Tyler Grimm

Father/grandfather: David Grimm, died at 67 in 2020

Lived in: Lincoln

Years at Bluebonnet: 1973-2020

Worked as: Lineworker crew supervisor, right-of-way superintendent

Son: Douglas Grimm, 42

Lives in: Lexington

Years at Bluebonnet: 2001-present

Currently: Contractor inspector

Previously: Lineworker crew supervisor

Grandson/nephew: Tyler Grimm, 25 (Douglas’ nephew and David’s grandson)

Lives in: Giddings

Years at Bluebonnet: 2022-present

Currently: Apprentice lineworker  

“My grandfather taught me a lot about taking my time with a job. He showed a lot of patience and persistence when teaching me stuff when I was younger. That showed me how I needed to approach line work and the other linemen I work with. My uncle has taught me that you will learn something new every day, and to never stop learning.”
Saegert
Kenneth Saegert, right, has worked in the electric distribution industry more than 30 years. His son, Tucker, left, joined Bluebonnet in 2022.

Kenneth and Tucker Saegert

Father: Kenneth Saegert, 52

Lives in: Elgin

Previously: Lineworker at Bluebonnet for two years in the early 1990s; worked at Austin Energy for 29 years, retired

Currently: Returned to work at Austin Energy in 2021, inspecting poles

Son: Tucker Saegert, 19

Lives in: Elgin

Previously: Manager of a Bastrop barbecue restaurant

Years at Bluebonnet: 2022-present

Currently: Apprentice lineworker

“I worried about my dad when he was gone when I was younger, but knowing the guys around him were going to make sure he got home safely made those worries go away as I got older.”
Lloyd Catchings and Joseph Carrillo
Lloyd Catchings, left, and his grandson Joseph Carrillo, had a snapshot taken together following Hurricane Laura in 2020. They were helping restore power for different companies, but were working in the same area. Family photo

Lloyd Catchings and Joseph Carrillo

Grandfather: Lloyd Catchings, 73

Lives in: Bastrop County

Previously: Began working at electric utilities in 1968; lineworker at LCRA; lineworker and lineworker crew supervisor at Austin Energy; retired in 2023

Grandson: Joseph Carrillo, 31

Lives in: Cedar Creek

Years at Bluebonnet: 2022-present

Currently: Journeyman lineworker

Previously: In the electric utility business since 2011; power-line contract companies

“Being a lineman will teach you a lot about yourself and the things you can accomplish, both mentally and physically. My grandfather taught me to approach a job by breaking it down into steps, and to look for the safest way possible to complete a job.”
Meinke
Dean Meinke, right, has worked at Bluebonnet 37 years. His son Colton, left, started at Bluebonnet in 2016.

Dean and Colton Meinke

Father: Dean Meinke, 61

Lives in: Ledbetter  

Years at Bluebonnet: 1983-2020 (full-time, started as lineworker), 2021-present (part-time)

Worked as: Lineworker crew supervisor, maintenance supervisor, other positions

Currently: Part-time maintenance specialist

Son: Colton Meinke, 31

Lives in: Ledbetter  

Years at Bluebonnet: 2016-present

Currently: Substation technician; assists lineworkers with power restoration

Previously: Control center operator  

“I’ve learned a lot from my dad, from names of parts to field lingo, how things work and their purpose. I call him a lot of times to get his reassurance that I’m doing things right.”
Tobola
H.J. ‘Jim’ Tobola, upper right, was, above from left, the father of David Tobola, the grandfather of Austin and Dalton and the father of Joey. His son James, middle right, and son-in-law, Phillip Ellis, lower right.

Jim, David, Joey, James, Dalton and Austin Tobola, Phillip Ellis

Father: Jim Tobola, died at 74 in 2022

Lived in: Giddings      

Experience: 55 years at power-line construction contractors; majority on Bluebonnet's electric system

Previously: Built communications lines for the U.S. Army

Son: David Tobola, 48

Lives in: Giddings    

Years at Bluebonnet: 2002-present

Worked as: Journeyman lineworker, lineworker crew supervisor, field operations superintendent

Currently: Manager of field operations

“The best part about this job is the bonds we have with everyone. They aren’t just co-workers, they are family.”

Son: Joey Tobola, 45

Lives in: Bastrop   

Years at Bluebonnet: 2002-2014, 2019-present

Worked as: Journeyman lineworker, field operations superintendent

Currently: Manager of contractor operations

Previously: Lineworker and supervisor at power-line construction contractors

“My favorite part of line work is making something out of nothing and caring for power lines, equipment and people.”

Son: James Tobola, 51

Lives in: Bastrop

Currently: Lineworker crew supervisor at power-line construction contractors

Son-in-law: Phillip Ellis, 48

Lives in: Giddings   

Years at Bluebonnet: 2005-present

Worked as: Journeyman lineworker, substation and transmission supervisor

Currently: Manager of technical services

Grandson: Dalton Tobola, 24, James Tobola’s son

Lives in: Bastrop    

Years at Bluebonnet: 2024-present

Currently: Journeyman lineworker    

Previously: Five years at power-line construction contractors

“Being able to help a team of people working toward the goal of getting the power back on is the best part of line work.”

Grandson: Austin Tobola, 19, David Tobola’s son

Lives in: Giddings  

Currently: Lineworker at power-line construction contractors since 2023 high school graduation

Alton and Eric Sommerfield
Alton Sommerfield, left, began his line work career for the city of Brenham. His son, Eric, works for Bluebonnet. 

Alton and Eric Sommerfield

Father: Alton Sommerfield, 63

Lives in: Brenham

Currently: City of Brenham’s deputy general manager of utilities since 2020

Previously: Lineworker for the city of Brenham since 1979

Son: Eric Sommerfield, 35

Lives in: Brenham

Years at Bluebonnet: 2018-present

Currently: Lineworker crew supervisor in Brenham

Previously: Six years at power-line construction contractors

“When I started, my dad always reminded me to wear my gloves and other personal protective equipment. Now that I have a family, I see why he was so adamant about that.” 
Schlemmer
Doug Schlemmer, left, a Bluebonnet lineworker for 32 years, with his son Jakob, who has been a lineworker for five years for Texas New Mexico Power. Above right, at the 2003 Texas Lineman's Rodeo in Seguin.

Doug and Jakob Schlemmer

Father: Doug Schlemmer, 57

Lives in: La Grange

Years at Bluebonnet: 1984-2006; 2014-present

Currently: Contractor inspector

Previously: Meter reader, line-design technician, lineworker crew supervisor

“I tried to teach him to be safe. Something I always told him is that he should come home the way he left. And that he should always check these three things: hard hat, gloves and ground chains. I still worry about him every day, though.”

Son: Jakob Schlemmer, 24

Currently: Journeyman lineworker for Texas New Mexico PowerPreviously: Lineworker helper at Bluebonnet

Billy and John Matejcek
Bill Matejcek, left, and his son, John, both pursued careers in line work.

Bill and John Matejcek

Father: Bill Matejcek, 69

Lives in: Giddings  

Years at Bluebonnet: 1982-1995

Worked as: Lineworker, manager of safety

After: Ten years at power-line construction contractors

“If you want to become a lineman, make sure you go to a good company that cares about their employees, that is very safety-oriented, like Bluebonnet, and learn from them."

Son: John Matejcek, 45

Lives in: Giddings  

Years at Bluebonnet: 2005-present

Works as: Journeyman lineworker

Previously: Eight years at power-line construction contractors

“What made my dad a good lineman was his patience in teaching someone who had no idea about the job. You have to do the job safely. That's the priority. So everybody goes home at night.”
Stephen and Doug Braneff
Stephen, left, is one of four Braneff sons who followed their father Doug into the electric distribution industry.

 

Doug and Stephen Braneff

Father: Doug Braneff, 76

Lives in: Bastrop    

Years at Bluebonnet: 1985-2006

Worked as: Lineworker crew supervisor, superintendent of operations

Previously and after: 33 years at power-line construction companies

"Even with all the safety practices, there are still elements out there that can be dangerous. A lot of people say you’re not your brother’s keeper, but whenever you’re on a line crew, you are your brother’s keeper.”

Son: Stephen Braneff, 34

Lives in: Bastrop  

Years at Bluebonnet: 2023-present

Works as: Apprentice lineworker

Previously: 14 years as a lineworker at power-line construction contractors

“You sacrifice your time away from your family to ensure everyone has power, and as a lineman, there's no greater feeling than to get somebody's lights on who's been without power.”

***

Bluebonnet’s lineworker internship program

Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative offers lineworker internships to hire and train the next generation of employees to master the difficult job.

The intern program began in 2018 and focuses on hiring local candidates, including recent high school graduates. The program starts with six months of classroom instruction and field observation at Bluebonnet.

There is a strong emphasis on safety, which is of utmost importance at the cooperative. Interns receive technical instruction about line work, earn climbing certifications and obtain commercial driver’s licenses.

After that, they start as apprentices, training in the field alongside journeyman lineworkers. After four years — 672 hours of technical instruction and 8,000 hours of on-the-job learning — interns who successfully complete the program can become U.S. Department of Labor-certified journeyman lineworkers.

The program is part of the cooperative’s investment in the communities it serves. It also allows Bluebonnet to continue providing safe, reliable electricity to its members, now and in the future.

Watch bluebonnet.coop and the cooperative’s social media for information about applications and when they will be accepted. For more information about the cooperative’s lineworker training program, go to bluebonnet.coop/careers.

Thank a lineworker

National Lineworker Appreciation Day is April 8. It is a chance to thank the men and women who work day and night, 365 days a year, to build, restore and maintain the nation’s — and Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative’s — power supply system.

Electric cooperatives observe the second Monday in April as National Lineworker Appreciation Day, after a 2014 decision by the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.

Check Bluebonnet’s social media on April 8 for a video tribute to lineworkers, describing the qualities and skills their jobs entail. You can help us thank the cooperative’s lineworkers by leaving a comment on our video or by sending us a private message.

Card Teaser
At Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative, many have followed in the bootsteps of their family members. Today, the next generation of lineworkers keeps the lights on, builds new power lines, maintains the electric system and watches out for each other. It’s not just a job — it’s a calling.

A rare solar spectacle

On Monday, April 8, residents of the Bluebonnet service area will be treated to a rare celestial eve...
Media contacts

Have questions or comments about news stories or media inquiries?
Please contact:

Will Holford
Manager of Public Affairs
512-332-7955
will.holford@bluebonnet.coop

Alyssa Meinke
Manager of Marketing & Communications 
512-332-7918
alyssa.meinke@bluebonnet.coop

Next Board of Directors' meeting
Oct. 21

The agenda for the Board meeting is updated the Friday before the meeting.

View agendas »