 July is going to be hotter than ever because you get up to $50 off any smartphone at Appalachian Wireless to your agreement required. Better service, bigger savings, that's today's Appalachian Wireless, an East Kentucky network company. Let's go down and burn my building down if we have to, with the elect. In Pike and Letcher counties, folks are coming together and looking for a fight. Not a brawl in the street, but a fight against a proposed hike in electricity rates. In Pike County, a handful of people came together for an organizational meeting with hopes of organizing a regional protest rally against Kentucky powers proposed 17 percent rate increase. And I've had several people express interest in organizing a, you know, and I think at this point it's a purely a conversation, but some type of, you know, a public, I guess, show of disagreement. In Letcher County, though, the rally seemed to already be underway. You can take a twig and break it, right there, but if you combine us all together by QOR, guess what you can't do, can't break it. Organizer Steve Brewer spoke to the crowd at the Letcher County Courthouse, urging them to rise up against Kentucky power and march on the Public Service Commission. He compared this fight to that of unions organizing and fighting for their members. AEP has picked on us long enough. Every year that we do nothing, they go away, they pick on us again, they pick us on us again. And let me tell you something, come next year, you know, what they'll ask for? Another increase. But let me tell you something, we're going to stand up and we're going to stand up AEP. And AEP is going to know that we are tired of what they're doing to us. And the people listened, and the people spoke. They need to cut back and be within their means. Let's do what we can to help our neighbor. Let's do what we can to help our own family, and let's try to get this done. They forgot that we're the customers, and without us, they wouldn't be in business. I go to Frank for a week, let's go. Let's go down and burn my building down if we have to. I'm at 100% agree with that. I'm ready to fight. In the movement against Kentucky Power's proposed rate increase is underway, a march is being planned for Monday in Weizberg, the first of many organized demonstrations if Brewer has his way. We're already two strikes down. When you take a governor that appoints a guy that was an attorney for the power company, and he puts him in as chairman, you're already a strike down right there. But we don't care. I've seen two strikes turn into a home run quick. So we're maybe down, but we ain't out. So we go for that, and after Monday, we'll decide where we go from there. In Pikeville and in Weizberg, Chris Anderson, EKB News.