Fleming Island is a peninsula, and the water is the reason to think about backup power. The
St. Johns River runs along the east side,
Doctors Lake cuts deep into the middle and
west, and Swimming Pen Creek laces the south.
All that water is the draw for communities like Eagle Harbor and Pace Island, and it is also
what backs up and floods when a storm parks over Clay County.
Power here comes from Clay Electric Cooperative,
a member-owned co-op rather than a big investor utility. The co-op works hard after a storm, but
it covers a large rural footprint, so when trees come down across the wider service area the
island can wait its turn while crews clear the worst damage first.
The island sits low. Much of the shoreline and plenty of interior lots drain slowly, and when the
river and the lake rise together the water lingers long after the wind is gone. That is exactly
the situation Hurricane Irma created in 2017, and it is why outages here tend to run long rather
than short.
A permanently installed standby generator handles all of it on its own. It senses the outage,
switches your home over within seconds, and runs until Clay Electric brings the grid back,
keeping the AC, the refrigerator, and the sump pumps going the whole time.
See how installation works →