
Donnie Eslinger works at his desk in Worthington in April 2026, in his 50th year with Hoosier Energy.

Donnie Eslinger is photographed at work for Hoosier Energy in the 1980s.
Most people remember March 1976 for Indiana University’s unbeaten national championship in men’s basketball. But that date is also notable for the start of Donnie Eslinger’s career at Hoosier Energy, one that has reached 50 years and counting.
Eslinger, who is now a transmission working foreman, was initially hired as a communications technician C at 20-years-old, with a degree in electronics communication technology from Ivy Tech in Terre Haute.
The Dugger, Indiana, native always favored math and science in high school and drew inspiration to work in the utility industry from his father, a construction lineman on transmission lines.
“I was just a young guy trying to make my way in the profession,” Eslinger said. “I wanted it to be a career job, but you never think about getting old, and I never would have dreamed I’d be here 50 years.”
He maxed out his initial position as a communications technician A, playing a key role in putting in a new microwave system for Hoosier in 1979, before applying to become a relay technician.
In 1980, Eslinger got that job working at the new Merom plant under Darrell Goodson as a relay technician B. That partnership saw Eslinger and Goodson pioneer a digital fault recorder in the early 1980s.
In 1984, the relay group’s working headquarters was moved from Merom to Worthington, where Eslinger has been based ever since.
His working group became meter relay in 1989 and remained such until 2022, when it became the transmission relay group. Eslinger was also a key part of building new substations and commissioning them.
“Donnie’s one of a kind when it comes to his knowledge base and what he knows about Hoosier Energy and our entire system, our entire network,” said Rob Horton, executive vice president and chief operating officer at Hoosier Energy.
For Eslinger, his work was more than something to fill up the day before going home to his wife, Linda, whom he married in July 1976.
“I always felt it was more than just a job; it was a calling,” he said. “It’s a calling to make things better for everyone else and provide reliable power to our member consumers at the lowest cost. I see the advantage for my neighbors, my family, for the people of the co-op.”
That dedication has not gone unnoticed.
“Ultimately, it is Donnie’s passion for what he does that is just so impressive,” said Horton.



