There is a moment every utility leader knows, even if it never makes the board deck. The lights are on, the metrics behave, everything hums. Then 1 transformer wants attention. 1 storm drifts off script. 1 overloaded corridor reminds you that electricity is the only product people notice when it fails.
Gridco was built for that moment. Founded in 2023 in Birmingham, Alabama by Brad Weaver, CEO, and Patrick Russo, with Trent Weaver joining the founding team in 2024, Gridco is a founder-owned, employee-focused platform that skips theatrics. It is bucket trucks, tight planning, and field discipline that holds when the grid starts breathing heavy.
This week, Gridco announced a strategic growth investment from BayHawk Capital, with founding management remaining majority shareholders and continuing to lead the business. The amount was not disclosed. In a market obsessed with valuation scorecards, that restraint feels deliberate. This is capital aimed at execution, not applause.
BayHawk Capital backs founder-owned essential services and technology businesses, and the logic is straightforward. Aging infrastructure is not getting younger. Load growth from electrification is accelerating, with artificial intelligence and data centers adding real demand. Regulatory reliability mandates keep tightening. Doug Haber and Scott Prozeller are wagering that the operators who can scale safety, reliability, and performance without losing culture will own this cycle.
Gridco’s edge is fieldwork with range. Distribution, transmission, and substation repair and maintenance, plus lighting and engineering services, delivered to investor-owned, cooperative, and municipal utilities across the Southern United States. More than 350 skilled professionals, and skilled is not a throwaway word when the job happens 30 ft in the air at 2 a.m.
The capital will support organic growth and strategic acquisitions, with a clear ambition to expand into a national provider of mission-critical utility services while staying customer-centric and employee-first. Jeffrey Schmidt joining the board, bringing experience from MasTec and Quanta, adds perspective from leaders who understand what scale demands.
The takeaway is simple. BayHawk did not invest in a slogan. BayHawk invested in a system built by founders who know the field. When reliability is the mandate and the grid starts talking back, the real question is who you trust on the line, and whether they show up ready when the work gets loud.


