We used
Edison Electric. I would heartily recommend them. It's a small company with a process that seems geared more towards smaller jobs (1 day or less). When you call them you get an actual person who asks you about your project and makes an appointment allowing for what seems like the right amount of time. When the truck shows up, they look things over and do the estimate on the spot. If you accept it, they just start right in and do the job that day.
Because they charge a $79 site visit fee, the downside is that if you want to collect multiple bids (or don't like their proposal) you still have to pay for the site visit. But the upside is that if you trust them to give you a fair bid, you just call them and the job gets done. Their prices seem very fair and the electrician they sent was prompt, polite, professional and did a great job. As it turns out, he wasn't able to do the whole job the first day, so they scheduled a second day with no site visit fee. This was necessary because we saw that there was squirrel damage to the wires disappearing under the old insulation and they couldn't fix that until the insulation was out.
When they came back today I had opened up an exciting new storage space in the SE corner of the attic, totally unimproved but ready to be developed into 60 more square feet of under-eave storage. There was also a vital electrical cable traversing this space that had been savaged by squirrels and needed to be replaced ASAP, so it's a good thing I opened up this hidden area. Anyway, they fixed that cable (among others) and installed this cool pull-chain light in the new storage space. When the insulators come back on Thursday they will put some insulation in the ceiling. Then I'll finish the kneewall, add an access door and possibly put some plywood on the floor, and we'll have a new "room." I have dreams like that all the time, where I keep finding new rooms in an old house (often in the attic). So exciting! And now much less likely to burn down due to stripped insulation. I also have an air conditioner outlet on a new, almost empty, 20 Amp circuit and another new 4-banger in the space by the stairs where I plan to put the kitchenette.

In other news, Richard has the angiogram referral that he hoped to get, it looks like refinishing the attic floor really will be under $2000, Laura took a box of fabric that I needed to give away, and somebody on Freecycle wants those two beautiful plate glass mirrors from the Leamington that I never really found a use for. It's been a busy day.