Fair
42°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Clean Line files proposed routes

Some fear use of eminent domain to obtain property needed for project

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 2)

Of the 500 miles the line goes across, 120 miles are in Illinois. Less than 3,000 acres in Illinois are being purchased for easements to put the towers on, said Detweiler. Of the 3,000 acres, 12 acres will be taken up by the tower footings.

Clean Line has maintained that row crops such as corn and soybeans can be farmed under the towers still.

"This land is some of the best land in the world. You can't renew it," said Carothers. "If you give them the right-away, it's a terrible thing to give away."

Farmers who try to farm under the towers will have to worry about who is responsible if something happens to the tower or their equipment while maneuvering around the footings, she said. It is possible to farm under it, she said, but it's not easy.

Whether the project goes through his property or someone else's, Babson said the benefits of the project will not be for Illinois, he said; it's just going through our state.

"I'm not against anything that comes through. I'm against people not explaining what is actually happening," said Babson.

Babson said Clean Line officials have been quoted as saying the line cannot happen unless wholesale electricity rates climb 50 percent higher than they are today. Something he said they are not making widely known.

Detweiler's response is this statistic was taken out of context. With the recession, prices have gone down in the last two to three years and this is expected to change, he said. A number of things have to happen in order for the project to be successful that do not make up one percentage, he said, including the value of renewable energy standards and wind turbine technology costs.

The benefits Illinois will see include decreased power costs due to increased competition, said Detweiler. He compared it to the growth and delivery of corn.

"If you deliver a huge amount of corn into the county it's going to lower corn prices and people benefit regardless (of who they buy from) . . . everybody buys the market price. The prices are lower either way," he said.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all