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Farm Bureau objects to Clean Line

Rezin joins opponent Benson in opposing project

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State Senator Sue Rezin, R-Morris, has written a letter to the ICC requesting it reject the proposal. Her opponent, Christine Benson, D-Ottawa, opposed the project first.

Rezin said she's been studying the project and receiving numerous calls from constituents. She said she could not take an official stance until she saw the route Clean Line chose.

The project, she said, "does more harm than good."

"I oppose the project and the current path as it runs through some of the greatest farmland in the world," said Rezin in a release. "The project has failed to show its necessity to Illinois electric consumers, only serves to help Iowa wind farms, and it has chosen a path that is harmful to the Illinois agricultural industry."

Benson said the release of the route didn't matter.

“This new route changes nothing. As I have stated from the beginning, the RICL has no positive impact on the state of Illinois. Our current wind and solar providers cannot tie into it, it provides no local jobs, and it takes farmland, with no benefit to the state or residents," she said in a release.

Clean Line says the benefits Illinois will see include decreased power costs due to increased competition. Detweiler 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 previously.

In addition, Clean Line is investing millions into Grundy County with the construction of the $250 million converter station in Channahon and its agreements with the counties it goes through, giving it $7,000 a mile a year.

Rezin recognizes this, but the loss of farmland and potential food producers outweighs this, she said last week.

In the Mendota area, much of the farmland is used by a large food producer that may pull out if it cannot aerial spray, she said. With the towers, farmers could be forced to spray their crops from the ground.

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