logo
Residents opposed to data centers give Porter County officials an earful

Residents opposed to data centers give Porter County officials an earful

Chicago Tribune26-03-2025

Residents gave Porter County officials an earful on data centers during two consecutive meetings Tuesday.
Union Township School Corp. Superintendent John Hunter doesn't want a large data center built just north of Wheeler High School and the adjacent Union Township Middle School.
'We know there is a place for a data center. We just don't believe it's in Union Township,' he said.
'We are really going to create a dead zone from a residential standpoint' if the data center is built, he said. 'That's roughly one-third of our township,' which could have a major impact on the school system, he said.
The Plan Commission has an application for a proposed data center, but it's not considered a complete application until the county's staff approve it for consideration, County Attorney Scott McClure said. Once they've vetted the application, including the rezoning request, the Plan Commission is obligated to hear the request, McClure said.
'We all as American citizens have due process,' he said, and the same principle applies to Plan Commission requests.
The Plan Commission's decision, if the application isn't withdrawn, wouldn't be final. That board gives either a favorable or unfavorable recommendation to the project, with the three-member Board of Commissioners making the final decision.
'All of us people are terrified that it's up to these three people,' resident Severin Fisher said.
Mike Jabo, Porter County's director of planning and stormwater management, has said the petitioner requested placement on Wednesday's Plan Commission agenda, but the staff didn't place it there.
The petitioner hasn't requested any financial incentives like a tax abatement, Jabo said at Tuesday's Redevelopment Commission meeting before a County Council meeting.
When it's time for an official public hearing on the project, a venue larger than the commissioners chambers at the Porter County Administration Building will be chosen, he said.
Proposed data centers have been rejected by Chesterton, Burns Harbor and Valparaiso officials.
County Council President Andy Vasquez, R-4th, who also sits on the county Redevelopment Commission, saw how Valparaiso officials handled the data center issue, he said, and assured residents at Tuesday night's council meeting they would all be given a chance to be heard.
Normally, the County Council invites public comment only on agenda items, but he made an exception Tuesday.
'What you have to say is important to us,' Vasquez said. However, the real decision is up to the Board of Commissioners, he said. 'If this data center thing is a 1- to 20-step process, we are step 20.'
Fisher said he got 200 people to sign up for yard signs in just one week to defeat the Valparaiso proposal for a data center to be built on land the city had acquired for a potential sports complex. Neither the data center nor the sports complex will be built there now.
'I feel that these companies are only threading the needle through the loopholes,' Fisher said.
'Why don't they build 50 miles south,' he suggested.
Wheeler resident Liz Bennett and other residents suggested building the data center in Gary, which is starved for tax revenue and has all the amenities a data center would need – easy access to water for cooling, plenty of electricity for power-hungry servers, a super-fast internet connection and room to build in an industrial area.
Bennett questioned the Redevelopment Commission's vote to hire Barnes & Thornburg on an as-needed basis to help with tax-increment financing issues. Barnes & Thornburg has represented data centers in the Indianapolis area, she said.
Vasquez abstained from that vote, saying he hadn't had time to think about it before Tuesday's meeting. He was too busy fielding calls from residents, he said.
'I have been fighting tooth and nail against the Willowcreek (Road) extension,' Bennett said. County officials have promised that there would be a one-mile buffer on either side of the road to prevent it from being heavily commercialized.
'That project's not even done, and now we have an industrial park in our backyard,' she said.
'To me, this is killing an entire community,' Bennett said.
The proposal hits home for Bennett. 'Our house is literally one of those consumed by all of this,' she said.
Melissa Reid said building a data center would probably be the biggest development in Porter County since the steel mills were built. It would be 'three Walmarts tall' with a 50-foot setback, she said.
One resident spoke of the hyperscale data center under construction in New Carlisle. 'It's impressive and terrifying at the same time,' he said. His concerns include the heavy power consumption data centers require and whether NIPSCO's residential customers would be burdened more than industrial customers by the cost of additional electrical generation capacity.
NIPSCO's proposed settlement in its current electric case said any future data centers, not existing customers, would foot the bill for the extra generating capacity they require. However, some residents referred to the Indiana General Assembly's ability to change that.
Reid also said that Blackstone, a company whose portfolio includes data centers, owns nearly 20% of NiSource, which is NIPSCO's parent company.
Amy Heuring is a business owner. 'I consider Wheeler to be the most amazing place to raise children,' she said, but she fears the environmental effects that might come from a nearby data center.
'We're not going to let these people come in and treat us like guinea pigs,' she said.
Cory Griffith fears building a data center in Union Township 'would really ruin the Valpo experience.'
Porter County could generate a lot of property taxes from a new data center, but she would prefer raising the income tax to allowing a data center. 'There are other ways to make up that money,' she said.
Marissa Barnes promised to be 'at every single meeting until this is handled.'
She's concerned about the possible environmental effects of data centers. Barnes, who lives in Shorewood Forest, wondered who would pay to clean up Lake Louise if the data center contributes to problems there.
She also wondered how the playground at Union Center Elementary School and the soccer fields at Wheeler High School and Union Township Middle School might be affected by emissions connected to a data center, along with potential groundwater contamination.
'I sort of think it would wreck the schools there,' said Meredith White, who built a home in Union Township two years ago.
'I'm willing to overthrow the commissioners,' Barnes said, to prevent a data center from locating in the township.
Vasquez distributed a statement from the council on data centers, spelling out the county's process for considering requests from developers and committing to a transparent process, including a special meeting of the Plan Commission to take place before the formal public hearing process and at a venue large enough to accommodate attendees.
For the Willowcreek Road extension, the commissioners held a similar meeting at the Porter County Expo Center, which has larger meeting rooms. The room was packed that night.
Unlike the council, the Board of Commissioners hasn't released a statement on data centers, said Commissioners President Jim Biggs, R-North, who is president of the Redevelopment Commission. Biggs doesn't like them, but he's just one of three members of the Board of Commissioners, he noted.
'We're going to hear from you. Our emails and our phone numbers are published,' he said.
'Let's see what we can learn about it,' Biggs said. 'I know basically what you know about it.'
The commissioners killed a proposal to build a solar farm near Malden in Morgan Township after a loud public outcry, but the county doesn't have a moratorium on solar farms, he said. Like a solar farm, a data center would have to be built in the right location, Biggs said.
Although the outcry at Tuesday's Redevelopment Commission and County Council meetings was clear and heard, that doesn't mean everyone opposes data centers.
'There's people sitting in their homes right now, in their recliners, reading the news about this, and they want it,' Biggs said.
A data center would be a big boost to the property tax base, and the county is facing tough decisions on how to pay for improved road maintenance and address other issues.
Maintaining the quality of life in Porter County means either cutting services – and the vast majority of the county's spending is for public safety – or raising money.
As the county considers allowing a data center, Biggs promised to be thorough in vetting the proposal. 'If we end up saying no, there's going to be a clear reason for it,' he said.
For Councilman Andy Bozak, R-At-large, whose wife sits on the Burns Harbor Town Council, the outcry was clear Tuesday night as well as at previous hearings for proposals elsewhere in the county. 'Nobody came in support of it,' he said. 'I think our community has spoken.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Florida Libertarians, meeting in Daytona Beach, sense opportunity in Musk-Trump breakup
Florida Libertarians, meeting in Daytona Beach, sense opportunity in Musk-Trump breakup

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Florida Libertarians, meeting in Daytona Beach, sense opportunity in Musk-Trump breakup

DAYTONA BEACH − Fallout from the week's nuclear-bomb-level blowup between President Donald Trump and his billionaire buddy Elon Musk had yet to settle when a few dozen true believers in absolute freedom and small government gathered to map out plans for the 2026 election. The Libertarian Party of Florida held its annual convention at The Daytona Hotel June 6-7, and attendees were energized by the opportunities presented by the Trump-Musk spat and skepticism about Trump's spending plan, aka the "Big, Beautiful Bill," that's being hashed out in the Senate. Steven Nekhaila, national chair of the Libertarian Party, is from Key West and was in attendance at the Daytona convention. He described a Republican-Democratic "duopoly," two boots of the same creature that continue to kick the American public that keeps electing it. "We have a saying. There's nobody more Libertarian than a Republican who's running for office until they get in power," Nekhalia said in a June 7 interview. "And we've seen that with the GOP over and over again at the federal level." Following Musk's break with Trump, the world's richest man posted to X, his own social-media platform: "Is it time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?" Smelling an opportunity, Nekhaila pounced, posting: "We've been building this party for the 80% who are tired of being ruled by liars, spenders and tyrants. The door is open. The Libertarian Party isn't new, but it's finally impossible to ignore." While Nekhalia worked at a national level, other Libertarians at the Daytona convention were eying positions at the local and state level. Two Libertarians elected at the local level in Seminole County led a candidate training session. Altamonte Springs City Commissioner Jim Turney and Winter Springs City Commissioner Paul Diaz talked about how in Florida, most local elected positions are non-partisan, which creates an opportunity for minor-party candidates to introduce themselves to their communities and build trust without running into the major-party machinery. Turney suggested that when presenting themselves, candidates be Libertarian, authentic and themselves. Diaz said he campaigned in 2024 on a message that much of what is being proposed by government is outside of its role. "Is that really the role of government? Is that really what we should be doing? My line during my campaign was, 'Government's role is not to entertain people.'" Diaz said. "Stick to what we're supposed to be doing, and in my case I go right back to my lane, which is fiscally sound policy, only doing what you're supposed to do, and why on Earth are you even proposing a budget that's going to increase ... a tax increase ... when you still have mismanagement in your books?" As a two-time candidate, Matt Johnson, the state chairman, learned that he had a better shot when he ran for the DeLand City Commission in 2022 than the Florida Legislature in 2024. Even though the City Commission was a nonpartisan race, Johnson said the first question out of most voters' mouths was whether he was a Republican or Democrat. "I was able to take just over 30% away from an incumbent in a heavily Republican district," Johnson said. In the 2024 Florida House District 29 race, incumbent state Rep. Webster Barnaby won 55.6% of the vote over Democrat Rosemarie Latham and Johnson, who managed just 2.8%. "Our messaging and our policies and our methodologies of governing (are) popular, but when it comes down to the machine that is the Republicans and the Democrats, we just don't have the money to compete, and so I would say start small, start local, win there, where your party is not allowed to be a part of the discussion, build a resume of success and fighting for their rights," Johnson said. The Libertarian Party, founded in 1971, has hung on as a minor party because of its core beliefs, Johnson said. "Our principles are more aligned with the founders than either of the two parties as they currently exist," he said. "What keeps me going is I believe if humanity, if Americans, DeLandites, Volusia County citizens are to fully live to their full potential, they have to be as free as possible without government intervention. I think it is purely principles that keeps us going." Libertarian Joe Hannoush, an Ormond Beach resident who has run for multiple offices over the past decade, said he has previously been a member of both the Republican and Democratic parties. "I left for the same reason. They don't do what they actually believe," Hannoush said. "They tell you they're for anti-war and they keep going to war. They tell you they're for fiscal responsibility. They keep raising the debt. Both sides. ... I think we have to have hope because the only other option is another revolution, you know, and I'm not ready for that, so I'm trying to do it the peaceful way, the voting way." Hannoush said he is "hopeful" the Libertarians will soon be on an "upward swing," but he also cautioned that the parties involved in the Trump-Musk clash of titans have self-interest at heart. Musk − owner of Tesla, the electric car manufacturer − has expressed dismay that a Joe Biden-era electric vehicle mandate will be eliminated, while Trump has also threatened to cut Musk's company off from other government contracts. "Libertarians want an equal playing field under government. Not having government pick winners and losers," Hannoush said. "Most people don't want to have that spending, which is what the Big, Beautiful Bill does. The Big Beautiful Debt is what it is." This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: Libertarians stand for small government. Can any win in 2026 election?

Alabama leaders call to preserve job training program amid Trump administration scrutiny
Alabama leaders call to preserve job training program amid Trump administration scrutiny

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Alabama leaders call to preserve job training program amid Trump administration scrutiny

Moves in Washington D.C. could cost the Montgomery region 90 jobs and a yearly economic benefit of about $144 million, not to mention streams of newly trained workers, Mayor Steven Reed says. Reed joined U.S. Rep. Shomari Figures, D-Montgomery, at the Montgomery Job Corps campus Saturday morning to call for safeguarding the national training program. There is also a Job Corps campus in Gadsden. The Trump administration has called for the pausing of Job Corps programs at all 99 locations in the country by June 30. A Labor Department report cites low graduation rates and safety concerns on the campuses as reason for the pause. A federal judge has issued a stay in the administration's move. "We want to see a full reinstatement of the program, with full funding," Reed said, urging the public to contact their representatives in Congress and U.S. Senators to protest the plans to pause the efforts. Job Corps programs serve young people 18 to 24 with job training. While taking part in the program, participants are offered housing and meals on campus. More: Prattville approves $15M bond to fund city construction projects The Montgomery campus employs about 90 people, and has an yearly economic inpact of about $144 million, Reed said. Figures said continuing the training makes sense. "These are not a partisan issues, as the mayor has indicated," Figures said. "These are not things that fall along political lines. These are things that matter to real people. Creating jobs and maintaining a strong workforce is a bipartisan, shared, American ideal." The Job Corps program has real impact on the Montgomery region and the state, Reed said. '"It offers a second chance for our youth, a pipeline for our local industry and a key driver for our economy," he said. Contact Montgomery Advertiser reporter Marty Roney atmroney@ This article originally appeared on Montgomery Advertiser: Alabama leaders call to preserve federal job training program

Beloved UWS eatery Jacob's Pickles shuttered for roaches, rats, sewage
Beloved UWS eatery Jacob's Pickles shuttered for roaches, rats, sewage

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Beloved UWS eatery Jacob's Pickles shuttered for roaches, rats, sewage

Upper West Side eatery Jacob's Pickles was abruptly shuttered this week following a slew of icky code violations. The Department of Health temporarily closed the Southern-style dining hotspot after the place showed evidence of rats and roaches. The restaurant was also cited for having an 'improper, inadequate, or unapproved' sewage disposal system. An inspection report revealed that the venue, located at 509 Amsterdam Ave. between 84th and 85th Streets, also allegedly failed to properly protect 'food, supplies, or equipment' from possible contamination sources. The shutdown took effect Wednesday with a statement from the restaurant claiming they'll be back open come Monday. 3 The Jacob's Pickles website said the restaurant was closed for renovations. Photo: Eilon Paz 'While unexpected, we're genuinely grateful this issue was brought to our attention,' the statement read. 'With the guidance of the health department, we uncovered underlying structural issues that contributed to unforeseen facility maintenance challenges. 'The safety of our guests and staff is always our top priority, and we will not reopen until every concern is resolved in full compliance with NYC Health Code standards,' the statement concluded. 3 Health inspectors shut the restaurant down Wednesday. JHVEPhoto – 3 Inspectors found evidence of rats living in the restaurant. Katsiaryna – The restaurant's website stated that Jacob's Pickles was closed for renovations and 'will open in a few days.' Jacob's Pickles has had a C rating with the Department of Health since December. Owner Jacob Hadjigeorgis said in May 2024 he would move the American restaurant to a new location at 688 Columbus Ave., between 93rd and 94th Streets, after which he planned to open a new bar, Velvet Cowboy, inside the space Jacob's Pickles had occupied. It's unclear if Hadjigeorgis' plans have changed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store