Firm eyes ‘voluntary acquisition’

Clean Line says it will avoid eminent domain

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TAMPICO – A company proposing transmission lines through southern Whiteside and Lee counties says it would use the power of eminent domain as little as possible.

It wants to negotiate with landowners for easements, an executive says. But that may be difficult. More and more farmers are objecting to the lines. 

On state Route 172 north of Tampico, signs are popping up in opposition to the project.

Rock Island Clean Line, a subsidiary of Houston-based Clean Line Energy Partners, has proposed an east-west line across northern Illinois, ending near Morris, about 60 miles southwest of Chicago.

Clean Line hasn’t chosen a final route, but it plans to do so in the next few weeks, said Hans Detweiler, the company’s Chicago-based director of development. It already has released alternative routes. 

One of the biggest concerns is the effect of the towers on center pivot irrigation systems. Farmers fear the towers could interfere with the systems’ revolutions, removing acreage from irrigation. 

That’s a particular problem in southern Whiteside County, where farms depend on irrigation systems because of the sandier soil.

The company pledges to lessen the impact to farms. One alternative route is north of Tampico, alongside existing ComEd lines. In that area, the company would align the towers with ComEd’s, which would reduce the affected acreage, Detweiler said.

In areas without existing lines, the company plans to put the towers in the corners of fields, where the irrigation systems don’t reach.

‘As much voluntary acquisition as possible’

Clean Line, Detweiler said, plans to refile its application for the power lines with the Illinois Commerce Commission in the next few weeks. It will include a preferred route and an alternate.

With most such projects, he said, companies nearly always negotiate with landowners, rather than use the power of eminent domain.

“We’ll try to do as much voluntary acquisition as possible,” Detweiler said.

In some cases, though, such as property with absentee landowners or where estates are in probate, the company may have to seek eminent domain, he said.

In its initial application, Detweiler said, the company isn’t seeking condemnation authority.

According to the company’s landowner compensation fact sheet, a landowner could get $88,000 to $112,000 for two towers on a half-mile-long easement, depending on the tower type and assuming farmland is worth $8,000 an acre.

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