Wind power can be a major source of tax revenue, but officials struggle to get communities – WRSP (Springfield)

Denny Kingren, the fire chief of Paxton, Illinois, says he had neither positive or negative feelings about wind development to start off with — he’d just seen them crop up throughout Illinois. Then about 13 years ago, came the funds: about $40,000 a year since then, which has since gone toward new trucks, new equipment and more on-call firefighters. “It was a true benefit to our fire department,” he said.
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taxpayer
1 year ago

Any kind of nuclear or coal plant, or even solar, unless exempt from taxes, would provide similar revenue benefits to localities. Expanding on Downstate Paul’s comment, I hope somebody is putting aside funds to pay for decommissioning these facilities when they are worn out or obsolete.

Downstate Paul
1 year ago

I would predict that the tax revenues for renewables will evaporate. So they should be putting 25% of revenues away somewhere. The only people who like these things are those making money off it. And then when it’s not in their backyard.

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