| Ethanol 
            Production: good for the community and the farmers?The Hidden issues.
 
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            [MARCH 12, 2005]  
            
            
            I 
            went to that ethanol awareness meeting on Monday night dead-set 
            against the plant locating just down the road from our house.  My 
            reasons for being against it were that I feared that my property 
            values would be affected, and when the wind blew out of the 
            southwest, we would be enveloped in a breath-stealing stench in both 
            my house and my yard. | 
        
            | After the meeting my fears about odors 
            coming from the plant were practically eliminated. Brian Wrage from 
            Illini Bio-Energy assured us that this plant wouldn’t produce the 
            Staley’s-like smells I feared. The testimony of people who have 
            visited similar ethanol plants confirms that Brian Wrage was telling 
            the truth about this odor issue. 
 And, if I’m being realistic about the property value issue, my 
            property values would probably begin to suffer in the long run if 
            I’m living in a county where the citizenry constantly opposes and 
            chases away every bit of economic development which requires any 
            kind of sacrifice. In the long run, this will only be a job-less, 
            business-less bedroom community with a Walmart and a few fast-food 
            places. Businesses and industry that pay a living wage are important 
            to this community.
 
 There were some people at that meeting on Monday night that have a 
            legitimate concern with the proposed location of the ethanol plant. 
            They will look out their front windows and see the distillation 
            towers filling their sight. The railroad spur for the plant will be 
            right in their backyards. If there is an environmental problem 
            caused by the plant, it will immediately affect their lives. And, it 
            is very likely that their property values will decline severely 
            because no one will want to purchase their homes, should they ever 
            decide to sell. I have a great deal of sympathy for those people. 
            Their concerns should be part of every negotiation regarding the 
            plant.
 
 The greatest fears expressed by the crowd at the meeting Monday 
            night centered on hidden environmental issues. Would the plant 
            silently poison the environment over time? Would the VOM toxins 
            cause cancer rates to soar in the area? Would this coal-fired plant 
            put soot into the air? Would the plant poison the ground water? What 
            if the product leaked? These were all good questions! Personally, 
            though I heard Brian Wrage’s answers and thought they were truth, I 
            had a hard time trusting answers from anyone in the chemical 
            industry because so much untruth and hidden problems have happened 
            in this industry across the world.
 
 So far, though, this short-lived ethanol industry seems to have a 
            good environmental track record.
 My remaining concerns 
            center around some of the other hidden issues regarding this ethanol 
            plant. These concerns are about the real economic cost to the 
            county.
 The location of this plant requires the Logan County citizenry to 
            heavily subsidize the operation of this plant through property and 
            sales tax abatement. The current proposal is for 10 years of 
            property tax abatement to the farmland tax level. The figures thrown 
            around at that meeting indicated that the plant will likely pay some 
            $350,000 a year in property taxes. It is roughly estimated that the 
            infrastructure costs for roads will be about $6 million dollars over 
            that 10 year time period. The proposal also calls for the complete 
            abatement of the county’s portion of sales taxes for operating 
            supplies purchased in the county over the next 10 years. My 
            calculator tells me that leaves the taxpayers of Logan County with 
            the remaining cost of some $2.5 million dollars over ten years.
 | 
            
             
            I received a number of responses this week to my article Tuesday 
            about the ethanol meeting. Some of them were from 
            ethanol-industry-insiders. They told the story of ethanol plant 
            startups across the country which offered the area farmers an 
            independent market for their grain. The farmers joined these coops, 
            signed contracts for the sale of their corn, and invested heavily in 
            them, thinking this would help their family farms survive. Local 
            investors for these plants provided only about one third of the 
            moneys needed for construction and operations to begin. These 
            ethanol coops then solicited outside investments in order to 
            complete their projects, and found eager LLCs (Limited Liability 
            Companies) who filled their coffers and allowed the plants to be 
            built and operations to start.. 
 These LLCs don’t have to disclose who’s behind the money. It has 
            turned out across the country that these shadowy LLCs are owned by 
            the same mega-grain giants who dominate agri-business across the 
            country, and across the world. These giants manipulate grain prices 
            for their own profit and repress and crush the independent farmer 
            with their power by keeping grain prices too low. Having a 60% stake 
            in the local ethanol coop allows them to control the prices paid for 
            the crops of independent farmers who had hoped for and been promised 
            better prices for their product.
 
            
            
             
            So, my remaining question is who will ultimately own and control the 
            county’s future? Will the promise made to local farmers to have a 
            legitimate, new market to sell their corn to, untainted by the 
            tyranny of the mega-agribusiness giants who currently repress grain 
            prices for their own profits be upheld? Or will Logan County be held 
            even tighter in the clutches of the ‘super-markup to the world?’ 
            
            Click here to respond to the editor about this article 
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                Life Sentence, No Parole 
                If we tried to invent the 
                cruelest punishment for dogs, we probably couldn't come up with 
                anything worse than "solitary confinement" on a chain or in a 
                kennel. 
                Dogs are pack animals who 
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                games of fetch, or even just walks around the block mean the 
                world to them.  Curling up at your feet while you watch TV is 
                their idea of heaven. 
                Many dogs left to fend for 
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                or choke as a result of getting entangled or caught in their 
                tether. 
                If you have a backyard dog, 
                please, bring him or her inside.  They don't want much--just 
                you. A public 
                service announcement from Lincoln Daily News and
                 helpinganimals.com |  |