Locals react to RICL plan

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“I find it highly prejudicial and suspect that they would drop the route in the middle of the busiest time of the year for those that are impacted the most,” Mauch said.

Mauch also questioned several points in an RICL press release.

The company claimed to have held more than 600 meetings in Iowa and Illinois to introduce the transmission project, answer questions and gather feedback on routing options. Mauch said only 26 of those meetings were held across Iowa and Illinois for landowners, and the rest were private meetings to advance the project.

Mauch also objected to the claim that RICL is committed to supporting local and Illinois-based beneficiaries of the project, and has announced a potentially $70 million agreement with Southwire Company to supply the aluminum and steel conductor for the line from its facility in Flora.

Mauch said her sources say they don’t have the facilities or the employees for it to actually be produced in Illinois.

Mauch said RICL quotes the advantages of what could be enabled by these transmission lines but don’t disclose the billions of taxpayer dollars included in that investment.

“Their biased studies leave out the disadvantages and negative financial impacts — just focuses on anything in their favor without weighing the negatives in the lump sum,” she said.

Anyone can submit evidence and arguments to the ICC regarding the RICL’s proposal. All of the material will be evaluated, and a judge will make a recommendation to the board, who will make the final decision. Detweiler estimated the case could take about 18 months for the issue to be settled.

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