House Committee votes to send economic development to North Dakota and Nebraska. Again.
KELOland is reporting that a legislative committee voted to send projects that would bring jobs and revenue that could help alleviate tax burden in our state to North Dakota and Nebraska. Again.
Am I talking about CO2 pipelines? No, silly. We killed the revenues and investment that such a project was going to bring to the South Dakota economy last year, and they’ve already left for greener pastures. Today, House State Affairs voted against providing tax incentives to kill more investment in our communities – the mega-million dollar data centers that want to come here.
The same types of tax incentives all of our neighbors are offering. But South Dakota apparently won’t:
The prime sponsor, Republican Rep. Kent Roe of Hayti, said the incentive would attract large data centers to South Dakota. Roe said data centers would pay substantial amounts of property taxes at a time when many people are complaining their property taxes are too high. He noted that 40 states offer sales-tax breaks to data centers, including South Dakota’s six neighboring states.
and..
Voting yes to kill the bill were Republicans Jessica Bahmuller of Alexandria, Spencer Gosch of Glenham, Hansen, Leslie Heinemann of Flandreau, Karla Lems of Canton, Schaefbauer, Overweg and Scott Odenbach of Spearfish, and Democrat Erin Healy of Sioux Falls. Voting no were Emery, Jamison and Republican Tim Reisch of Howard.
And people wonder why their taxes keep going up, and their kids keep moving away? Because when projects want to come here and pay sales tax on the power they’re going to buy, property taxes on the buildings they put up, payroll taxes on the people they hire to build and staff the places, plus much of the same for the people they bring into the community, people won’t cut them a tax break on computer equipment to go in the buildings?
With the anti-development attitude the NIMBY’s and BANANA’s leading the legislature have, instead of calling South Dakota the Land of Infinite Variety, we should change the slogan to South Dakota. No.






