Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Recommends Denial of 6,099-Acre Earthrise Solar Project After Court-Ordered Hearing

Spread the love

Will County Board Special Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | May 12, 2026

Article Summary: Following a court-mandated cross-examination hearing, the Will County Planning and Zoning Commission voted 1-4 to recommend denial of a special use permit for the massive Lincoln Solar Energy project spanning three townships.

Earthrise Solar Project Key Points:

  • The PZC voted 1-4 against the special use permit for the 600 MW solar facility (Ordinance #26-109 / Case ZC-25-129) proposed by Earthrise Energy.

  • The special meeting was mandated by a court order (26CH79) from Judge Breslin to allow plaintiffs to cross-examine developers due to alleged due process violations.

  • Plaintiffs argued the application was incomplete, citing missing field data for “farmed wetlands” and public safety risks.

  • The $1.2 billion project footprint encompasses roughly 6,099 acres across Manhattan, Green Garden, and Wilton townships.

The Will County Board Planning and Zoning Commission on Tuesday, May 12, 2026, voted 1-4 to recommend denial of a special use permit for a sprawling 6,099-acre commercial solar facility, following a contentious, court-ordered cross-examination hearing.

Earthrise Energy, operating under Lincoln Solar Energy, LLC, applied for a special use permit to build a 600-megawatt solar facility across 96 parcels in Manhattan, Green Garden, and Wilton townships. The facility would connect to the grid via the existing Lincoln natural gas peaking plant. While the PZC had previously voted to recommend denial in March, Tuesday’s special meeting was mandated by a temporary restraining order from Judge Breslin. The court order allowed plaintiffs to cross-examine the developers, a process the plaintiffs’ attorney claimed the county had illegally bypassed for years.

“The reason you haven’t heard this before is for some reason in this county there’s not been any cross-examination for years during a special use application,” Plaintiff Attorney Steven Becker told the commission. “That’s what we won in front of Judge Breslin… this is a new procedure that was apparently being bypassed by Will County unbeknownst to me.”

During the cross-examination, Becker grilled Earthrise Lead Developer Robert Kalbouss over the company’s environmental reviews, specifically focusing on the delineation of wetlands and the potential for heavy metal leaching into the groundwater. Becker argued that the application was incomplete because Earthrise relied primarily on a National Wetland Inventory (NWI) data set from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rather than waiting for fields to lie fallow to properly field-delineate “farmed wetlands.”

“If a field is being tilled, you cannot determine hydrophytic vegetation. You have to wait until it is fallow,” Becker argued. “This application is woefully incomplete.”

Earthrise attorney Ben Jacobi fiercely defended the application, noting that the company updated its site plan on March 5, 2026, and submitted a supplemental memorandum on May 8 detailing complete field delineations. Jacobi stated that the project was designed to completely avoid all permanent impacts to wetlands.

“They’re going to avoid them all. They’re going to assume the jurisdiction of the wetland, and they’re going to avoid them all,” Jacobi said. “And so, that’s really important that that eliminates the wetland as an issue entirely.”

The developer also faced questions about why outreach meetings were not held in Green Garden or Wilton townships. Kalbouss confirmed that public information meetings were only hosted in Manhattan Township, citing “the hostility that we observed online from the township” as the reason for not holding open forums in the other jurisdictions.

Prior to the final vote on the special use permit, the PZC voted unanimously to amend conditions 3, 5, and 6 of the permit to match language recently approved by the Will County Board for the Plum Valley Solar project.

However, when the amended special use permit was called to a vote, it failed in a 1-4 split. Commissioner Lewis Navarat voted yes, while Vice Chairman John Kiefner, Commissioner Matt Garland, Commissioner Karen Warrick, and Chairman Hugh Stipan voted no.

The 192 variances associated with the project—allowing for 36-inch ground cover plant heights and a reduction in mandatory mowings—were previously approved during a March 31 meeting and were not subject to Tuesday’s vote. The PZC’s denial recommendation will now move forward to the Will County Board for final consideration.

Today Jul 12
Mostly Sunny
92° 70°

Mostly Sunny

💨 5 mph 💧 0%

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Damage costs still being assessed from record tornado numbers

Damage costs still being assessed from record tornado numbers

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The National Weather Service has confirmed a record 149 tornadoes have touched down in Illinois this year,...
DEXIT to Texas: Companies continue to leave Delaware for Texas

DEXIT to Texas: Companies continue to leave Delaware for Texas

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Companies are continuing to leave Delaware, redomiciling in other states, referred to as DEXIT. More recently, Fortune 500 companies have been making high profile announcements...
Pritzker open to ‘fair’ data center development, local moratoriums

Pritzker open to ‘fair’ data center development, local moratoriums

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – After legislation to heavily restrict the development of new data centers across Illinois failed to progress in...
DOJ announces 455 indictments in connection to billions in alleged fraud

DOJ announces 455 indictments in connection to billions in alleged fraud

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Justice announced Tuesday that 455 people have been indicted for alleged health care fraud, believed to cost taxpayers over $6.5 billion....
Illinois Quick Hits: ICE arrests woman accused of helping never-charged shooting suspects

Illinois Quick Hits: ICE arrests woman accused of helping never-charged shooting suspects

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – U.S. Immigration and Enforcement officials have arrested a Venezuelan national who was accused of helping two alleged...
Baseball commissioner admits mistake; no discipline for players

Baseball commissioner admits mistake; no discipline for players

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Major League Baseball, its commissioner again guilty in the court of public opinion, has backed down and admitted its mistake. Rocky Mount native Landen Roupp...
Frankfort Village Board Meeting Graphic

Frankfort OKs Shared Patio for Grounded Coffee and The Loft Downtown

Frankfort Village Board Meeting | June 15, 2026 Article Summary: The Frankfort Village Board on Monday, June 15, 2026, approved amendments allowing Grounded Coffee Bar and The Loft to merge...
U.S. Senate passes landmark bipartisan housing bill, sends to House

U.S. Senate passes landmark bipartisan housing bill, sends to House

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Bipartisan legislation to boost housing supply and home ownership nationally cleared the U.S. Senate in an 85-5 vote Monday evening, the largest housing bill Congress...
POLL: Majority of voters believe U.S. should stay in NATO

POLL: Majority of voters believe U.S. should stay in NATO

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square A majority of American voters say the U.S. should remain in NATO, according to The Center Square Voters’ Voice poll. President Donald Trump has toyed...
Nonprofits: Los Angeles schools need to do better following Carvalho's resignation

Nonprofits: Los Angeles schools need to do better following Carvalho’s resignation

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square Superintendent Alberto Carvalho has resigned from the Los Angeles Unified School District, and education watchdogs are not sad to see him go. Carvalho announced his...
Chicago anti-violence department proposed; activist dismisses Trump post

Chicago anti-violence department proposed; activist dismisses Trump post

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker agrees with an Illinois anti-violence activist who says President Donald Trump is not the...
Pritzker plans to sign social media law despite criticisms

Pritzker plans to sign social media law despite criticisms

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois may now face one less potential hurdle enacting a law requiring social media and other online...
Illinois Quick Hits: IDOT says all 102 counties to have transit

Illinois Quick Hits: IDOT says all 102 counties to have transit

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Department of Transportation says all 102 counties in Illinois will soon have transit service. IDOT...
Poll: Taxes, economy top voter concerns

Poll: Taxes, economy top voter concerns

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Voters say taxes and economic concerns top the list of issues facing Illinois. The Illinois Policy Institute’s...
Murphy, Dhillon go to bat for players in baseball's Pride Night black eye

Murphy, Dhillon go to bat for players in baseball’s Pride Night black eye

By Alan WootenThe Center Square How Major League Baseball can force one viewpoint upon players and “attack” them for expressing another is a puzzler to a North Carolina congressman. Three...