Economic Impacts & Benefits
Jobs, tax revenue, subsidies, and public costs — the strongest arguments on each side, plus the local specifics.
Economics is where the strongest arguments on each side meet: jobs, tax revenue, and landowner income on one hand; public subsidies, cost-shifting, and few permanent jobs on the other. The sources below are grouped so you can read both cases and the local specifics.
A note on scale
The subsidy and jobs research below studies large hyperscale data centers that negotiate big tax-incentive packages. The Cascade proposal — now a roughly 12-acre data center, originally a Bitcoin mine — is far smaller, and reporting indicated the company purchased its land from the CEDC. Whether any tax incentives apply, and the data-center version's job and power figures, are best confirmed in current council and CEDC records. Treat the national figures as a framework for asking questions, not as a direct estimate for this project.
Local
The local picture
What's been reported about jobs and the CEDC's economic case for the Cascade project.
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Project would create about six to eight jobs (KCRG)
Local reporting citing the CEDC's estimate of roughly eight jobs from the proposed Cascade facility.
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Benefits and concerns weighed locally
Reports the CEDC leader emphasizing economic benefits while the mayor raised concerns; notes a six-to-eight job estimate and the land purchase.
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Container operation and power-disclosure agreement
Notes the CEDC backing and an agreement requiring Simple Mining to disclose maximum potential power demand.
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CEDC mission and economic role
The CEDC's stated purpose: business retention, expansion, and attraction to support the local economy and tax base.
Benefits
The case for benefits
Arguments and reporting on jobs, tax revenue, and landowner income.
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Rural development framed as adding jobs and revenue
Includes the argument that rural data center projects bring jobs and tax revenue and can offset declining agricultural income.
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Economic opportunity alongside resource pressures
Argues responsible development can bring landowner payments, jobs, and tax revenue to rural areas, while noting land/water/energy trade-offs.
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Industry claims of jobs and tax revenue (with concerns)
Lays out the economic-growth and jobs case companies make, alongside community concerns and the industry 'ratepayer protection' pledge.
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A defense of data center economics
Opinion arguing large facilities often pay industrial rates and fund their own grid infrastructure, with net benefits; labeled opinion.
Costs & concerns
The case for caution
Research and reporting on subsidies, overstated job claims, and costs that can fall on the public.
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How data centers endanger state budgets (subsidies)
A subsidy-watchdog analysis of how data center tax breaks erode state and local revenue, and how many states fail to disclose the cost.
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State subsidies average about $2 million per job
Summarizes Good Jobs First findings that incentives for large data centers can average roughly $2 million per permanent job, with few local-business linkages.
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Disclosure checklist for evaluating a deal
An advocacy group's list of what a project application should disclose: tax incentives, cost-benefit assumptions, real owner, power, water, and noise figures.
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AI data centers employ very few people
Summarizes Brookings research finding job claims often overstated, and that location is driven by power, land, and fiber more than tax breaks.
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Cost-shifting to ratepayers
Relevant to the public balance sheet: how grid costs for large loads can be spread to all utility customers. See also the Electric page.
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Effect on farmland values
How development can push land values above productive farm value, raising costs for active farmers nearby.
Questions worth asking
Evaluating the local economics
Does the project receive any tax breaks or incentives?
Reporting indicates Simple Mining purchased industrial-park land from the CEDC. Whether the deal includes any abatements, credits, or utility-rate arrangements is best confirmed in the official CEDC and council records. If a cost-benefit analysis exists, ask to see its assumptions.
How many jobs, and are they permanent and local?
Early reporting on the mining version cited about six to eight jobs; the data-center version's job count may differ and isn't yet confirmed. Useful follow-ups: are positions permanent, what do they pay, and will they be filled locally? Research on larger facilities has found job counts are sometimes overstated and that skilled roles are often filled by transfers.
Who pays for power and infrastructure?
A central economic question is whether the facility covers its own electricity and any grid upgrades, or whether some costs spread to other ratepayers. Cascade runs its own municipal utility, so the CMU board records are the place to look. See the Electric page.
What should a complete application disclose?
The Good Jobs First checklist (linked above) lists what residents can reasonably ask for: any incentives, the cost-benefit assumptions, the real owner (not a shell LLC), and the project's power, water, and noise figures.