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.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Candidates notch wins in Nevada U.S. House primaries

Candidates notch wins in Nevada U.S. House primaries

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Voters in Nevada selected incumbent and new partisan candidates in the primary races for the U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday. Here are some of...
Lombardo, Ford projected to run in Nevada's Nov. 3 gubernatorial race

Lombardo, Ford projected to run in Nevada’s Nov. 3 gubernatorial race

By Liam HibbertThe Center Square Nevadans voted for the two biggest names on the primary ticket Tuesday to send Democratic and Republican heavyweights to the general election on Nov. 3....
Platner will face Collins in November; U.S. House races pending

Platner will face Collins in November; U.S. House races pending

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Graham Platner, a Maine oyster farmer, is projected to move forward in a general election for U.S. Senate against incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins. Platner...
Motorola targeted with class action over license plate reader cameras

Motorola targeted with class action over license plate reader cameras

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Motorola has improperly shared data from its license plate reading cameras with federal immigration agents and other federal law enforcement offices, allegedly...
Seattle enacts one-year ban on data centers

Seattle enacts one-year ban on data centers

By Randy DiamondThe Center Square A one-year ban on new large-scale data centers was approved by the full Seattle City Council on Tuesday. The ban comes after 98,000 residents emailed...
Social Security fund to run dry in 2032, automatic cuts loom

Social Security fund to run dry in 2032, automatic cuts loom

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Social Security's retirement trust fund will be depleted in 2032, triggering an automatic 22% reduction in benefits for about 70 million Americans unless Congress acts,...
$70B bill funding ICE, Border Patrol through 2029 heads to Trump's desk

$70B bill funding ICE, Border Patrol through 2029 heads to Trump’s desk

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Republicans in Congress on Tuesday sent their $70 billion bill funding federal immigration enforcement agencies through 2029 to President Donald Trump’s desk. The 214-212 U.S....
Lawmakers probe taxpayer savings in military contracts

Lawmakers probe taxpayer savings in military contracts

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Advocates urged lawmakers on Tuesday to implement legislation that will provide for greater accountability of taxpayer dollars in military contracts. The Department of War requested...
U.S. launches retaliatory strikes against Iran

U.S. launches retaliatory strikes against Iran

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square U.S. forces have begun launching “self-defense strikes” against Iran after President Donald Trump announced a response to the Islamic Republic's shooting down of a U.S....
Congress debates effects of U.S. immigration policies

Congress debates effects of U.S. immigration policies

By Christine JohnsonThe Center Square Abuses of the Department of Homeland Security's Temporary Protection Status program allowing foreign nationals of specifically designated countries to come to and remain in the...
Apple can’t shake huge class action over Photos face scans

Apple can’t shake huge class action over Photos face scans

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Tech giant Apple could be facing a potentially massive payout, after a federal judge said she will allow an Illinois biometrics class...
Another approach to border security: Denaturalization

Another approach to border security: Denaturalization

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The Trump administration is advancing multiple approaches to border security, including enforcing federal law that requires denaturalization. Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, a naturalized...
Kennedy nutrition pledge lacks enforcement as health costs rise

Kennedy nutrition pledge lacks enforcement as health costs rise

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The federal government is spending $5 million on a voluntary medical school nutrition initiative, but fewer than 40% of the nation's 202 accredited medical schools...
Matchups not yet determined in redrawn congressional races

Matchups not yet determined in redrawn congressional races

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square One week after polls closed in California, several matchups in redrawn congressional districts have yet to be determined. The passage of Proposition 50 in California...
Changes made to Illinois public transport plan sends money downstate

Changes made to Illinois public transport plan sends money downstate

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A law expected to bring reform to public transportation in Illinois took effect at the start of...