Cornfish
Outdoor Enthusiast
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2015
- Location
- Central Oregon
- Moto(s)
- 2024 KTM 890 SMT - 2016 KTM 250 XC-F
- Name
- Reed
- BARF perks
- AMA #3288739
I haven't dug into it enough to know exactly what is proposed, but I am against it. La Pine is not an economic powerhouse, and as such is prone to wanting the increased revenue from permitting, and the potential job growth. Unfortunately most of these data centers only employ a handful of people at best, and in many cases get preferrential treatment on permitting, which is a lose/lose for the city. But more importantly, the water issue and electricity costs will have a real, negative impact on the residents there. As it stands, much of La Pine is low income, and a lot of the old wells are shallow. Many long time residents cannot afford to drill a new well, and there are already significant water issues. Those issues have become a hot button topic for the current county commissioner's election, with all sorts of political battles taking place and pointing of fingers.Data Center ≠ Crypto Mine
Projects like this often get labeled as “data centers”, but many are actually crypto mines. Big difference.
A real data center runs cloud services and provides real jobs.
A crypto mine is just racks of loud machines running nonstop to generate cryptocurrency for one company.
Crypto mines bring heavy noise, huge power draw, and almost no community benefit — and they can seriously impact rural quality of life in places like La Pine.
My understanding what is being planned or proposed for Lapine is a crypto mine not a data center.
Lapine is a nice place doesn’t deserve this.
PaulR
In Prineville, about 30 minutes from Bend in Crook County, there are two very large data centers for Facebook and Amazon. The small town of Prineville was lured in with the promise of jobs and economic benefit, which never materialized in the ways promised. Unfortunately, there is very little to be done about it, especially if the politicians making the decisions are on board. I sincerly hope the citizens of La Pine and the surrounding areas (me!) are able to block this. But it is only a matter of time before there is another attempt. And typically, the developers will learn from a denial, sweeten the deal, and grease the correct palms to eventually get what they want.