Public Documents
Downloadable reports, legal documents, meeting minutes, and public records
Jerome_County_Energy_and_Farmland.pdf
An unused presentation overview of the Proposed zoning changes
Economic_Value_Assessment_v7-03252026.pdf
This document appears to be corrupted or encoded in an unreadable format. The content consists entirely of garbled characters, symbols, and random text strings that do not form coherent sentences or meaningful information. No actual government content, decisions, or meeting information can be extracted from this document.
Formal submission email to P&Z Commission and Board of Commissioners.pdf
AI summary not available for this document.
Institutional_Ownership_Briefing_v4-03262026.pdf
This document is a briefing prepared by Jeff A. Pierson for Idaho legislators and elected officials examining institutional ownership patterns in Idaho's energy infrastructure development. It analyzes how three major asset management firms (BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street) hold significant ownership stakes across multiple companies in Idaho's energy value chain, from utilities to developers to construction firms.
Key Points
- BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street collectively hold 20-31% ownership in virtually every major company involved in Idaho energy development, including utilities, developers, and construction firms
- The document argues these ownership patterns create a situation where the same shareholders profit at every stage of energy infrastructure transactions
- Multiple active federal and state legal proceedings are examining potential antitrust violations and anticompetitive behavior by these institutional asset managers
- The briefing highlights concerns about political influence through lobbying expenditures exceeding $7.9 million annually by some energy companies and documented campaign contribution patterns
- Over 5,770 MW of energy projects are reportedly connected to a single Idaho substation near Jerome, representing what the author characterizes as systematic infrastructure transformation rather than isolated projects
HB895_897_Legislative_Brief.docx
This is a legislative brief authored by Jeff A. Pierson supporting Idaho House Bills 895 and 897, which would restrict data centers' water usage rights and eliminate certain tax incentives for new facilities starting in 2026. The document argues that Idaho's current data center incentive framework is too generous and shifts costs to taxpayers, ratepayers, and water users.
Key Points
- HB 895 would prohibit new data centers from using groundwater or surface water for cooling unless supplied by municipal systems
- HB 897 would eliminate facility-level property tax exemptions and require full electricity cost recovery from data centers
- The author argues Idaho's Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer is already overappropriated and cannot sustain additional industrial water users
- Current tax incentives allegedly shift infrastructure costs to local governments while data centers receive 20-year tax holidays
- The bills would maintain equipment-level sales tax exemptions while adding accountability measures and reporting requirements
Jerome County BESS Briefing Guide Draft.pdf
This is a comprehensive 34-page briefing document prepared by Jeff Pierson analyzing Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) technology, safety concerns, and community impacts for communities facing BESS proposals. The document focuses on a proposed NextEra Energy 200 MW BESS facility on 120+ acres of agricultural land in Jerome, Idaho, covering technical specifications, fire risks, corporate ownership structures, and providing 60 detailed questions communities should ask developers.
Energy, Data Centers & Ordinances
- Analysis of NextEra Energy Resources proposed 200 MW BESS on 120+ acres of agricultural land in Jerome, Idaho
- Documentation of BESS fire incidents including Moss Landing (January 2025), East Hampton NY (May 2023), and multiple other locations
- Risk category analysis including manufacturing defects, design failures, BMS failures, operational errors, environmental factors, cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and suppression system failures
- Discussion of battery chemistry differences between NMC, LFP, and Iron-Air technologies
- Analysis of federal tax credits (ITC, PTC) and Renewable Energy Credits (RECs) for BESS projects
- Documentation of Samsung SDI $726 million battery supply deal with NextEra using NCA chemistry
- Analysis of BlackRock and institutional investor ownership of both NextEra Energy and Idaho Power/IDACORP
- Discussion of grid conditioning requirements vs energy arbitrage functions for large-scale BESS
- Supply chain analysis showing predominant Chinese and South Korean manufacturing of battery components
Constitutional & Social Concerns
- Corporate regulatory capture and political influence concerns
- Cybersecurity vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure
- Environmental justice issues regarding toxic metal contamination from battery fires
- Loss of agricultural land to industrial energy projects
- Community consent and transparency in energy infrastructure siting
- Institutional investor control over energy markets
- Emergency response burden placed on rural communities
- Property rights and land use planning authority
Key Points
- Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) technology
- Lithium-ion battery chemistry (NMC, LFP, Iron-Air)
- Thermal runaway and fire safety risks
- BESS fire incidents and case studies
- NextEra Energy corporate profile and track record
- Environmental and agricultural impacts
- Vertical integration and subsidy structures
- Corporate ownership and institutional shareholders
- Grid conditioning vs energy arbitrage purposes
- Outdoor containerized design architecture
- Manufacturing and supply chain analysis
- Battery Management System (BMS) controls and cybersecurity
- Community questions and transparency requirements