Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Garver Family Farm Market expands with new building
USDA’s decision to end some crop and livestock reports criticized 
Farmer sentiment falls amid concerns over finance forecast
2023 Farm Bill finally getting attention from House, Senate
Official request submitted to build solar farm in northwest Indiana
Farm Science Review site recovering from tornado damage
The future of behavioral healthcare for farmers
Tennessee is home to numerous strawberry festivals in May
Dairy cattle must now be tested for bird flu before interstate transport
Webinar series spotlights farmworker safety and health
Painted Mail Pouch barns going, going, but not gone
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
Farmers blast Hoosier State on I-69 land acquisitions

HAUBSTADT, Ind. (AP) — Southwestern Indiana farmers in the path of the Interstate 69 expansion say they are frustrated by the state’s handling of buyouts of their properties, complaining that the prices being offered are too low and the acquisitions will chop up their land.

The Indiana Department of Transporta-tion (INDOT) is in the process of buying 615 parcels of land it needs for the first three sections of the I-69 extension. So far, INDOT has spent $20.3 million to buy 209 parcels. Another $69.7 million is budgeted for purchases through June 30, 2011.

“At this time we feel we have been fair to all property owners throughout the right-of-way acquisition process, as well as continuing to be a good steward of the taxpayer’s dollars,” INDOT spokeswoman Cher Goodwin said.

But farmers say the prices the state is offering are too low for them to buy comparable land elsewhere, and some say the state has a “take it or leave it” approach. Property owners have 30 days after being contacted about a land deal to accept the offer or reject it and go to court.

“They come in, they make you an offer,” said Larry Schwiersch, who owns a Gibson County farm that is in the path of the expansion. “But it’s not simply an offer. It’s the price, unless you want to go to court.”

A farmhouse and dozens of acres on Schwiersch’s family farm were the state’s first purchases for I-69 in 2009. Schwiersch says the result will ruin the bucolic view from the property.

“Before this, I looked out at the sunset, and everything was peaceful and quiet. Now we’re going to have interstate traffic 150 feet from my front door. That’s not something I’m looking forward to,” he said.

He and Kenneth Stunkel, who sold 13 acres in Gibson County for $79,000, are unhappy with the prices offered, saying they believe the state paid too little.

“I can’t go out on an auction somewhere and buy acre-for-acre what I got from the state,” Stunkel said.

8/11/2010