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Louisiana Hands Meta a Tax Break and Power for Its Biggest Data Center
Posted on 9/22/25 at 5:32 pm
Posted on 9/22/25 at 5:32 pm
quote:
LOUISIANA PLANNING AUTHORITIES have voted to rush through approval for three natural gas turbines to power Meta’s massive new data center in Richland Parish. When it’s done, the 4-million-square-foot facility will require more than 2 gigawatts of energy to run.
On August 20, Louisiana’s Public Service Commission voted four to one to approve the construction of the plants, which will be run by the utility company Entergy Louisiana. The decision was met with criticism from members of the public who testified against Entergy and Meta’s plan, claiming that the process was rushed. They voiced concerns about rising energy bills and water shortages.
Documents viewed by WIRED show that state authorities agreed to grant Meta tax breaks and incentives without the company explicitly guaranteeing any full-time jobs for local workers.
Opponents of the plan were angry about the sped-up approval timeline: Entergy submitted its application in 2024, and the vote originally could have taken place this October, to give the commission’s administrative law judge the chance to issue further recommendations. But Entergy filed a motion to move the vote to August, claiming that some of the parties that had previously opposed the project were now in agreement. The rescheduled vote left no time for changes.
Critics also claim the deal doesn’t include stipulations like a cap on how much Entergy could charge utility customers for the construction of the gas plants and transmission lines in Meta’s data center build-out—a concern as massive AI data centers can cause utility bills to spike. While Meta agreed to finance the first 15 years of a 30-year loan to construct the gas plants, the construction of the transmission line will be paid for by utility customers.
quote:
During the approval vote, Entergy and Louisiana’s economic development officials repeatedly pointed to the projections shared by Meta, which suggest that the project would bring a $10 billion investment and upwards of 300 to 500 well-paying jobs. In its original 2024 application for the plants, Entergy referenced Richland Parish’s low income levels—one in four residents lives below the poverty line—as a reason to authorize the plan.
“There has never been a better time to lift our residents out of poverty. There has never been a better time to give people in our region better jobs,” said Rob Cleveland, the CEO of Grow NELA, an economic development firm representing northwest Louisiana who testified in support of Entergy’s gas plants, at the hearing.
quote:
Meta would need to hire these 500 “full-time” jobs by 2035 if it wants to receive the highest level of tax breaks, an 80 percent reduction on the full amount. It does require the jobs to provide health insurance and says the pay for all jobs should average out at $82,000 a year. The contract also charges Meta an “administrative fee” of $10,000 for every $1 billion it spends in the state.
quote:
The tax exemption agreement secured between Meta and Louisiana officials did not secure any guarantee of local hiring. Litten, with Louisiana Economic Development, told WIRED that separate state tax breaks that all companies in the state are eligible for do require local hiring. They include the Quality Jobs Rebate, which provides a 6 percent rebate on payroll expenses, a program set to replace it called High Impact Jobs program.
Most data centers hire specialists from out of state for the technical jobs, according to Kasia Tarczynska, a research analyst who studies data center tax breaks at the nonprofit Good Jobs First. She says data centers employ a mix of low-skill and high-skill technical workers to manage servers in addition to security guards and maintenance roles. She says that while construction is happening, data centers often hire specialist electricians who travel from state to state to set up servers.
For this reason, she says, Meta is not the only tech company hesitant to guarantee local hiring when negotiating data center contracts. “They know that some of these jobs require skills that people in the local community just don’t have.”
LINK
So I guess two questions:
1- Will this cause utility bills to rise?
2- Since the statement was made about there not being a better time to bring Richland Parish residents out of poverty, how many Richland residents will be hired, or even qualified, for what Meta wants to bring them out of poverty?
Posted on 9/22/25 at 5:36 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
1- Will this cause utility bills to rise?
Yes
quote:
2- Since the statement was made about there not being a better time to bring Richland Parish residents out of poverty, how many Richland residents will be hired, or even qualified, for what Meta wants to bring them out of poverty?
Maybe a couple. Most of the jobs will be skilled professionals and labor who already aren’t below the poverty line. Other than some janitors I don’t think these have a ton of entry level positions. Maybe eventually you career path a few but I wouldn’t expect much.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 5:46 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
The contract also charges Meta an “administrative fee” of $10,000 for every $1 billion it spends in the state.

Posted on 9/22/25 at 5:47 pm to billjamin
quote:
Most of the jobs will be skilled professionals and labor who already aren’t below the poverty line. Other than some janitors I don’t think these have a ton of entry level positions.
That’s what I suspected. So this “Grow NE Louisiana” CEO is just a slimy being blowing smoke up people’s asses to pad his resume.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 5:50 pm to ragincajun03
This will never deliver the ROI. Remember IBM getting their tax breaks for employment numbers for a BR based center?
Posted on 9/22/25 at 5:51 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
1- Will this cause utility bills to rise?
Yes. Entergy already said that even though Meta is paying for the plants that the Entergy customers will have to pay for the infrastructure.
Then you will have 2 new plants operating at a very high capacity - using natural gas - just like the other plants. So that will likely cause the price of natural gas to go up as well, which in turn will cause normal consumers bills to rise.
And all of this is before the water issue.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:04 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
Will this cause utility bills to rise?
Of course, you have to pay for the billionaires company's electricity
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:08 pm to ragincajun03
Data centers are the new solar fields
Another way to rape our dwindling natural resources
Another way to rape our dwindling natural resources
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:12 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
how many Richland residents will be hired, or even qualified, for what Meta wants to bring them out of poverty?
They aren’t evening using that many Richland baws to build it. Every baw I know on the project commutes weekly from another state.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:17 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
That’s what I suspected. So this “Grow NE Louisiana” CEO is just a slimy being blowing smoke up people’s asses to pad his resume.
I’m sure that he is also being paid a handsome sum under the table.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:29 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
Will this cause utility bills to rise?
The citizenry should be able to sue to prevent it. It's not appropriate for citizens to get screwed in this way. Especially since tax money has been paid to maintain the service.
Also, they should be required to hire locally, and Americans. Not import people. All as a part of the deal. Tired of govts asking deals that don't actually end up mostly benefitting the locals.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:30 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
Since the statement was made about there not being a better time to bring Richland Parish residents out of poverty, how many Richland residents will be hired, or even qualified, for what Meta wants to bring them out of poverty?
Those hundreds of temporary workers will have to secure temporary housing and buy thing while living here. And the facility itself will have billions in spend sourced to Richland parish. Not all of the economic impact is direct jobs.
People can Bally who about corporate welfare all they want, but the reality is if Louisiana and Richland parish didn’t incentivize Meta to locate there, another jurisdiction would
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:31 pm to BigBinBR
More Corporate WELFARE courtesy of the taxpayers.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:40 pm to AlextheBodacious
They probably don’t have enough people that live there much less the skill to build it without travelers
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:55 pm to PUB
quote:
More Corporate WELFARE courtesy of the taxpayers.
Unfortunately, this is what being business friendly means.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 6:55 pm to GeauxtigersMs36
What isn't farmland up there is a dump.
There's sone decent people, but its mostly poor folk and crooked cops.
Anything they get is better than what they had.
There's sone decent people, but its mostly poor folk and crooked cops.
Anything they get is better than what they had.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 7:01 pm to ragincajun03
I know this is all evil and never benefits locals, etc.
But whats the alternative? Never have any industry whatsoever come?
But whats the alternative? Never have any industry whatsoever come?
Posted on 9/22/25 at 7:13 pm to PUB
quote:
More Corporate WELFARE courtesy of the taxpayers.
And this right here is why this state sucks. And will continue to suck.
This should be huge news for NELA. Directly or indirectly, this will bring a huge economic boost to the area. And the residents will benefit from the infrastructure improvements Entergy and DOTD will have to make.
But muh tax dollars and let’s try to fleece a major corporation wanting to build in this state for more bullshite. It would be much better to do another study on roads that will never be built.
Posted on 9/22/25 at 7:14 pm to upgrayedd
ITEP has been raping local resources for years. This is no different. Elected officials are so desperate for the jobs they aren’t in a position to say no.
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