PEORIA MAGAZINE June 2023
The new Precision Planting building under construction in Morton
Chuck Boyer, senior operations manager at Precision Planting
continental U.S. The company also works with agricultural equipment manufacturers around the globe. Farmers can use Precision Planting technologies to collect data on each field pass from planting to harvest, and then use that information to increase yield and profit potential. Mark Schleder of Green Valley counts 46 years working the fields, and he’s used Precision Planting products since the company was founded three decades ago. “When you're in the cab, Precision Planting's technology gives you confi dence that your machinery is respon sive and planting where it needs to be planting,” he said. “That's important because you only have a five- or six-day window to get your seeds in the ground. “The value Precision Planting pro vides for our farms is exceptional. And they stand behind their products and service them well,” added Schleder. “I'm so happy we've been close enough to watch the company grow.” Meanwhile, new products are con tinuously coming to market. At the company's winter conference this year, the Panorama app was in troduced. It is being tested this spring with plans to release it later this year. The app makes it easier for farmers to access data collected from Precision Planting's 20/20 monitor, which ob serves, controls and diagnoses field conditions and equipment performance in real time. WHY MORTON? Precision Planting's new Morton operations center is on 61.31 acres at
the north end of Erie Avenue, south of the exit ramp from Interstate 74 east to Interstate 155 south. It’s up the road from Precision Planting's 100,000-square-foot main operations building at the intersection of Erie and Birchwood streets. “Ironically, that building has always flown under the radar. We’ve been there for 10 years in November,” said Bryce Baker, Precision Planting marketing manager. That building already has been purchased, and a new, as-yet-unnamed tenant will move in after Precision Planting leaves. The new operations building will be used as a warehouse for inventory, assembly of products, kitting and packaging, and distribution of products worldwide. Kitting is a process where complementary items are packaged and shipped together. About 400 employees will work at the new facility, including about 25 new full time hires. There's room in the building for 600 employees. The building will be humming initially with three shifts, five days a week. Chuck Boyer, Precision Planting operations and building project manager, said the new building's site was chosen because of its proximity to I-74 and I-155, both for product transportation purposes and employee convenience. “While doing our due diligence in selecting a site, we learned we could lose two-thirds of our local employees had we located the building in the Bloomington-Normal area,” he said.
Precision Planting and the Village of Morton are improving the infrastructure in and around the construction site to pave the way for further development. Among the company’s projects are the construction of 1,300 feet of Agricultural Drive, a new east/west road that will con nect Erie to an extension of Flint Avenue. Among the village's initiatives are an extension of a water main under I-155 from Detroit Avenue to Erie and an improvement of the Birchwood and Erie intersection. “The infrastructure work and the size and quality of the Precision Planting building will put that area on the map. It will be magnet for other businesses,” Loudermilk said. “There will be more than a mile of new public roadway there when the new road and road extensions are completed. This is the first time since I was hired by the village in 2011 that we're building public roads.” Eight taxing bodies approved five years of property tax abatements for the Precision Planting project, beginning with a 90% abatement the first year the operations center is fully accessed. Meanwhile, Precision Planting must meet hiring requirements to keep the abatement in place. After the abatement ends, It’s estimated that the Morton School District will receive about $500,000 annually in property taxes from the operations center.
Steve Stein is a longtime Peoria area print journalist
JUNE 2023 PEORIA MAGAZINE 9
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