LEAP is not a side story in Indiana.
It is the state’s marquee economic-development project.
The Indiana Economic Development Corporation — the state’s taxpayer-funded economic-development arm — describes LEAP Lebanon as a 9,000+ acre innovation district along Indiana’s I-65 Hard Tech Corridor, with land ready for manufacturing, research and development facilities, and corporate campuses.
Lilly has announced that it is building a $9 billion, 800-acre research and manufacturing campus within LEAP.
Meta has broken ground on a $10 billion, 1,500-acre data center designed for one gigawatt of capacity — roughly enough power for 800,000 homes.
The Indiana Capital Chronicle reported that LEAP spending was nearing $1 billion, with the projected budget shielded.
And LEAP is now at the center of public fights over water, wastewater, Eagle Creek Reservoir, utility infrastructure, and who pays for Indiana’s next generation of mega-development. WFYI reported that 21 of 25 Indianapolis City-County councilors warned about a proposed deal that could send up to 25 million gallons of water per day from Indianapolis sources, including Eagle Creek Reservoir, to Lebanon Utilities by 2031, with treated industrial wastewater then piped back toward Eagle Creek Reservoir.
Billions of dollars.
Thousands of acres.
Pharmaceutical manufacturing.
Data centers.
Water.
Power.
Public money.
Private development.
And continuing questions about transparency: how publicly funded economic development works in Indiana, who benefits, and what the public can actually see.