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"Hopefully, we may be able to pay off the Rocket Center soon than later," said Conotton Valley Superintendent John Zucal.
The Ohio Supreme Court on Aug. 13 upheld the Rover Pipeline's public utility property tax valuation of nearly $3.67 billion.
Tax money from the pipeline was used for construction of Conotton Valley's Rocket Center and new school buildings in the Tuscarawas Valley district.
The Rover has been operational since August 2017, but this final approval allows the pipeline to add the additional receipt and delivery points for the gas production in West Virginia.
The Ohio Supreme Court case does not affect the Rover Pipeline (Rover) tax valuation appeal. The State Tax Commissioner and Rover had short-lived settlement negotiations in summer 2024.
However, the owners of the pipeline, Energy Transfer, appealed the amount of taxes they owed, seeking to cut Rover’s taxable value from $3.5 billion to about $1.85 billion.
After Rover took longer than expected to restore land around some pipeline sections, FERC said in June that its review of future in-service requests would "depend, in part, on a demonstration of ...
Energy Transfer sold a 32% stake in Rover to funds managed by Blackstone for about $1.57 billion in 2017. Together, Energy Transfer and Blackstone control 65% of Rover through an entity called ...
The federal commission that oversees gas pipelines told Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners last week to clean up its mess before it will allow the Rover Pipeline to flow. New drilling on unfinished ...
CANTON — A natural gas pipeline project across Ohio hasn’t honored an agreement to pay for harm done to historic properties, the State Historic Preservation Office said. The Rover Pipeline agreed to ...
Company spokeswoman Vicki Granado said the natural gas project by ET Rover Pipeline, a subsidiary of Energy Transfer Partners, is in a pre-filing process. Another application is due to the Federal ...