South Dakota Economic Development: TIF, Data Center Incentives, and Buc‑ee’s Expansion

by Emma Walker – News Editor

Jan. 25, 2026

Forget⁤ whether⁣ tax increment financing ⁢as proposed was an appropriate way to fund Rapid City’s proposed Libertyland ⁣USA‍ development.

Set ‍aside, for now, if South ‌Dakota and by extension its municipalities ought to exempt qualifying data centers from a big ⁢chunk of the sales⁢ tax they typically would pay.

Frist, let’s talk about Buc-ee’s.

It’s a ‌Texas-based mega gas⁢ station ​and convenience store chain with a massive following. Fans rave online ‍about the food,themed merchandise is even sold through ‍Walmart,and the⁢ company has become known for the remarkable ‍cleanliness ⁢of its bathrooms.

Essentially, Buc-ee’s has plenty of options ⁢when it comes​ to expansion plans.

So ⁤this week, when I saw‌ the chain had ​committed to a store in Gretna, Nebraska, the “why” caught my attention.

Gretna, with ‌a population approaching 10,000 people, is home to one of Nebraska’s Good⁢ Life ​Districts. Created a few years ago by the state’s Legislature, Good Life Districts are designated areas designed⁤ to attract tourism​ and ​economic development. These ‍districts are ‌allowed to ⁤use half ⁤of the state’s typical share of sales ⁤tax —⁢ 2.75⁣ percent — to‍ offset qualifying project costs such as constructing public ⁣streets and utilities. In Gretna, the incentive applies until 2054.

“And that incentive is actually ‍what caught the attention ⁤of the Buc-ee’s enterprise. Without it, I’m not convinced that they would have looked at Nebraska,” Gretna city⁢ administrator Paula ​Dennison said in a news report.

This Buc-ee’s isn’t ⁣a typical convenience store. It’s proposed to be 74,000 square feet,​ located on‌ 43 acres southeast of Interstate‌ 80 and ⁣Highway 31. Stores that size rarely locate in communities that size.

“Buc-ee’s ‍checks ⁣all the boxes the Good Life‌ legislation⁣ was⁢ designed for; it generates significant tax revenue,increases our state’s tourism and creates hundreds of good-paying local⁣ jobs,” gretna Mayor‌ mike Evans said in a ‌news release.

Not surprisingly, Good Life⁣ Districts also drew controversy in Nebraska. The Gretna one in⁣ particular has seen starts, stops and all kinds of potential concepts⁣ floated, plus ⁣there have been issues around the correct ‌way to structure the state programme and‌ what​ kind of guardrails to put around⁣ it.​ It​ has not been the smoothest ride, but at least they’re attempting a different way ⁣to attract the sort of larger-scale developments‌ that can move the needle for a community and ‍by extension the⁣ state.

When you offer‌ an incentive ‍to a business to locate in your state or community, it’s‍ always a bit ​of⁣ a roll of ⁤the dice.

You generally are giving ⁣up some immediate‌ revenue⁤ — ‌in South Dakota, it’s usually property tax — for the prospect of greater revenue in the ‍future and broader-based ‍business activity. There are unique⁣ hurdles that⁣ come with redeveloping old,industrial downtown areas,for example. By allowing a ‌portion of ​property tax paid to directly offset those costs, the idea is that the development will become a catalyst that ⁣could create additional​ growth: new residents, office workers, retail sales tax, etc.

The classic contrarian​ view is ‌that ⁤private development‍ would‌ occur without ​incentives and that public dollars shouldn’t ⁤benefit a private‍ business.

As in politics, I think the ⁤majority of ⁢people would⁢ take a​ moderate approach to offering economic ⁣development incentives. I also think they want the place they’ve chosen to live to attract ⁢the business activity necessary ‍for steady, well-managed growth.

Economic ‌development can’t beco

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