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Cities and States Move to Regulate Data Centers

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Media Bias Meter
Sources: 4
Left 25%
Center 50%
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Sources: 4

Fayetteville. The Fayetteville City Council will consider proposed regulations Tuesday that would limit data centers to a single zoning district, require operators to report water and electricity usage and impacts to ratepayers, add setback and landscape buffer requirements, permit mayoral restrictions during shortages, and include an emergency clause; the proposal was presented during an agenda-setting session and is co-sponsored by Scott Berna and Mike Wiederkehr. Seattle and Texas actions illustrate broader responses: Seattle’s City Council approved a one-year ban Tuesday after extensive resident comment, while Texas Governor Greg Abbott directed regulators to require data centers to fully fund necessary electric infrastructure and submit a joint memorandum to the governor’s office by July 17, measures that will affect permitting, funding responsibilities and local review processes in coming weeks.

Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.

Timeline of Events

  • March: Seattle mayor called for a pause on large data centers.
  • Tuesday: Seattle City Council approved a one-year ban on large-scale data centers.
  • This week: Fayetteville staff presented proposed data-center regulations at an agenda-setting session.
  • Thursday: Fayetteville mayor announced the drafted legislation on social media.
  • Governor Abbott directed PUC and ERCOT to act and requested a July 17 memorandum.

Why This Matters to You

Data center regulations could impact your utility bills and local services. If you live near a proposed site, changes like landscape buffers might affect your view. Check your city council's agenda for data center discussions.

The Bottom Line

Cities and states are taking control of data center growth, citing concerns about resource use and local impact. This could slow tech expansion, but also protect community interests. Worth forwarding if you know someone in a tech hub.

Media Bias
Articles Published:
4
Right Leaning:
1
Left Leaning:
1
Neutral:
2

Who Benefited

Municipal residents and small businesses benefited from measures designed to prevent data centers from shifting infrastructure and utility costs onto households and local ratepayers.

Who Impacted

Data center operators, potential site developers and some technology firms may face higher compliance costs, reporting burdens, funding obligations, and tighter siting restrictions under the new and proposed rules.

Media Bias
Articles Published:
4
Right Leaning:
1
Left Leaning:
1
Neutral:
2
Distribution:
Left 25%, Center 50%, Right 25%
Who Benefited

Municipal residents and small businesses benefited from measures designed to prevent data centers from shifting infrastructure and utility costs onto households and local ratepayers.

Who Impacted

Data center operators, potential site developers and some technology firms may face higher compliance costs, reporting burdens, funding obligations, and tighter siting restrictions under the new and proposed rules.

Coverage of Story:

From Left

Seattle enacts one-year ban on data centers

KTBS
From Center

Cities and States Move to Regulate Data Centers

Fayetteville Flyer ArkansasOnline
From Right

Texas Gov. Abbott Blocks Data Centers From Raising Residential Electricity Bills

Dallas Express

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