United States — Local governments in Augusta, Charlotte, Iron County (Utah), Parowan, and Massillon this week acted to pause, postpone, or reconsider data center development. On May 26, Iron County enacted a 180-day pause and Massillon discussed zoning changes; Charlotte held hearings on a proposed 150-day moratorium while Augusta delayed a committee discussion. Officials cited utility capacity, traffic, environmental justice, and community concerns as reasons for temporary moratoria or zoning reviews, and residents and activists urged clearer standards. City and county leaders said moratoria would provide time to draft requirements, certify utilities, and hold further public engagement before accepting new applications or approvals.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Data center decisions can impact your community. They affect utility capacity, traffic, and local environment. If you live in these areas, your voice matters. Attend public hearings or write to your local officials about your concerns.
Local leaders are taking a step back to ensure data centers benefit everyone. They're focusing on drafting clear standards and engaging the public. If you're in these communities, stay tuned for updates. Worth forwarding if you know someone affected by these decisions.
Municipal planners, environmental advocates, and neighborhood groups gained additional time to evaluate infrastructure capacity, environmental impacts, and equity issues before new data center approvals proceed.
Developers and data center companies faced delays, increased regulatory scrutiny, and uncertainty as local governments imposed temporary moratoria or proposed stricter zoning and utility requirements.
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Local leaders pause and review data center approvals
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