Here are today’s most significant data center locality stories — regulatory battles, community opposition, and legal challenges shaping where data centers can be built across the United States.
1. Maine legislature passes nation’s first data center moratorium
Maine · Government Policy
Maine’s legislature has passed the nation’s first moratorium on new data center developments, pending the governor’s signature. This unprecedented legislative action signals growing regulatory scrutiny and could set a precedent affecting data center expansion nationwide. Read here.
2. Virginia voter support for new data centers collapses from 69% in 2023 to 35% in new poll — Multi-gigawatt, 37-building Digital Gateway project abandoned
Virginia · Community Pushback
Voter support in Virginia for new data center projects has sharply declined, leading to the abandonment of the massive Digital Gateway project comprising 37 buildings. This shift highlights increasing community resistance that could slow or halt large-scale data center developments in key markets. Read here.
3. Lowell, Indiana to hold town hall on proposed $5B data center from Sentinel Data Centers
Indiana · Community Pushback
Lowell, Indiana is holding a town hall meeting to discuss a proposed $5 billion data center project by Sentinel Data Centers amid local concerns. This public engagement reflects growing community involvement and potential opposition that could impact project timelines and approvals. Read here.
4. Hundreds of neighbors protest Gaines Township Microsoft data center land rezoning; committee tables decision
Michigan · Community Pushback
Hundreds of residents protested a land rezoning request for a Microsoft data center in Gaines Township, leading the local committee to table the decision. This community pushback underscores the challenges data center projects face from local opposition impacting development approvals. Read here.
5. Kentucky data center regulations stripped from bill as legislative session closes
Kentucky · Government Policy
Kentucky lawmakers removed proposed data center regulations from a bill as the 2026 legislative session ended, effectively halting new regulatory measures. This legislative outcome maintains the status quo, impacting how data center developments will be governed in the state moving forward. Read here.
This roundup is generated daily from our Data Center Locality Report. Subscribe for the full intelligence briefing.