Top 5 Data Center Locality Stories: March 27, 2026

Melissa Palmer

March 27, 2026

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. Tulsa will pause new data center construction for 9 months after council vote
Oklahoma · Moratorium on data center construction
Tulsa city council voted to impose a 9-month moratorium on new data center construction to allow time for review and planning. This pause signals growing local government scrutiny on data center expansion, impacting project timelines and investment decisions in the region. Read here.

2. Amendment to ban data centers in Ohio advances to next step
Ohio · Legislation to ban data centers
A proposed constitutional amendment to ban large data centers in Ohio has advanced to the next legislative step, reflecting significant political pushback. This development could drastically reshape the state’s data center market by potentially halting future large-scale projects. Read here.

3. Grassroots organization announces plans to file suit against Mason County data center proposal
Kentucky · Lawsuit filed
A grassroots group in Mason County, Kentucky announced plans to file a lawsuit opposing a proposed data center project, citing environmental and community concerns. Legal challenges like this highlight increasing local resistance that can delay or block data center developments. Read here.

4. Oregon communities envision 9,100 acres for new data centers, quadrupling the industry’s footprint
Oregon · Zoning and land use planning
Several Oregon communities have collectively identified 9,100 acres for potential new data center development, which would quadruple the region’s current data center footprint. This large-scale land allocation signals aggressive local support for data center growth, influencing regional infrastructure and market capacity. Read here.

5. Minnesota | With new law in effect, data centers shouldn’t mean higher electric bills for the rest of us
Minnesota · Energy legislation
Minnesota enacted a new law ensuring that data center energy consumption will not lead to increased electricity costs for other consumers. This legislation provides a regulatory framework that balances data center growth with community energy affordability concerns. Read here.


This roundup is generated daily from our Data Center Locality Report. Subscribe for the full intelligence briefing.

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