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. Proposal calls for three-year moratorium on construction of data centers in New York
New York · Government Policy
A formal proposal has been introduced in New York calling for a three-year moratorium on the construction of new data centers. This matters because it signals significant regulatory pushback that could slow data center growth in a key U.S. market, impacting expansion plans and investment decisions. Read here.
2. Texas county pauses data center construction in rural areas for a year
Texas · Government Policy
A Texas county has enacted a one-year pause on data center construction in its rural areas to evaluate impacts and plan infrastructure accordingly. This moratorium is significant as it reflects growing local government caution and could affect the pace of data center development in Texas, a major hub for the industry. Read here.
3. Data center company sues Birmingham’s zoning board over power structure denials
Alabama · Lawsuit Or Legal
A data center company has filed a lawsuit against Birmingham’s zoning board following denials related to power structure permits. This legal action highlights the increasing conflicts between data center developers and local authorities over infrastructure approvals, which can delay or block projects. Read here.
4. East Fishkill to adopt moratorium on data centers
New York · Government Policy
The town of East Fishkill has voted to adopt a moratorium on new data center developments to assess their impact on local resources and infrastructure. This action is important as it reflects growing local government efforts to regulate data center growth amid community and environmental concerns. Read here.
5. Urbana begins walking back zoning changes that permitted data centers
Ohio · Zoning Permit
The city of Urbana is reversing previous zoning changes that allowed data center construction, signaling increased regulatory scrutiny. This rollback could slow data center development locally and indicates rising challenges for the industry in securing zoning approvals. Read here.
This roundup is generated daily from our Data Center Locality Report. Subscribe for the full intelligence briefing.