Grand Blanc Township, Michigan, just put a one-year pause on all new data center applications, with the option to shorten or extend it.
The core concern is classic AI infra friction: big data centers could consume most of the available power and water in a planned “tech village,” crowding out other development.
Local officials want time to rewrite zoning rules so they can control siting, capacity, and resource usage before any GPU-heavy builds show up.
This signals that power and water constraints are now front-and-center at the municipal level, not just with utilities and hyperscalers.
For operators, it’s another reminder that permitting and resource competition can derail site strategy even before a single rack is planned.
For vendors, it underlines the need to show credible efficiency and community impact models if they want local approvals.
The piece is short but worth a read for how small-town governance is starting to shape the AI data center map.