Texas county pauses data center construction in rural areas
4 hours ago
- #Texas Regulations
- #Data Centers
- #Rural Development
- Hill County, Texas, imposed a one-year moratorium on new data center construction in unincorporated areas, the first such action in the state.
- The decision was driven by public health and safety concerns, including noise pollution and high water/electricity usage from a proposed 300-acre development.
- County officials cited the need to study the impacts of data centers due to rapid, unregulated growth in areas lacking zoning laws.
- Developers opposed the moratorium, arguing it would hinder economic benefits like funding for schools and roads, and attempted last-minute lobbying.
- The move faces legal risks, with warnings of potential lawsuits from developers and state officials questioning counties' authority to enforce such pauses.
- Other Texas counties, like Hood and Hays, have considered similar measures, but state leaders have pushed back, claiming constitutional overreach.
- Despite uncertainties in Texas law, Hill County justified the moratorium as temporary and necessary to assess public health risks, hoping for state regulatory support.