US residents angry datacenters 'shoved down our throats' are recalling officials
5 hours ago
- #Resource Consumption
- #Data Centers
- #Community Resistance
- A proposed data center in Lenox Township, Michigan, faced public backlash due to perceived secrecy, leading to packed meetings and a recall petition against officials.
- Nationwide, U.S. residents are increasingly pushing for moratoriums on new data centers, citing concerns over property values, water and energy strain, and unemployment, with bipartisan unity emerging against the projects.
- Data centers consume significant resources: one center can use as much electricity as 2,000 homes and up to 5 million gallons of water daily, straining local infrastructure and increasing consumer costs.
- Developers often operate clandestinely, using non-disclosure agreements, which fuels public distrust and transparency demands, as seen in cases from Virginia to Oklahoma.
- In Festus, Missouri, a $6 billion data center deal prompted a recall effort against the mayor and council, despite claims of economic benefits, highlighting community resistance to lack of involvement.
- In Yukon, Oklahoma, a recall petition over a $1 billion data center led to a vice-mayor's resignation and a neighboring city imposing a moratorium, driven by water rationing and transparency issues.
- Opposition is sometimes falsely attributed to Chinese influence, as with a Utah project, though experts find little evidence, and critics question who benefits from projects like in Lenox Township.
- The Lenox data center website, linked to political advocacy software, stalled with no clear developer disclosed, reflecting broader challenges in data center proposals and community engagement.