Texas county passes 1-year data center construction ban

(politico.com)

20 points | by cdrnsf 12 hours ago ago

24 comments

  • fastest963 4 hours ago ago

    Datacenters bring millions in tax revenue (I oppose giving them tax breaks, that's a politician issue not an issue inherent to DCs) and are much less of a nuance than factories or warehouses. The increased cost of electricity is a concern but can be helped by an upfront investment, a bond for future grid maintenance, or separate utility infrastructure.

    Are the datacenter concerns actually AI fears and they somehow think that stifling datacenter construction will save their jobs from AI? I understand the fear but if there's money to be made, datacenters will get built somewhere, and another municipality will reap the benefits.

  • JuniperMesos 11 hours ago ago

    [flagged]

    • ryandrake 6 hours ago ago

      Heaven forbid residents might get a say in whether or not a corporation can come in and build a huge blight / negative externality right next to them in their community! We should just let corporations build whatever they want anywhere they want to, right?

      • JuniperMesos 4 hours ago ago

        The lesson of YIMBYism is, actually yes, you should let corporations build whatever they want wherever they want to; because otherwise local residents will take advantage of any legal provision they can to prevent anyone from building anything, and that's how you get a housing shortage (that happens to financially benefit the incumbent homeowners, although I think this is mostly not what's driving NIMBYism).

        But the real lesson of YIMBYism is the ability to think that local residents politically agitating against something they think constitutes a local negative externality, might need to get told to go to hell for the benefit of the rest of society, even if they're right about the thing being a negative externality for them.

        In my California neighborhood right now, there are people complaining to our local city council representative about a certain planned housing development, that they think is a negative externality for them for various reasons. The city council person is interested in responding to the concerns of his constituents, and is also telling them that California state law limits what local governments can do to prevent these kinds of developments.

        I am wholeheartedly in favor of that California law, much to the chagrin of my anti-housing neighbors. I would wholeheartedly be in favor of an analogous Texas law that tells anti-data-center local interests that their concerns are stupid, and they shouldn't have the power to prevent a corporation from constructing a data center near them, so that the rest of society can continue to benefit from using computer systems housed in data centers.

      • fastest963 4 hours ago ago

        This is what zoning is for. If you live near land zoned for industrial or commercial then you can't fight it when someone wants to develop the land. If you don't want to live near something like that you shouldn't have bought/rented next to that zone.

        • jmye 2 hours ago ago

          Or I can fight to rezone that land because a single pass of zoning, shockingly, isn’t fucking permanent.

          Y’all do vaguely understand how government works, right? Planning and zoning is a core function. This is hardly rocket science, except, I suppose, when your vibe-code shit start-up depends on building data centers in other folks’ backyards.

          • fastest963 2 hours ago ago

            Rezoning land is extremely difficult and likely requires changes to the Master plan for the city/county. If a citizen is unhappy with a zone nearby do not move there.

            If an area is zoned for industrial and someone wants to build a datacenter there without variances I don't see why anyone should be able to say no. Same thing for building condos or single-family homes in areas zoned for those. There's almost always variances though which is why there is even an opportunity to say no.

    • usefulcat 9 hours ago ago

      Is it really that difficult to believe that these residents—many of whom are living out in the country by choice—really just don’t want this kind of development near them? And that they have taken action of their own volition?

      I laughed out loud at the suggestion that rural Texans are reading Politico, or any other “elite media” for that matter. I say this as someone who has lived in TX for decades.

      ETA: to be fair, I'm not saying that what you describe never happens, but no way is this an example of it.

      • JuniperMesos 8 hours ago ago

        Yeah, there probably are some rural people who just reflexively oppose any kind of construction, NIMBYs are everywhere. The psyop is Politico writing an article in support of them, instead of comparing what they're doing to redlining or some other historic phenomenon that the Politico writers see as racist against nonwhites.

        • jmye 2 hours ago ago

          Yes, not wanting a data center is the same as fucking red-lining. What an astronomically bullshit argument and false equivalence. What a stunning display of intellectual dishonesty.

    • aggakake 10 hours ago ago

      I'm getting a shill vibe from the shill accusation.

    • petee 9 hours ago ago

      And you're 100% ok if it were being built immediately outside your window, right?

      • fastest963 4 hours ago ago

        Depends. Is the alternative a loud, obnoxious factory? Or a warehouse with a constant stream of trucks? If you live near land zoned for industrial buildings then something is going to go there eventually.

      • JuniperMesos 8 hours ago ago

        Yes. In fact I assume there are multiple data centers built in the same urban area I live in, perhaps not very far from me.

      • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

        I would personally, why not (generally curious why there is opposition. Things such as the whole electric infrastructure costs being passed on to consumers is not inherent to a data center build, just a failure in policy).

        • dozerly 6 hours ago ago

          To name just a single reason: they produce noise at inaudible frequencies that makes people sick.

          • JuniperMesos 2 hours ago ago

            I think this is a fake phenomenon, like people who claim to have some kind of sensitivity to radio waves that causes them chronic illness that induces them to move to the national radio quiet zone (https://wjla.com/news/health/allergic-to-radio-signals-suffe...).

            The main difference is that when people complain about the negative health effects of 5G cell phone radios, the Politico-writer class makes fun of them for being conspiracy theorists instead of arguing that the existence of these people is one of several good reasons to get rid of 5G cell phone towers.

          • amazingamazing 6 hours ago ago

            Interesting - got a source? Id be surprised if such a noise survives a few miles.

      • iloveoof 9 hours ago ago

        This is like saying that you should oppose electricity or factories if you don’t want them in your backyard.

        • king_geedorah 8 hours ago ago

          If given the choice, which would you prefer?

          A) An electrical station immediately proximal to where you reside

          B) No electrical station immediately proximal to where you reside

    • add-sub-mul-div 10 hours ago ago

      This is incredible. On the range from zero to multiple layers of irony it's a great read regardless of where it lands.

    • fakedang 9 hours ago ago

      Data-center advocacy is so clearly a psyop driven by members of the elite techbro class (i.e. the kinds of people who write comments like these), who are scared of the middle class. I wish the US had better constitutional protections for people who want to protect their quality of life and their jobs in spite of short-sighted or malicious billionaire opposition.