That's a little better. It should be at least 3 years before they can try again.
If they wait that long, it'll go elsewhere. That's all there is to it....
Data centers are a fact of U.S. life. They'll go up somewhere and that's a fact. Wherever they go up, they generate tax dollars for the local government. That's a fact.
Our state enacted large property and state income tax reforms, so that cut off funding to local county and city governments. The only way for those local governments to generate enough money to provide basic services like fire, police, streets, sanitation is to raise local income taxes.
Large projects like this come with agreements for paying taxes to support local governments, agreements to not drain the water supply by using closed loop system and employing mostly air cooling, and agreements to not raise local electricity prices.
They create a TON of temporary construction jobs, then those jobs go away. They create SOME permanent jobs after construction is over.
At the meeting, the majority of people speaking for it are construction/electrical/plumbing unions and local government leaders. The majority of people speaking against it are people that live there. They elected the local officials, and were all for the first data center and battery plant and power plant and steel mill and solar farm, etc............. until they started building them and realized just how HUGE these places are. Now they're regretting their choices.
There's a large ridge running between the small town and these sites, so I guess they figured out of sight, out of mind. They forgot about the tax ramifications that came from the people they elected, and now the only way to generate taxes is large projects like this.
They are getting what they voted for and are now regretting it.