A recent Tom’s Hardware news analysis examines how local political opposition, zoning disputes, moratoriums, rejected proposals, and community organizing are affecting major U.S. data center projects.
Read the original article at Tom’s Hardware:
Local political revolts threaten to derail US data center projects
Why This Matters Locally
The article is relevant to Roseville residents because it highlights a broader national pattern: communities are increasingly scrutinizing large infrastructure and industrial-scale technology projects before accepting claims of “innovation,” “economic development,” or “progress.”
For the Phillip Road Site rezoning debate, the lesson is straightforward. Residents have a right to ask whether a proposed land-use change truly serves the public interest, whether environmental and infrastructure impacts have been fully evaluated, and whether local decision-makers are weighing long-term community consequences rather than relying on broad development promises.
Important questions include:
Will the proposed use increase traffic, noise, emissions, utility demand, or public-service burdens?
Are the public benefits clearly documented, or merely asserted?
Have residents received complete and understandable information?
Would rezoning permanently change the character of the area?
Are local concerns being treated as legitimate civic participation?
Save Reason Farms supports transparent public review, careful land-use decision-making, and meaningful community participation before major zoning changes are approved.
Source and Attribution
Source: Tom’s Hardware
Author: Jon Martindale
Article: “Local political revolts threaten to derail US data center projects — mounting delays are already costing AI hyperscalers billions”
Published: April 17, 2026
Original URL: https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/local-political-revolts-threaten-to-derail-us-data-center-projects-mounting-delays-are-already-costing-ai-hyperscalers-billions