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Detroit begins drafting data center regulations

July 6, 2026

Detroit's City Planning Commission is developing zoning regulations for data center facilities, with Councilman Scott Benson aiming for City Council approval by year's end following input from a cross-sector working group. While smaller data centers already operate in Detroit, city officials are working to inventory existing facilities and have determined that large hyperscale data centers won't be permitted due to insufficient land, energy capacity, and community opposition. Some advocacy groups have criticized the working group process as lacking transparency and inclusivity, though Benson defends it as open and public.

Who is affected

  • Detroit residents, particularly those on the city's east side
  • City Councilman Scott Benson and Detroit's City Council
  • The City Planning Commission and its Director Marcell Todd
  • Mayor Mary Sheffield and her administration
  • Erma Leaphart and members of the data center working group
  • Detroit People's Platform advocacy group members
  • Eastside Community Network and east side residents
  • DTE Energy
  • Environmental groups, unions, tech officials, and the Detroit Economic Development Corporation
  • The city's Buildings, Safety Engineering, and Environmental Department

What action is being taken

  • The City Planning Commission is drafting a proposal to govern data center developments
  • City planning and building officials are working to determine what types of small-scale facilities are already operating in Detroit
  • The planning commission is reviewing ordinances from around the country
  • The working group's four committees have been meeting
  • The Eastside Community Network is holding biweekly Wednesday meetings to educate residents and develop a report
  • Members of Mayor Sheffield's administration are participating in workgroup discussions

Why it matters

  • This policy effort is significant because it will establish how Detroit manages data center development in a city that lacks the infrastructure for massive hyperscale facilities that have raised concerns nationwide due to their enormous energy and water consumption. The regulations will protect Detroit neighborhoods already overburdened with industry from potential environmental and health impacts while determining what scale of data centers is appropriate for the city's available land, energy capacity, and community needs. The outcome will set precedent as multiple Michigan municipalities grapple with similar data center proposals following state-approved tax breaks for the industry.

What's next

  • Councilman Benson aims to have the data center zoning policy approved by Detroit's City Council by December 31
  • The City Planning Commission will likely have a status report with draft language by the end of July
  • The ordinance will include public hearings and a community engagement process
  • The Eastside Community Network hopes to have a report by the end of summer or early fall on what it believes is best for their neighborhood regarding data centers
  • Mayor Sheffield still needs to make a determination on the City Council's request for a two-year moratorium on data center development

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com

Detroit begins drafting data center regulations