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Data center moratoriums pile up in Michigan. No one knows if they’ll work

February 5, 2026

Michigan communities are experiencing an unprecedented wave of resistance to data center development, with at least 18 local governments implementing temporary moratoriums on new facilities following the state's passage of tax incentive legislation in 2024. Rural townships and cities across the state are grappling with proposals for massive hyperscale computing facilities that consume hundreds of acres of land and require energy equivalent to major cities, sparking concerns about lost farmland, environmental impacts, and whether taxpayers will bear financial risks if the AI industry falters. The controversy has created unusual political unity, with residents from diverse backgrounds opposing these projects despite industry claims that data centers provide essential infrastructure and tax revenue.

Who is affected

  • Michigan residents across rural and urban communities statewide
  • Local government officials and township boards in at least 18 Michigan communities
  • Tim Boal and other Howell Township officials and planning commissioners
  • Residents of Ypsilanti Township facing the University of Michigan-Los Alamos National Laboratory data center proposal
  • Communities including Howell Township, Saginaw, Muskegon area, Sylvan Township (near Chelsea), Mason, and Ypsilanti Township
  • Farmland owners whose land is being targeted for data center development
  • Michigan taxpayers and utility ratepayers
  • Data center developers and Big Tech corporations
  • Governor Gretchen Whitmer and gubernatorial candidates (Jocelyn Benson, Mike Duggan, John James, Tom Leonard)
  • State lawmakers including House Speaker Matt Hall and various legislators sponsoring related bills
  • University of Michigan
  • Advocacy groups including the Michigan Economic Development Responsibility Alliance and NetChoice

What action is being taken

  • At least 18 local governments around Michigan are voting or proposing temporary halts (moratoriums ranging from three months to one year) on new data centers
  • Communities are rushing to set limits on where, when, and how data center facilities can operate
  • Local officials are attending and holding packed public meetings to hear resident concerns
  • The Michigan Municipal League is receiving calls from local officials and advising them to "pump the brakes"
  • State Representatives Jim DeSana, Dylan Wegela, and Erin Byrnes are sponsoring legislation to overturn data center tax breaks
  • A trio of Democratic senators has introduced a package to place guardrails on the industry's water and energy use
  • State Rep. Jennifer Wortz is preparing to introduce legislation for a statewide moratorium
  • Other bills are being introduced to ban non-disclosure agreements and block a $100 million state grant for the U-M-Los Alamos data center
  • Ypsilanti Township officials are conducting a public relations campaign asking residents to contact state officials
  • Gubernatorial candidates are actively campaigning on data center issues
  • Tom Leonard is traveling to city and township meetings across the state to voice objections

Why it matters

  • This issue matters because it represents a fundamental tension between state-level economic development priorities and local community control over land use and quality of life. The data centers require massive amounts of land (often converting farmland), consume energy rivaling major cities, and benefit from hundreds of millions in state tax breaks through 2050, yet create relatively few jobs (minimum 30 per facility) and raise concerns about environmental impacts and infrastructure strain. The controversy crosses all political, socioeconomic, and cultural divides, creating rare bipartisan unity among residents who feel state lawmakers prioritized tax incentives for wealthy corporations during economically difficult times. The outcome will shape Michigan's economic development strategy, determine the balance of power between state incentives and local zoning authority, influence the 2026 gubernatorial race, and potentially impact the broader AI industry's expansion plans nationwide, as Michigan communities' resistance is part of a national trend that has already blocked or delayed $64 billion in data center projects.

What's next

  • Communities with active moratoriums will use the pause period (ranging from three months to one year) to develop regulations and restrictions on data center development
  • Various legislative bills addressing data center tax breaks, water and energy use restrictions, non-disclosure agreement bans, and the $100 million grant will proceed through the legislative process
  • State Rep. Jennifer Wortz will introduce legislation proposing a statewide moratorium (though both Governor Whitmer and House Speaker Hall have indicated they oppose this measure)
  • The 2026 gubernatorial election will feature data center policy as a key campaign issue among candidates
  • Legal questions about whether data centers constitute a "demonstrated local need" under state exclusionary zoning laws will need resolution
  • University of Michigan will proceed with its Los Alamos data center project in Ypsilanti Township despite local opposition (as the university is exempt from local zoning laws)
  • Data center developers will continue seeking communities with "open arms" and may abandon proposals where resistance slows approval timelines

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com

Data center moratoriums pile up in Michigan. No one knows if they’ll work