
"Two New York lawmakers on Friday announced that they are introducing a bill that would impose a three-year moratorium on data center development. The announcement makes New York at least the sixth state to introduce legislation putting a pause on data center development in the past few weeks-one of the latest signs of a growing and bipartisan backlash that is quickly finding traction in statehouses around the country."
"Data center moratoriums are "being tested as a model throughout states in this country," said state senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat, who presented the bill at a press conference Friday with its cosponsor, assemblymember Anna Kelles, also a Democrat. "Democrats and Republicans are moving forward with exactly these kinds of moratoriums. New York should be in the front of the line to get this done.""
"The new bill comes as a wave of bipartisan anti-data center sentiment that has swept across the country in recent months. In December, Senator Bernie Sanders, the Vermont independent, became the first national politician to call for a blanket moratorium on data center permitting, saying that a moratorium would "ensure that the benefits of technology work for all of us, not just the 1 percent.""
Two New York lawmakers introduced a bill to impose a three-year moratorium on data center development. The proposal makes New York at least the sixth state to pursue such a pause amid a fast-growing, bipartisan backlash against data center expansion. National and state leaders, including Senator Bernie Sanders and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, have called for moratoria or limits on permitting and expansion. New York hosts more than 130 data centers and faces several large-scale projects, including a proposed 450-megawatt project on a former coal plant. The proposals link data center growth to energy, consumer, and community concerns.
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