Even with Gunfire Behind Bars, Why Do American Small Towns Oppose AI Data Centers?
On April 7, voters in Festus, Missouri, recalled four of eight city council members over the approval of a $6 billion AI data center project at the end of March. The project, led by Clayco's data center development arm CRG, spans 360 acres and has an undisclosed Fortune 100 end user (codenamed Project Cumulus).
The city council signed off on the project without a public hearing, leading local residents' group Wake Up JeffCo to sue the city government and CRG in St. Louis County court, with a recall petition against the mayor underway. According to Tom's Hardware, around the same time, Indianapolis councilman Ron Gibson's home was shot at multiple times late in 2025, with a "No Data Centers" note left at his doorstep.
Festus is not alone. Recently, Indianapolis councilman Ron Gibson's home was sprayed with 13 bullets in the dead of night, waking his 8-year-old son. A handwritten note at the door read, "No data center allowed." The FBI is investigating. Jordyn Abrams, a researcher at George Washington University's extremism program, points out that data centers are becoming targets for anti-tech, anti-government extremists.

Ron Gibson shooting scene
The advocacy group Data Center Watch, in its Q2 2025 report, has updated the number of organized opposition groups from 142 a year ago (in 24 states) to 188 (across 40 states). The value of halted or delayed projects has risen from $64 billion to $162 billion. On April 1, 2026, Port Washington, Wisconsin, passed the first-ever nationwide referendum explicitly targeting a data center, with 66% of voters in favor of adding a mandatory referendum threshold for projects receiving over $10 million in TIF subsidies.
All these events collectively answer the same question: Will the true bottleneck of AI capacity expansion be at the county and city ballot boxes?
Backlash in Full Swing
Plotting the events of the past 23 months on a map of the United States, two tiers of backlash are apparent. One is at the state level, with eight states having submitted or passed data center pause bills, including Maine (passed 82-62 in the House, extending to 2027), Vermont (paused until July 2030), Virginia (introduced by Democratic Delegate Irene Shin, paused until 2028), Georgia, Maryland, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. This tier represents legislative action, with the broadest impact but slowest progress.

Another type is at the municipal or county level, with a more intense and vigorous backlash. The Chandler City Council in Arizona unanimously rejected Active Infrastructure's $2.5 billion project in December 2025 (lobbied by former U.S. Senator Kyrsten Sinema). The Tucson City Council in the same state is currently reviewing data center zoning restriction regulations, with public feedback open until the end of April 2026. Hays County/San Marcos in Texas rejected a $1.5 billion project in a 5-2 vote. Other locations include Cascade Locks in Oregon, Chesterton in Indiana, Catlett Station in Virginia, Peculiar in Missouri, and Lansing in Michigan. According to Data Center Watch, at least 10 states have seen direct rejections at the city government level or developers withdrawing their plans.
Over half of the high-conflict incidents are concentrated in the Midwest and South Central regions. This area has been a hotspot for data center siting due to the relative grid capacity surplus over the past decade. Now, the backlash is concentrated in the same region. From another perspective, the suppliers are moving from the "power plant surplus states" and encountering the most politically sensitive layer of local politics.
$60 Billion — Not in the Same League
The financial scale of Festus makes the $60 billion figure impossible for the city council to digest normally. According to local newspaper myleaderpaper citing municipal budget documents, Festus's FY2025 general fund plus public safety operational budget is $17.64 million, total municipal expenses in FY2024 were $37.41 million, and an estimated year-end reserve of $28.09 million for FY2025.
The $60 billion data center project is around 340 times the annual operating budget, equivalent to $450,000 per resident in a city with 13,200 residents. In relative terms, this is not a local development project up for discussion but rather a small town being plugged into a capital pipeline completely unrelated to itself.

Contrasting this with Festus residents' median per capita income of approximately $35,000 in non-metro Missouri sheds light on the issue. Any decimal in the data center contract is greater than the entire community's lifetime disposable income per capita. Local officials lack the experience to balance such numbers. The criticism of the Festus City Council resolution being dubbed "not open for public hearing" is technically due to the fact that such projects typically involve commercial confidentiality clauses (with neither the developer nor end customer identities disclosed), rendering normal city council procedures unable to review confidential contracts. This is a structural flaw, not an oversight by individual council members.
Due to the difference in scale, splitting a data center contract into a size that can be handled by a local council is inherently unfeasible. That's why in the past 12 months, the rebound path has not been resolved within the legislative process but through the use of three external weapons: recalls, lawsuits, and referendums. In a rare case, Festus saw its four city council members recalled, a lawsuit filed by a residents' group in St. Louis County Circuit Court, and the initiation of a mayor recall petition, with all three paths triggered simultaneously.
A Data Center Consuming a Small Town
The power usage of an AI data center is best understood by comparing it to a small town in the United States. A fully loaded 200 MW AI data center, with an 86% load factor, consumes about 1,500 GWh annually. In comparison, a small U.S. town of 100,000 residents consumes approximately 420 GWh per year (based on the U.S. Energy Information Administration's EIA average annual residential electricity consumption of 10.5 MWh per household, assuming 2.5 people per household). The data center consumes electricity 3.6 times that of the town's residents. And this is only for electricity, not accounting for cooling and associated water usage.
Water usage, on the other hand, presents a more intuitive comparison. Based on the U.S. Geological Survey's typical residential water use (100 gallons per person per day), a town of 100,000 residents consumes around 36.5 billion gallons of water per year. In contrast, a hyperscale AI data center such as Google's Council Bluffs (the largest Google data center in the U.S.) consumes 500 million gallons of water per year. In absolute terms, the data center's water consumption is 13.7% of the town's usage. However, in a different perspective, it is equivalent to the water consumption of 14,000 people for a whole year. In a small town with a population of 10,000 to 50,000, this means allocating a significant portion of the city's water supply system to a single user. According to Lawrence Berkeley Lab's 2024 Data Center Energy Report, U.S. data centers consumed 17 billion gallons of water directly for cooling in 2023 and 211 billion gallons of water indirectly (for power generation). Direct water usage is expected to double or even quadruple by 2028.

The most commonly heard protest slogan is "our well will run dry." Looking at the numbers, this is not an emotional expression. In 2023, Loudoun County in Virginia (the county with the most concentrated data centers in the U.S.) had a potential water usage of 8.99 billion gallons by data centers, accounting for around 10% of the county's total water usage, according to local water supply data cited by Sierra Club and Grist. If at the county level it's already significant, the numbers at the town level would be even more extreme.
Planned Capacity in Development, Entering Rebound Window
The true capacity of U.S. data centers that have actually been commissioned is approximately 50 GW, according to FERC and Wood Mackenzie 2025 Q4 data. The planned pipeline totals 241 GW, with 33% in active development (around 80 GW) and another 67% (around 161 GW) yet to be initiated. BloombergNEF predicts an additional 97 GW of capacity to be added in the U.S. from 2025 to 2030, with the data center electricity demand peaking at 106 GW by 2035. All these numbers point to one fact: the vast majority of the capacity is still on the drawing board and not yet implemented.

According to data revealed by Sightline Climate via TechRadar, of the 16 GW originally scheduled to come online in 2026, 30% to 50% are expected to be canceled or delayed. Meanwhile, Data Center Watch's data shows that from May 2024 to March 2025, over 10 months, $64 billion worth of data center projects were stopped or delayed due to organized opposition. In the single quarter of 2025 Q2, this figure was $98 billion corresponding to 20 projects. The amount blocked in a single quarter has exceeded the cumulative total of the previous 10 months.
This sets up a timing mismatch. Capital has already committed to doubling U.S. data center capacity over the next five years, but the new capacity has to navigate through each level of county and city approvals. The more planned capacity there is, the larger the surface area that can be held back by rebound. Cases like Festus were able to escalate from a city council vote to recall and lawsuits within a month not because it was unique but because the number of opposition organizations increased by 46 in a year (according to the Data Center Watch 2025 Q2 report) and shared templated legal tools across states, including TIF subsidy referendums, zoning litigation, and legislator recalls. Whether a long-term power agreement signed by a cutting-edge lab will materialize depends on which counties these contracts land in and which residents are watching those county councils.
The bottleneck in AI capacity expansion, stepping out of power contract negotiation for the first time, appeared on the recall vote cast by 13,200 people.
You may also like

The arrival of the Web 3.0 era: A review of Hong Kong court rulings on digital assets

Track Markets At a Glance: New WEEX Price Widgets for iOS & Android
To streamline your market data access, WEEX has officially launched "Market Watchlist" desktop widgets

The billion-dollar lesson: The focus of DeFi security is shifting from code to operational governance

A Brief Analysis of Stablecoin Licenses and On-Chain Funding

BVNK Founder: Three Stages of Stablecoin Development

The truth about Trump's son's Bitcoin game: he made a staggering $100 million while retail investors lost $500 million

What Is Futures Trading? Hours, Platforms, and How to Start Trade Futures(2026 Guide)
Learn how to start futures trading, understand trading hours, and choose the best futures trading platform. Includes real data, strategies, and ways to maximize returns with rebates.

The Rise of Composable RWA

MAGA Up 350% in 24 Hours, PEPE Up 46% in One Day: Which Memecoins Are Next in 2026?
MAGA +350% in 24hrs. PEPE +46% in one day. RAVE +4,500% then -90%. In 2026's memecoin market, the gains are real. So are the traps? Here's how to tell the difference before you buy.

RCD Espanyol vs Real Madrid: Can the Pericos Delay the Inevitable?
RCD Espanyol vs Real Madrid lineups, standings, and stats for May 3, 2026. Real Madrid visits RCDE Stadium as Barcelona closes in on the LALIGA title. Full preview inside.

MegaETH goes live with an FDV exceeding 2 billion USD. Which ecological projects are worth paying attention to?

Dialogue with "Wood Sister" Cathie Wood: The next bull market is about to arrive

Can prediction markets win the competition for perpetual contracts?

Who is trading on Trade.xyz?

Binance quietly placed a bet on a leading large model company

Best Crypto Discord Server 2026: Why Jacob’s Crypto Clan Is Gaining Massive Attention
Jacob’s Crypto Clan has grown into one of the most active crypto Discord communities, with over 45K members and continuing to expand. This rapid growth reflects strong demand for structured trading insights and real-time collaboration.

Tom Lee Buying ETH: Why Wall Street’s Loudest Ethereum Bull Keeps Doubling Down
Tom Lee keeps buying ETH through every dip, every drawdown, and every moment of market doubt. Inside the strategy that's turning Ethereum into a treasury asset — and what it signals for the rest of the market.

Stripe Sessions 2026: AI Agent, Global Payments, and Invisible Crypto Infrastructure
The arrival of the Web 3.0 era: A review of Hong Kong court rulings on digital assets
Track Markets At a Glance: New WEEX Price Widgets for iOS & Android
To streamline your market data access, WEEX has officially launched "Market Watchlist" desktop widgets






