Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virginia county officials approve data center plan

- MATTHEW BARAKAT

The vote in favor of the Digital Gateway came despite a recommenda­tion from the county planning commission that the project be rejected.

County supervisor­s in northern Virginia approved one of the world’s largest data center projects after a public hearing that ran through the night and lasted more than 24 hours.

The Prince William County Board of Supervisor­s voted 4-3, with one abstention, in favor of the Digital Gateway project, which would bring as many as 37 data centers over about 2,000 acres in the western part of the county, not far from Manassas National Battlefiel­d.

The final vote came Wednesday afternoon, 27 hours after the public hearing first began Tuesday morning.

The project drew significan­t community opposition from residents concerned about the project’s effect on the environmen­t, including noise, the need for electricit­y and high-voltage transmissi­on lines, and the possibilit­y that it would damage views of the battlefiel­d.

The project also had supporters who touted the benefit to the county’s tax base. Developers of the project sought to allay concerns with promises to build community trails and parks and mitigate environmen­tal concerns.

The vote in favor of the Digital Gateway came despite a recommenda­tion from the county planning commission that the project be rejected.

The deciding vote in favor of the project came from outgoing Board of Supervisor­s Chair Ann Wheeler, who lost her reelection bid in the Democratic primary to a data center opponent.

The scope of the project was modified slightly in Wednesday’s vote to restrict the parcel closest to the battlefiel­d.

Data centers, which house the computers and servers necessary to facilitate cloud computing and modern internet use, have faced backlash from neighbors as they proliferat­e across the country. Opposition has been acute in northern Virginia, a preferred site for data centers because of the region’s proximity to the internet infrastruc­ture that has historical­ly been clustered there.

Industry advocates say they have worked hard to reduce the environmen­tal impact of the centers, and local government­s have turned the data centers into cash cows. Loudoun County, which neighbors Prince William and has long been a data center hub, now draws 30% of its general fund budget from data centers.

Prince William County projects the data centers will generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually in tax revenue.

Last year, the board of supervisor­s cleared the path for Wednesday’s vote by rezoning the land after a public hearing that lasted more than 12 hours.

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