Updated
Updated · TPM · Jun 23
Monterey Park Voters Permanently Ban Data Centers as 70% of Americans Oppose Local AI Projects
Updated
Updated · TPM · Jun 23

Monterey Park Voters Permanently Ban Data Centers as 70% of Americans Oppose Local AI Projects

3 articles · Updated · TPM · Jun 23

Summary

  • Monterey Park voters approved a ballot measure permanently barring data centers, citing risks to air quality, drinking water and public health after local backlash to a proposed AI facility.
  • 70% of Americans oppose AI data centers in their communities—75% of Democrats and 63% of Republicans—making the issue a rare bipartisan flashpoint despite deep national polarization.
  • At least 75 projects worth about $130 billion were stalled or blocked in the first three months of 2026, as communities pushed back over power bills, water use, noise, land demands and tax breaks.
  • More than 800 groups across 49 states are fighting roughly 1,500 planned data centers, though analysts warn the cross-party coalition could fracture as the 2026 midterm campaign turns the issue partisan.

Insights

With one city's landslide vote, will a wave of community-led bans on data centers sweep the nation?
As towns reject power-hungry projects, can technology be redesigned to coexist with communities instead of consuming them?
What is the unseen cost of prioritizing local resources over the relentless march of technological growth?