Orange County NC Website
27 <br /> Slide#9 <br /> Manager Recommendations <br /> • Direct staff to prepare materials for and notice a <br /> legislative public hearing at the April 21 BOCC meeting <br /> to declare a moratorium on "large-scale data centers" for <br /> one (1) year; and <br /> • Initiate an amendment to the Orange County UDO to <br /> define and regulate both "large-scale" data centers, <br /> inclusive of Artificial Intelligence Data Centers, <br /> Cryptocurrency Mining Facilities, Data Centers, Data <br /> Processing Facilities, and similar uses. <br /> �1 <br /> ORANGE COUNTY <br /> NORTH CAROLINA <br /> Commissioner Carter thanked staff for bringing the proposal and Commissioner Bedford's <br /> questions about noise. She said item 8-g in the consent agenda resonates with this topic. She <br /> thanked staff for bringing that forward in collaboration with the other municipalities to ask the North <br /> Carolina Utilities Commission to take measures that ensure that residential and other commercial <br /> rate payers are protected from unfairly bearing the costs of infrastructure built to support new <br /> large economic development loads. <br /> Commissioner Bedford thanked staff for the fast turnaround on the item and for <br /> Commissioner Carter's motion at the previous business meeting. She thanked Commissioner <br /> Carter and Commissioner Portie-Ascott for attending the NACo Legislative conference and <br /> bringing this and other important information back to the Board. <br /> PUBLIC COMMENTS: <br /> John Rees of the Orange Chatham Sierra Club read the following statement: <br /> "While I am not an expert, the reading I have done shows there are both environmental issues <br /> and environmental justice issues regarding the of siting of data centers. <br /> As we already discussed here, since Orange County doesn't currently have specific wording in <br /> the UDO regulating land uses for data centers, enacting a moratorium - and then working with <br /> county staff and subject matter experts would allow for rules that would better control data centers <br /> and regulate them in such a way that they do not impose both an environmental and economic <br /> impact on county residents. <br /> The Sierra Club has handy documents and resources that suggest regulations and topics of <br /> consideration, and also citations on what other states have done that I have already shared with <br /> you. <br /> For me, the key things to consider are: <br /> Not making incumbent ratepayers take the risk of paying for capacity that services data centers <br /> exclusively, or capacity that is stated to be need and then not used (leaving ratepayers with the <br /> bill) <br />