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  "description": "Pulaski’s moratorium fell short of the two-thirds threshold for emergency ordinances.\n",
  "path": "/arkansas-countys-data-center-moratorium-failed-over-vote-miscount/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-03T14:30:52.000Z",
  "site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
  "tags": [
    "appeared to approve the emergency ordinance",
    "See Breakfast Club Membership Options!",
    "See Breakfast Club Membership Options",
    "Denver passed a yearlong",
    "Minneapolis passed a six-month",
    "cooling needs",
    "estimated to reach 1 gigawatt"
  ],
  "textContent": "WASHINGTON, June 3, 2026 – Pulaski County in Arkansas proposed a yearlong moratorium on data center development but it will not take effect after officials determined the vote had been miscounted.\n\nThe Pulaski County Quorum Court initially appeared to approve the emergency ordinance last week, but County Clerk **Terri Hollingsworth** later said the measure received only eight votes in favor, short of the 10 needed for passage. The original count showed the ordinance receiving exactly 10 votes.\n\nSee Breakfast Club Membership Options!\n\n\n                            See Breakfast Club Membership Options\n                        \n\nSeveral jurisdictions have moved to restrict data center development across the country as concerns grow over power use, water demand, and local impacts. Last month, Denver passed a yearlong moratorium and Minneapolis passed a six-month moratorium on new data centers.\n\nPulaski's failed ordinance had carved out an exemption for AVAIO Digital Leo, a planned data center near Wrightsville that has drawn contention from county residents. Pulaski has about 405,000 people.\n\nAccording to project manager **Thomas Nesel** , the center’s daily water demand would be about 200,000 gallons during warmer months due to cooling needs. The data center is also power-intensive, initially set to require 150 megawatts with demand estimated to reach 1 gigawatt as the facility grows.\n\nRepublican Justice of the Peace **Phil Stowers** said he supported the exemption because AVAIO has “spent a heck of a lot of money to invest in this community.”\n\nDemocratic Justice of the Peace Julie Blackwood, the original sponsor of the ordinance, said she plans to reintroduce it as soon as she can.",
  "title": "Arkansas County’s Data Center Moratorium Failed Over Vote Miscount",
  "updatedAt": "2026-06-04T21:47:05.852Z"
}