Summary
This episode investigates the rapid expansion of data centers across America, focusing on community backlash against a 350-megawatt facility in Vineland, New Jersey. Host Aston Herndon explores tensions between AI infrastructure needs and local concerns about energy costs, environmental impact, and lack of community input in the development process.
Insights
- Data center development is proceeding faster than community engagement processes, creating political vulnerability for projects in economically disadvantaged areas
- Data center opposition is bipartisan and driven by kitchen-table economic concerns (energy bills, property values, water usage) rather than ideological positions
- There's a significant information gap: communities lack independent verification of job creation claims and environmental impact assessments before projects are approved
- Federal politicians are divided on data centers (some want moratoriums, others call them necessary evils), but ground-level residents feel unheard regardless of political affiliation
- Data center siting in poor counties may reflect corporate strategy to avoid communities with stronger political agency and regulatory resistance
Trends
Data center expansion accelerating faster than grid infrastructure and regulatory frameworks can accommodateCommunity organizing around data centers emerging as bipartisan political issue with electoral implicationsEnergy cost inflation in regions with major data center development creating voter anxiety and political opportunityLack of federal standards for data center environmental and infrastructure impact assessments creating patchwork local resistanceData centers becoming proxy issue for broader voter sentiment about corporate power vs. community interestsWater consumption and extreme weather resilience becoming critical data center siting concernsUnion labor demands emerging as secondary negotiation point in data center development agreementsAI infrastructure needs creating political tension between economic development and local quality-of-life concerns
Topics
Data Center Infrastructure ExpansionAI Infrastructure and Grid CapacityCommunity Engagement in Development ProjectsEnergy Consumption and Electricity PricingWater Usage and Environmental ImpactEconomic Development in Disadvantaged CommunitiesFederal Data Center Regulation and MoratoriumsLocal Political Organizing and BacklashUnion Labor Standards in Tech InfrastructureProperty Values and Residential ConcernsGrid Infrastructure PlanningCorporate Accountability and Community InputBipartisan Political CoalitionsTechnology Deployment Speed vs. Regulatory OversightExtreme Weather Resilience Planning
Companies
Data One
Operating the 350-megawatt data center in Vineland, New Jersey that is the focus of community backlash and has delaye...
People
Aston Herndon
Host investigating data center expansion and community impact in Southern New Jersey
Bailey Weindor
Democratic candidate organizing community opposition to data centers and advocating for federal moratorium on develop...
Quotes
"I'm pro-development, but I'm pro-responsible development. And I think the way this project is developed has not put the community first and has not had enough community input."
Bailey Weindor•Mid-episode
"Data centers are a pretty extractive type of project because the energy consumption, the way they're developed, and then they talk about a few hundred jobs."
Bailey Weindor•Mid-episode
"This data center project was in the easy fast lane, and community concerns have been stuck in traffic in the right hand lane. And that's a disconnect that I think is unacceptable."
Bailey Weindor•Mid-episode
"It feels more like, are you standing with the community or not? Are you putting the community first or not?"
Bailey Weindor•Town hall segment
"Everything relates from the top down. And what we're getting from the top has spread all the way to the local level. And it isn't good."
Resident attendee•Town hall Q&A
Full Transcript
Okay, so today we're driving to Southern New Jersey. I'm heading to a data center. Convertible? Are we sure? That's not enough for that. My man. That's a little aggressive, gay. Okay, so a couple weeks ago I read a story in inj.com and it was all about how there's a data center going up in Cumberland County, the poorest county in New Jersey, that's receiving some community pushback. And this immediately got my attention because data centers are going up all across the country and it feels like it gives you more people should be talking about. According to the ones that I saw, there's more than 4,000 data centers already across America and more than 2,000 that have been announced or are already under construction. That's kind of crazy. I feel like we should be hearing politicians talk more about this, but we haven't really heard a consensus. One member of Congress told me that he wants to see a moratorium on data centers, but a senator told me recently that he thinks they're a necessary evil as things like AI become a bigger part of our economy and our society. So that let me to think, let's do some journalism ourselves and figure out what people actually think. Are data centers really a necessary evil? Let's find out. What's up y'all? I'm Skyler Diggins, 7-time WNBA All-Star, Olympic gold medalist, and mom. And I'm Cassidy Hubbard, host and reporter for nearly 20 years, covering the biggest names and stories in sports and mom. And this is and mom, a community for athletes, game changers, and moms of all kinds. Dropping May 14th. Tap in with us. So I just got to Vineland, New Jersey and I'm here to look at the Data One Data Center. This just started construction early last year and we're already starting to see some community pushback on it. So much so, that Data One has had to actually delay its plans for expansion. And this has also been showing up in the political arena too. Southern New Jersey is home to New Jersey's second congressional district, and there are some Democrats who have been making this the focus of their campaigns, hoping to really seize on the community backlash on the issue. One of those Democrats is named Bailey Weindor, who we're going to talk to in a second. Now Bailey is a young person who's really tried to throw town halls on this issue. He spoke to city council and he's really been saying that the community was not included in the process by which this data center went into construction. And there's a lot of concerns on the energy front, on the environmental front, and simply just a lot of noise. So I want to try to untangle this, and let's figure out what's actually going on here. Thank you for being our tour guide here. I appreciate the chance to be with you. Can you just give us a sense of what we're outside right now? This is the new data center in Vineland, New Jersey. We're here in Cumberland County. And just look at the size of this thing. It is gigantic. Give me a sense of the scope of this thing. How large are we talking about? How far does this extend? It is huge. And we're talking 300 to 350 megawatts, 2.6 million square feet. Wow. But one thing I say to people is until you're in front of this, you see it in person, it's hard to put it in perspective. This is not just another project. It is something that's one of the largest data centers in the whole Northeast. People know this was happening. Was their community input? Like before we get to the sense of backlash now, take me what happened then. Sure. So one of the big frustrations, one of the big reasons why there have been so many concerns from the community is because of what you're pointing to, which is I think the process was expedited and it was shoved through. And a lot of... Now, is that a fact? Do we know that or is that something that people... That's based on what I'm hearing from people in the community. And there are a lot of concerns about energy and the environment and all. Part of it is plain and simple that this is a hyperscale size data center and a lot of folks here in Vineland across South Jersey felt like they were not notified until it was too late, until this had already taken off. And if you look at what's happened across city council meetings, which is the first way that I really got involved with this issue back in last fall, we are not going anywhere. Not next week, not next month, not after a postpone vote. Because this issue is doing something powerful, it is bringing the community together, left, right and center. People disagree about almost everything in politics right now, but this is about community interests versus big corporations and versus political deals that enable them to get the red carpet rolled out. Most city council meetings, people don't show up, right? Local politics are to get people to turn out. These city council meetings were packed. I mean standing room only because people were saying, wait a minute, what is going on here? Where was our consultation? And why haven't we had more town halls, more chances to have it back and forth? The writing is on the wall for what lies ahead for our city and you sit here staring blankly or doodling on your papers. There are still steps you can take to speak up and protect us from potential harm. We have reached out to council on multiple occasions, both here and personally. I'm here to offer that conversation again. We're ready to talk to you. You need to meet us here. We're mostly here for two reasons specifically. Like one, we want to think about the issue of data centers. Like I'm kind of wondering is this about process or people thinking that things are changing too quickly around them? It's about energy costs. This is about, you know, the noise or inconvenience. That's kind of one question in my head. But another one is just kind of thinking about like where Democrats are going to go on this. I've heard politicians say everything like there needs to be a moratorium on data centers to saying things like they're kind of a necessary evil in our like age of AI. Let's start with the second one. Like from where you see it, you know, one could say that this puts something like Cumberland County in the present, that it helps create jobs for our changing work economy. What's your response to that? My response is that I'm pro-development, but I'm pro-responsible development. And I think the way this project is developed has not put the community first and has not had enough community input. So we know AI is here to stay. We know this sector is going to be part of what drives the American economy for decades to come. But the consequences of something like this once it's up and running are huge. Uh-huh. But what I'm hearing from you doesn't sound like a like a complete opposition to a data center in this community or even, you know, development like this overall. It sounds like the concern is more in how this happened at least right now. Is that fair? My belief is that we need to have a short-term moratorium nationwide on data center development because it's moving too fast and because the impact is extreme in some cases. So I don't think that should be years and years, but I think the government needs to intervene right now and make sure that there are guardrails in place. I had read that Cumberland County was the poorest county in New Jersey. I want to circle back to that with the question of jobs. Data One would say they're helping provide a service for a community that needs it. I guess what I was hearing you say is the process has been the problem. So data centers are a pretty extractive type of project because the energy consumption, the way they're developed, and then they talk about a few hundred jobs. Well, first of all, there's no guarantee that those jobs will come into fruition. That's sort of based on a corporate pitch on why this project is good. And I think you need independent verification of that and you need close monitoring of that. Another thing I'll say is that at one of the city council meetings I spoke at, a union group came and said, if you're going to have jobs for this project, at least have them be union jobs. And that does not happen on the scale that I think is sufficient either. But there's a reason I believe why a lot of these data centers are coming into communities where they think they can come in aggressively without a lot of pushback, partially because of what you just said. I'm like, yeah, is it a happenstance that this is going up in the community of most need, maybe doesn't have the same type of political agency? I mean, I've seen some of the protests that have happened here and places across the country. What do you think is most driving this backlash to data centers? And do you think kind of federal politicians are hearing it? So I think people are just concerned about their day-to-day life. This is a kitchen table issue where here in New Jersey, life is so expensive already with taxes, with the cost of housing and education, you name it. So energy bills are already unaffordable for a lot of folks. And the concerns around this are that it's not credible to have something of this size without creating more impact there. That's what I was going to ask. Do we know causally that this raises New Jersey's energy prices? Well, what we do know is that nationally, data centers are about 5% now of electricity consumption. What we do know is that this project's development has coincided with a large spike in energy bills. And it's not credible to me that there's zero correlation there. I think part of the problem that you're speaking to is the lack of information, though. I think it's important to recognize that this is something that is so novel that we don't know a lot of what's going to happen, and that's what's driving some of that fear. Yeah, I hear what you're saying, that it's not necessarily that we have all this clear evidence that this data center leads to higher energy prices or inherently displaces all these folks, but we do know that this is happening so quickly and this is so new that it's driving a lot of anxiety among these people. Right. I heard that data ones delay the hearing with the city council after some of this public pushback. That leads to me to kind of one of my final questions. Like, do you think that they're hearing some of this? And part of the reason we've seen delays, part of the reason we haven't seen some of the proposed expansion is because the community's pushing back? Absolutely. So we organized a rally about a month and a half ago, and it was not just me. It was multiple organizations coming together, including environmental groups. That rally was really well attended. It was people who were Democrat, Republican, independent coming together. Because one thing about this issue is it's bipartisan in the community concern. We held that rally. We had a bunch of different speakers, and several days later, the Vineland City government decided to postpone a vote by two months on whether or not to expand this site. I wonder if how much of your position is reflected in constituency. Do you think residents are on your side in terms of maybe just wanting a pause, but kind of recognizing where AI plays its role in the future? Or do you think it's a more full scale opposition where they want this data center gone and they don't want one of these here again? I think the opposition is very strong. That's why I get messages all the time on social media from people who are really worried. This data center is underway, and we're not going to get it fully canceled. But there are measures that can be taken in the next couple of months when it comes to the possibility of expansion. Tax breaks, water usage, and that's really where my focus is on being a pragmatist about this and understanding that we can have legislation that can include those protections. But there's no way this project should have happened in this way. It's actually an insult to the community. And what it's done is create, I think, a story we've seen a million times before in America, but that's now on a scale that's really scary, which is, I think of it in terms of, as a big district, I'm driving around a lot. This data center project was in the easy past lane, and community concerns have been stuck in the traffic in the right hand lane. And that's a disconnect that I think is unacceptable. We have a kind of a stereotype of how hard it is to build in America, and how many, how much red tape is put up before things go up. And it's kind of like we're describing a process here that's the opposite. Then when it's come to these sort of things, they've gone up fast enough where folks don't even feel like they've had a moment for that kind of community concern. I think it's a great point, because when it comes to affordable housing, part of how we unlock that is critical thinking around bureaucracy and red tape. There's a lot that can be cut down there. The question is, how did a project of this size get up and running so fast? Okay, so now can you actually drive me around this data center so we can get a sense of just the scope of this thing? Absolutely. Let's do it. All right. So about how big is Vineland? Vineland, it's one of the larger cities in the district, but it's also, as you can see around here, there's just a lot of land. Yeah. I gotta say, it's not that I expected the data center to be aesthetically pleasing, but they have made this maybe the most un-austhetically pleasing structure humanly possible. I mean, the immediate comes to mind is like prison-like, but it's just the kind of drab, brutalist block. It is. It's very imposing. It's very cold. I think you can understand why folks around here are concerned about their property prices. Yeah. I've talked with people who said I'm petrified about not being able to sell my home. Yeah. And yeah, there it is. Here we are. 20 million gallons of water per year. Wow. And when you think about the risks these days of extreme weather in the summertime, right, you're going to have situations where the farmers are competing for water with this. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, thank you for driving me around. I really appreciate it. Absolutely. Thank you so much. Yeah. We're going to be at the town hall tonight. This week on Network and Chill, we're diving into another edition of Am I the Asshole? Finance Edition. And trust me, these money dilemmas will have you questioning everything. I'm breaking down real stories from real people who are navigating financial situations that range from mildly awkward to absolutely unhinged. And I'm giving you my unfiltered take on who's in the right and who needs a serious reality check. Because let's be real, when it comes to mixing relationships and finances, someone's always asking if they're the asshole. Learn how to set boundaries, protect your wealth, and avoid becoming the villain in your own financial story. Listen wherever you get your podcasts or watch on youtube.com slash your rich BFF. This week on Criminal, a man leaves his girlfriend at the top of a mountain. He's charged with her death. And then at the trial, his ex-girlfriend testifies that the same thing had happened to her too. She screamed. She felt dizzy. And you know, at that moment she realized she was like completely alone. Thomas apparently left her. On our other show, this is Love, a story of another couple on a mountain. There's no ledges. There's... you're trapped. I had confidence that there's no way this many things can go wrong in a row. You can listen to both episodes right now on Criminal and This Is Love, wherever you get your podcasts. So we're at the Hocus Community Center in Bridgestone, New Jersey. That's the next step in our story. And we're here because there'll be a resident town hall for all the folks around here who have been affected by the Data One data center. Now we know this call some community backlash and we know that Bailey Weindar, the congressional candidate, has been trying to channel that in his run for Congress. So we've decided to join along with him in his latest town hall to see what residents are actually thinking about it. Let's take a look. We're going to go ahead and get the ball rolling here. My name is Bailey Weindar, running for Congress in this year's election, hoping to bring some change to South Jersey, bring some new leadership to South Jersey. We are here tonight to talk about a number of things, but first and foremost to talk about an issue that I know matters a lot across this community, across the country. That is data centers and the way that they are being developed, the way that they are getting approvals, are not getting approvals and who is stepping up. And I think it's really important that we understand that this is something that is happening all over the place. And it's also something that's bipartisan. It really doesn't feel left versus right to me. It feels more like, are you standing with the community or not? Are you putting the community first or not? I think the message in this case is you have government looking out for the wrong people and having the wrong set of priorities. So I'll stop there. I thank you so much and I'll look forward to hearing your thoughts. Don? Just as a federal legislator, what would you offer as far as legislation goes to help protect the state and the industry? There's a host of answers for that. I'll start with the data center point specifically, which is that I believe we need a pause in order to make sure that the guardrails are in place. It's not saying we don't want development. We do want development. We want jobs. We want South Jersey's economy to become stronger, but it cannot happen at the expense of the community. I would imagine with the environment and council, they probably, like you, are like, I don't know the specifics of, you know, how much pollution is in the air and how you measure all that. So I would imagine that you would also rely on people that are experts in that field to tell you what would be acceptable or what would not be acceptable or what the threshold should be or what it should be. So that would be something that would happen through, I guess, the DEP? Well, I think the DEP plays a role in it, but part of what you're pointing to, which is a problem across our country right now, is that experts and science is not being invested in. And we have to understand that this technology has been around for a while, but it's also novel in some ways. When the data one CEO came to do his presentation, he said, this is technology we've never seen before. Right. Well, that could be a good thing, but that's also a scary thing to hear. Experiment. We're going to experiment down here. Where are the guinea pigs? Right. And where the guinea pigs are. Exactly. Exactly. How many employees are, is this place supposed to bring? Yeah, it's a good question. They say a couple of hundred in the long term. A couple of hundred. Two and a half million square feet. Yeah. The amount of electricity, you said it's like. About twice that of Vineland. Okay. How can they support that? How can that possibly be supported with today's grid? Right. One thing that happens in this country is there's no planning for the future. I mean, government, we're certainly doesn't seem to be that we're planning out our infrastructure is never updated. You've got to invest in here and, and not just looking at somebody's building because who benefits with that building? Who? It's not the people of this town. Right. Where the county or the state? What's going to happen? So, I gave some of my house. I told you, I'd buy it. I didn't have to spend it all through the stock. February. And because I need to be, where are my children? Or my husband, past my mom, past this time to go where they are. People come in, I have a woman who came back, twice had cash, and realized it was near the data center for her children's and mom. She says, I just can't do this. Yeah. So, people are going to do. Yes. That's right. This is not about abstract politics. It's about people's everyday lives and livelihoods and quality of life. I thank you all so, so much. Really appreciate you being here and taking the time. I hope we can talk more and grateful for the conversation. And we're just going to have Aston and the block seniors folks come up here and ask people. Excellent. So, my name is Aston Herndon. I'm a politics journalist. I host the podcast at Box. That's all about elections. It's called America, actually. I would love to ask you all just a couple like show of hands questions to get a sense of how you're feeling about this. And then maybe we'll hear some individual stories. How many of you right now feel like you got information about the data center before the construction started? No. Nobody. Okay. Can someone raise their hand and just tell me what their biggest concern was once they started hearing about it? Well, when I saw it, I thought it was the ugliest thing I've ever seen. So, that part of East Vineland is beautiful. Farmland was beautiful. Farmland. But then, of course, I thought about a lot of my friends that live out that way and how it was going to impact their everyday life. Most people live there because they love the farmland. Now, I know about the structure. I know about the kind of energy concerns. I wanted to ask about AI generally. Like, how many of you would say that your concerns about this data center are tied to larger concerns about AI and kind of some anxiety around that? The internet is the best of the world and the worst of the world. Okay. AI is going to do the same thing. It's already begun. You know, I scroll through Facebook and there's, you know, AI all over the place. Some of its cute little bunnies and cats. But a lot of the other stuff, you know, and it's bad. Again, our government is very slow to react. There has to be some regulations. Last question would be, where would you now put this on your scale of issues? There's so much happening right now, whether it be war on Iran or tariffs that someone mentioned or just generally there's so much going on. I wonder where data centers and this specific local reality now for you all maps onto your importance of issues. I would say most of the topics fall into two categories. Is it benefiting people or is it benefiting the elite and the money that's going into their pockets? You know, we see people trading before the war is announced and you, and they're benefiting from it. And I just find it all very disgusting. They're gambling. Yeah. I mean, they're gambling with insider information. As you were just saying, on one hand, there's, there's a kind of politics way of thinking about this in one bucket or another. But you're like, it's actually feels like in general, they're not responding to you, the regular person. And that's across a lot of issues. Yes. That's how I see it. I feel the same way. It's because everything relates from the top down. And what we're getting from the top has spread all the way to the local level. And it isn't good. Thank you all for, for, for entertaining our questions. And I think you all, I think it's illuminating to hear the way these issues are connected for people. And I think just this general sentiment that folks feel unheard. We don't feel that way. We are that way. Yes. Yes, I hear you. Thank you all for your time. We really appreciate it. Now we just finished talking to Vineland residents about this data center. And I think it got us a lot closer to figuring out what people actually think about this issue. Now let's recap what they said. They're mad about the process and the substance of this. They feel as if they weren't included in the conversation. And they're also seeing things like their electricity bills go up and things like energy prices go up. Now, we don't know if their electricity bills are directly related to the expansion of this data center, but it's driving the political backlash. And that's clear here on the ground. So if I think back to what some of the politicians in Washington told us, that data centers are a necessary evil, I think they've got another thing coming to them when they actually talk to people on the ground. America actually will be in your feeds every Saturday with an interesting interview in politics or culture. And of course, you can listen to America actually, wherever you get your podcast or on the Today Explained feed. Now the best way to support our podcast and to support Vox is by becoming a Vox member. You can sign up by going to Vox.com slash member. See you next week. Queue the theme music.