Key Targets (Gatekeepers)
- Building inspectors and code officials: Local officials enforcing construction codes and standards
- Air quality permit officers: Regulators overseeing generator emissions and air pollution
- Stormwater management officials: Agencies managing runoff, erosion, and water quality
- Fire marshals and emergency planners: Officials responsible for fire safety and emergency response
- Occupational safety inspectors: OSHA and state safety officials monitoring workplace conditions
Possible Interventions
- Monitor All Permit Applications: Track every building, mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and specialized permit application to identify intervention opportunities
- Challenge Inadequate Plans: File technical critiques of construction plans showing insufficient noise control, emissions management, or safety measures
- Demand Enforceable Conditions: Advocate for specific, measurable permit conditions with clear enforcement mechanisms and penalties
- File Complaints on Violations: Document and report all permit violations, safety issues, noise exceedances, and environmental infractions
- Continuous Community Monitoring: Establish resident-led monitoring programs for noise, air quality, traffic, and other impacts with regular reporting to authorities
Gateway Intervention
Campaign Playbook
Each campaign will have it’s own unique challenges and context. We are here to help talk through steps. The steps in this guide are informed by community victories so we aren’t reinventing the wheel. Contact us to talk about your campaign.
1. Permit Monitoring Setup:
Establish permit application tracking system. Create community monitoring network and protocols. Identify all relevant permitting authorities and processes. Engage technical experts for plan review.
2. Active Intervention:
Review and comment on all permit applications. Attend permit hearings and inspections when possible. File formal objections to inadequate conditions. Demand enhanced monitoring and reporting requirements.
3. Enforcement & Compliance:
Execute community monitoring program. Document and report all violations promptly. Demand inspections and enforcement actions. Build relationships with enforcement officials.
Valuable Allies
You don’t need to take on bad data centers alone. There are organizations and experts who can help. Explore the directory to find other leaders, and discover organizations in the Alliance Map.
Code Compliance Experts: Review construction plans and identify deficiencies
Environmental Monitors: Conduct air, water, and noise monitoring
Community Organizers: Coordinate resident monitoring networks
Public Health Advocates: Document community health risks
Environmental Attorneys: File enforcement complaints and appeals
Gateway 6: Construction & Operational Permits
Resources & Documents
Essential tools and resource for this gateway.
Add A ResourceData Center Anticipated Approvals and Permits (opens in a new tab)
Fair Shake is building a list of permits a data center might need that leaders can copy and use to track projects in their own communities.
- Source
- Fair Shake
Thornton Acoustics & Vibrations are Professional Noise and Vibration Control Engineers and Exp… (opens in a new tab)
Thornton Acoustics & Vibrations is a professional engineering firm specializing exclusively in acoustics, vibrations, noise measurement, and noise control throughout North America. With over 1,500…
- Source
- Thornton Acoustics & Vibrations
The Overlooked Reality of Hyperscale Data Center Security (opens in a new tab)
Pinkerton, a corporate security firm, details the physical defense layers hyperscale data centers deploy — perimeter fencing, surveillance grids, buffer zones and concentric access controls. Site se…
- Source
- Pinkerton
- Published
- January 15, 2026
“Expert Insights on Best Practices for Community Benefits Agreements” by Matthew Eisens… (opens in a new tab)
Thirty-five recommendations from attorneys and experts who have collectively negotiated dozens of Community Benefits Agreements lay out how developers and host communities draft enforceable CBAs for d…
- Source
- Columbia Law School
- Published
- September 1, 2023
Homer City Generation Site Redevelopment — PA DEP Regulatory Documents (opens in a new tab)
In Indiana County, Pennsylvania, the decommissioned 2 GW Homer City coal plant is converting to a 3,200-acre natural gas-powered data center campus. PA DEP's regulatory portal collects air qualit…
- Source
- Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
- Published
- May 7, 2026
Data Centers Impact on Energy Demand (opens in a new tab)
A 2025 NAACP resolution addressing data centers' impact on energy demand, water resources, and frontline communities. The resolution calls for community benefits agreements, congressional legisla…
- Source
- NAACP
Nuisance Map (opens in a new tab)
In Michigan, residents document noise, light pollution and well water problems from data centers, solar farms and construction through GPS-verified reports with timestamps and tamper-proof files meeti…
- Source
- ALEA Institute
Meta Data Center Construction Brings 600% Crash Spike to Rural Louisiana (opens in a new tab)
Vehicle crashes near Meta's $27 billion Hyperion data center in Holly Ridge, Louisiana increase more than 600 percent after construction begins — 64 between January and mid-September 2025 compa…
- Source
- WWNO New Orleans Public Radio / Gulf States Newsroom
- Published
- November 19, 2025
Data Center Decommissioning — Iron Mountain (opens in a new tab)
Iron Mountain sanitizes, remarkets and recycles data center hardware through a secure chain-of-custody process using NIST 800-88 compliant erasure and R2/e-Stewards certified recyclers. A case study s…
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- Iron Mountain
Data Center Resistance Video Series (opens in a new tab)
A curated video playlist by Protect PT reviews the environmental impact of the data center boom, linking it to fracking and fossil fuel extraction. It highlights the significant resource demands of da…
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- Protect PT
Model Data Center Ordinance (opens in a new tab)
This model ordinance provides template zoning language for Pennsylvania municipalities to regulate data centers, addressing site selection, dimensional standards, noise limits, water and wastewater re…
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- PennFuture
Data Center Watch – Media Coverage (opens in a new tab)
Press coverage from the Wall Street Journal, BBC, Bloomberg and over twenty other outlets documents rural resistance, water concerns and $64 billion in stalled data center projects nationwide. Data Ce…
- Source
- Data Center Watch
