200 Feet Away: One Family’s Unexpected Fight Against a Data Center

What do you do when you discover a $4 billion data center has been approved 200 feet from your home?

Jessica Sharp, Organizer with Wilmington Residents for Responsible Development, thought she was entering her stay-at-home-mom era. Instead, she found herself learning zoning laws, uncovering secrecy and NDAs, organizing neighbors, working with experts, hiring a certified planner, responding to shifting state legislation, gathering petition signatures, engaging with the media, and helping build a movement.

“I thought this was my stay-at-home-mom era, until I found out about this data center in my literal backyard.”

Jessica closed on her home the day before zoning for a proposed 4-million-square-foot Amazon Web Services hyperscale data center campus was finalized, without knowing it. What started as concern over one project quickly evolved into a community-wide effort involving multiple data center proposals, legal challenges, referendum campaigns, and larger questions about transparency and public accountability.

Joining Jessica will be Quintin Koger Kidd, a community advocate who has helped analyze the technical and policy dimensions of Wilmington’s proposed projects. Quintin has become a leading local voice on issues including tax incentives, zoning compliance, utility impacts, and the long-term community impacts of large-scale development.

Together they share the story behind Wilmington’s fight and the many unexpected turns along the way.