Data Centers are Noisy Monster Palaces

Don’t Wait For Everybody – Episode 030

Notes, references & transcript: https://chloehumbert.substack.com/p/noisy-monster-palaces

Yes data centers are noisy. And the people interested in building the data centers are so often crypto people “pivoting to AI” or attempting to do so.

References:

Lawyers, residents and experts in Clifton Twp. discuss the right ‘cocktail’ for data centers WVIA | By Kat Bolus | WVIA News Published October 1, 2025 at 3:49 PM EDT As for noise, Westhafner said he has never dealt with an ordinance “that tight.” “I think that there are many private residences that would not meet that ordinance,” he said. McHugh asked if he would be able to design a data center to meet Clifton’s noise decimal thresholds. “Possibly not,” he answered. Clifton resident Oksana Froymany asked Westhafner if he would live near a data center campus like Project Gold. “I don’t know how to answer that. I’m not moving,” he said. She asked again. “I know you don’t believe me, but I think data centers can be good neighbors,” he said.

MIT Technology Review – How Bitcoin mining devastated this New York town Between rising electricity rates and soaring climate costs, cryptomining is taking its toll on communities. By Lois Parshley April 18, 2022 As the long winter began to thaw, neighbors noticed a new disturbance: mining servers generate an extreme amount of heat, requiring extensive ventilation to avert shutoffs. Those fans generated a constant, high-frequency whine, McMahon says, “like a small-engine plane getting ready to take off.” It wasn’t just the decibels, but the pitch: “It registers at this weird level, like a toothache that won’t go away.” Carla Brancato lives across the river from Zafra, a crypto-mining and hosting company owned by Plattsburgh resident Ryan Brienza. She says that for several years her condo vibrated from its noise, as if someone were constantly running a vacuum upstairs. Meanwhile, the automated nature of these servers meant that the new mines provided few local jobs. “I’m pro–­economic development,” Read says, “but the biggest mine operation has fewer jobs than a new McDonald’s.” Plattsburgh doesn’t have a city income tax, and most miners lease their buildings, meaning they aren’t paying property taxes. (…) Economist Matteo Benetton, a coauthor of the paper and a professor at the Hass School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, says that crypto mining can depress local economies. In places with fixed electricity supplies, operations suck up grid capacity, potentially leading to supply shortages, rationing, and blackouts. Even in places with ample access to power, like upstate New York, mining can crowd out other potential industries that might have employed more people. “While there are private benefits, through the electricity market, there are social costs,” Benetton says. These impacts are now being felt across the country.

Big Tech’s AI Blackmail State and local data center extortion is going national. Pat Garofalo Dec 18, 2024 In response to the rapid growth of data centers in recent years — those large facilities that hold the plumbing necessary for businesses to store and manage their data — residents of many communities have stepped up to voice their concerns about the inevitable downsides of data center construction, which include noise, high energy and water use, and environmental degradation. These protests have occurred across the country, from Virginia to Arizona to Massachusetts. In rare instances, those local residents have been joined by state legislators or other local leaders. More often, though, elected officials roll out the red carpet for Big Tech data centers, lavishing them with public subsidies and other regulatory favors.

WUSA9 – What’s all the data center noise about? Neighbors say Northern Virginia data centers emit a noise they just can’t tune out. We took to the streets and dove in to the science to figure out why. Author: Abby Llorico, Bryce Robinson Published: 7:21 AM EDT April 7, 2023 Updated: 4:20 PM EDT April 7, 2023 Along with an audible hum, the Amazon Web Services Data Center in Manassas and others nearby have also been generating rumbles of complaints from the nearby community. “These data centers are loud, noisy beasts and they are being built too close to residential areas,” said Roger Yackel, who’s been active in the community’s pushback on data centers that they say are being approved without consideration of the nearby homes and schools. “That’s not something that we should have to live with.” John Lyver, a retired NASA analyst, has taken to tracking the noise from the data centers in his neighborhoods. “I’m finding that the noise is far worse than anybody ever figured it was going to be,” he said.

‘People are scared out of their minds’: Weak jobs report shows warning signs for Trump’s economy MSNBC Sep 6, 2025 Donald Trump: “but it will be in a year from now when these monstrous, huge, beautiful places, the palaces of genius. and when they start opening up, you’re seeing, i think you’ll see job numbers that are going to be absolutely incredible.”

Daily Mail – Residents of small Pennsylvania town are being driven mad by huge BITCOIN MINE whose two large cooling towers vibrate and hum more loudly than a waterfall By Dominic Yeatman For Dailymail.Com Published: 14:40 EDT, 13 December 2023 ‘I have a little pond in front of my house where I used to sit and have my coffee at,’ he added. ‘I can’t even enjoy that because I can’t even hear the water over the Bitcoin. It is louder than the waterfall.’ Talen Energy won over locals with promises of hundreds of news jobs and an economic boom in the township of 6,000 when they announced plans for the operation last year. ‘Amazon, Google, all those cloud computing applications, those are the potential clients, customers that we will have in the data center buildings,’ said Dustin Wertheimer, VP and Division CFO Talen Cumulus and Susquehanna Data Center. ‘On the coin mining side, there will be computers again located in those buildings and those computers will run computations that will trigger and generate the issuance of coins.’ The controversial cryptocurrency has been in the news again after a wild ride since the start of December. A rally last week saw it rise above $44,000 to reach its highest level in almost two years – then on Sunday it lost 6.5 percent of its value in just 20 minutes and dipped below $41,000. Global bank Standard Chartered thinks bitcoin could surpass $100,000 before the end of 2024 – yet well-known JP Morgan boss Jamie Dimon said last week that US lawmakers should ‘close it down’. The first 1,500 Bitcoins out of Salem Township were sold for $37.6 million after the 180 megawatt mine was plugged in this summer, but that was little consolation to residents at an angry town hall meeting on Tuesday.

Daily Mail – Residents of small Pennsylvania town are being driven mad by huge BITCOIN MINE whose two large cooling towers vibrate and hum more loudly than a waterfall By Dominic Yeatman For Dailymail.Com Published: 14:40 EDT, 13 December 2023 ‘The gentleman that’s house is the last house on Confers Lane, you could literally go inside his house, put your hand on the wall, and feel the vibration from the fans. it was that bad,’ said Ernest Ashbridge III, vice president of Salem Township board of supervisors. On Tuesday fed-up residents told the power boss they had endured enough of the endless noise.

The New York Times – Their Water Taps Ran Dry When Meta Built Next Door By Eli Tan Visuals by Dustin Chambers Reporting from Newton County, Ga. Published July 14, 2025 Updated July 16, 2025 The hardest part, Ms. Morris said, is that the house now has just one usable bathroom, which they have to share with her adult son Jon, 48, who has Down syndrome. They tried selling the house, with no luck.

I Live 500 Feet From A Bitcoin Mine. My Life Is Hell. More Perfect Union Jul 24, 2025 “It’s a different type of noise pollution. It’s not like truck traffic or anything like this. It’s a special noise. It’s a low frequency noise that is coming from these operations. And it is incessant.” (…) “The last thing we needed was more pressure on this lake. I know I can survive without electricity. I do know that. I can’t survive without water. “ (…) “These ginormous conglomerate corporations are having real impacts. They consume vast quantities of water, especially in Texas.” (…) “Who would buy this place? You have to disclose? My property value has gone down 75%, and that’s according to Hood County Appraisal District. The reality is, my property value is worthless.”

Tennessee Lookout – A billionaire, an AI supercomputer, toxic emissions and a Memphis community that did nothing wrong Memphis’s dealings with Elon Musk provide a textbook example of how the people who contribute the least to environmental harm often suffer the most from it. Ren Brabenec July 7, 2025 The facility is currently operating 33 methane-powered gas turbines to fuel its AI technology despite holding a permit for only 15. The supercomputer facility is located in a poor, predominantly Black Memphis community with historically high rates of pollution-related illness and disproportionate rates of industrial pollutants. The magnitude of the energy draw — and resulting pollution — at Colossus is, well, colossal. According to the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC), the facility draws enough electricity to power approximately 100,000 homes. Those inputs are alarming, but the outputs are even worse. The facility’s behemoth methane gas turbines increase Memphis’s smog by 30-60% as they belch planet-warming nitrogen oxides and poisonous formaldehyde around the clock, pollutants linked to respiratory and cardiovascular disease.

How Elon Musk is Poisoning Memphis | Ren Brabenec | TMR – The Majority Report w/ Sam Seder Jul 20, 2025 Ren Brabenec joinsto talk about his piece in the Tennessee Lookout that covers Elon Musk’s unpermitted Ai data center that is causing massive environmental damage in Memphis.

Memphis residents erupt at hearing over Musk’s xAI data center More Perfect Union Jun 11, 2025 We went to a public hearing on April 25, where residents testified that they can’t breathe and are getting sicker. “We’ve shown up here today because we’re tired of going in and out of funeral homes… That stops now.”

We Went to the Town Elon Musk Is Poisoning More Perfect Union May 30, 2025 Elon Musk’s massive xAI data center is poisoning Memphis. It’s burning enough gas to power a small city, with no permits and no pollution controls. Residents tell us they can’t breathe and they’re getting sicker.

Musk’s xAI gas turbines: no emission controls, filling Memphis air with smog – David Gerard 14 May 2025 xAI’s environmental consultant, Shannon Lynn, says “there’s rules that say temporary sources can be in place for up to 364 days a year. They are not subject to permitting requirements.” xAI has applied for permits for the first set of turbines. But it won’t install pollution controls unless and until its permits are approved.

“Musk Is Scamming the City of Memphis”: Meet Two Brothers Fighting Colossus, Musk’s xAI Data Center Democracy Now! Apr 25, 2025 We speak with two brothers who are fighting Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI over its massive data center in Memphis, Tennessee, used to run its chatbot Grok.

Efficiency and Abundance Lowering costs or shifting them? – Dylan Gyauch-Lewis and Revolving Door Project Apr 14, 2025 It can absolutely slow the building process and add additional costs. But the unspoken tradeoff is that we are more likely to—intentionally or unintentionally—harm and exploit people without it. What happens without these processes can be seen in projects that skirt them; in Memphis, Elon Musk’s xAI data center went ahead and expanded on-site fossil fuel turbines without a permit, and the community is now being exposed to dangerous air pollution and carcinogenic chemicals like formaldehyde.

Crypto connected real estate man revolving-doored in & out of the Shapiro admin and into data center consultancy. Dodgy looking conflict of interest crypto & AI stuff in Pennsylvania. Chloe Humbert Oct 02, 2025

Triblive – Everything we know about the proposed Springdale data center James Engel | Sunday, Sept. 28, 2025 6:10 a.m.

Data centers cancelled in Blakely Pennsylvania and Menomonie Wisconsin. Opposition to data centers is making headway against the AI bubble environmental assault. Chloe Humbert Sep 23, 2025

PA DEP under Dem Governor Josh Shapiro approves Trump admin official to burn tires to print cryptocurrency. There is NO other purpose for this power plant whatsoever than to make “alternative” currency. It provides no power to the grid, and exists only to print bitcoin. Chloe Humbert May 17, 2025

Data Center Dynamics – Junkyard in Pennsylvania acquired, developer files to develop data center campus One of three new campuses proposed in Lackawanna County August 18, 2025 By Dan Swinhoe The Times-Tribune notes Marzolino is also involved with another, separate data center project down the road from the junkyard, known as Project Gravity. He is also reportedly involved in a newly proposed data center campus a few miles south of the Eynon Jermyn Road projects in Blakely, off Business Route 6 and Terrace Drive. Marzolino and businessman Alpesh “Al” Patel – who owns the Dunmore-based Al’s Quick Stop convenience store chain – propose constructing a four-building data center campus. The pair filed for a rezoning of the land for an AI data center campus with the Blakely Borough planning commission earlier this month. The site could reportedly total 1.5GW, Marzolino told the Times-Tribune. Patel reportedly owns about 44 acres of the site in Blakely, while the Marzolino-affiliated Two Up Realty LLC and Route 6 Land Development Corp. own around 77 acres between them. Marzolino told the Times-Tribune his interest in data centers stems from a Bitcoin mining hobby. After starting to research data centers some three years ago, he is now working with global commercial real estate firm Avison Young and has a team of about 20 people in-house working on finding land, developing, planning, and engineering.

Claims about pivoting from crypto to AI may actually be false promises too. Is it even possible for Panther Creek to just “pivot” to anything else? Chloe Humbert Apr 27, 2025

Better Offline – OpenAI Is A Systemic Risk To The Tech Industry April 17, 2025 •

CNBC – Bitcoin miner Core Scientific rides AI from bankruptcy to $6.7 billion partnership in eight months Published Tue, Aug 6 2024 MacKenzie Sigalos For months, publicly traded bitcoin miners have been shifting into the AI infrastructure business because it became a lot less profitable to mine bitcoin after the halving in April. The companies had already spent the time and money decking out data centers across the country that could be retrofitted to serve an entirely new category of customers. But converting to AI isn’t as simple as repurposing existing infrastructure and machines, because requirements are different, as are the needs of the data network. Needham analysts wrote in a report in May that almost all infrastructure that miners currently have would “need to be bulldozed and built from the ground up to accommodate HPC,” or high-performance computing. Core Scientific’s Sullivan was among the mining leaders who attended a closed-door roundtable in June with former President Donald Trump, who recently jumped into the conversation of the convergence of bitcoin mining and AI.

Trump’s ‘Freedom Cities’? A Tech Blueprint to Dismantle the USA The Nerd Reich with Gil Duran Mar 14, 2025 So what’s their endgame and how are these new Trump Freedom cities part of it let’s start here this isn’t your grandfather’s corporate lobbying these billionaires don’t want to just influence government they want to become the government they seek a system that protects their wealth punishes their critics and uses AI and crypto to make their power permanent and having their very own new capitols to drive that power from is part of it here’s how we fight back expose The Playbook most Americans don’t realize this takeover is happening…

Transcript:

I wonder when they’re going to figure out that they need to just abandon all these data center projects in northeastern Pennsylvania because we’re all onto them now. But the public meetings go on. And found I found this article in the WVIA newsletter that’s our local PBS station here in Scranton. For Northeastern Pennsylvania The headline reads, lawyers, residents,

and experts in Clifton Township discuss the right “cocktail” for data centers. That was published October 1st, 2025. It goes, quote, as for noise, Westhafner said he has never dealt with an ordinance that tight. I think that there are many private residents that would not meet that ordinance, he said.

McHugh asked if he would be able to design a data center to meet Clifton’s noise decibel thresholds. Possibly not, he answered. Clifton resident Oksana, Froymany, asked whether Westhafner, Unquote. I’m going to go in chronological order of the articles that I’ve been reading and blogging about in my newsletter and blog for years now.

I picked out just some of the stories about noise. This is from MIT Technology Review from April 18, 2022. It’s about a Bitcoin data center in Plattsburgh, New York. Quote, as the long winter began to thaw, neighbors noticed a new disturbance. Mining servers generate an extreme amount of heat, requiring extensive ventilation to avert shutoffs.

Those fans generated a constant high-frequency whine, McMahon says, like a small engine plane getting ready to take off. It wasn’t just decibels, but the pitch. It registers at this weird level like a toothache that won’t go away, unquote. I think we’ve all been there. I just exchanged a new refrigerator because the pitch was way too high.

So the article goes on. They interview someone who lives across the river from the crypto printing facility owned by another Plattsburgh resident. So it says, quote, she says that for several years, her condo vibrated from its noise as if someone were constantly running a vacuum upstairs. unquote.

And then they go on to say how it hasn’t panned out for the promises. Quote,

meanwhile,

the automated nature of these servers meant that the new mines provided few local jobs. I’m pro-economic development, Reed says, but the biggest mine operation has fewer jobs than a new McDonald’s. Plattsburgh doesn’t have a city income tax and most miners lease their buildings, meaning they aren’t paying property taxes, unquote. And even when there are property taxes,

They don’t often pay them. In Menomonie, Wisconsin public meeting, one of the citizens who gave a public moment mentioned that nothing would be taxed at the state level because of the state law and that it would take, you know, another cycle by the time it would get through to property taxes for the county or the city.

And then at that point, maybe the data center’s lifetime wouldn’t make sense. So anyway, there’s an article from last year about how that’s happening all over in the boondoggle substack by Pat Garofalo. The headline is Big Tech’s AI blackmail state and local data center extortion is going national. Quote,

in response to the rapid growth of data centers in recent years, those large facilities that hold the plumbing necessary for businesses to store and manage their data, residents of many communities have stepped up to voice their concerns about the inevitable downsides of data center construction, which include noise, high energy and water use, and environmental degradation.

These protests have occurred across the country from Virginia to Arizona to Massachusetts. In rare instances, those local residences have been joined by state legislators or other local leaders.

More often,

though, elected officials roll out the red carpet for big data centers, lavishing them with public subsidies and other regulatory favors, unquote. So this is a story from Northern Virginia, WUSA9. Headline, what’s all the data center noise about? Neighbors say Northern Virginia data centers emit a noise they just can’t tune out. April 7th, 2023. Quote, along…

With an audible hum, the Amazon Web Data Services in Manassas and others nearby have also been generating rumbles of complaints from the nearby community. These data centers are loud, noisy beasts, and they are being built too close to residential areas, said Roger Yackel, who’s been active in the community’s pushback on data centers,

that say they are being approved and without consideration of the nearby homes and schools. That’s not something we should have to live with, John Lyver. a retired NASA analyst, has taken to tracking the noise from the data centers in his neighborhoods. I’m finding that the noise is far worse than anybody ever figured it was going to

be, he said,

unquote. And I see noisy beasts mentioned a lot. The word monstrosity also comes to mind for me with some of these things. And I’m not the only one. Donald Trump himself referred to data center power plants as essentially monster palaces and Well, here’s the exact quote.

He said, quote, these monstrous, huge, beautiful places, the palaces of genius, unquote. Of course, he was promising at the time that he would take care of the job numbers. But now everybody knows that data centers don’t need lots of people besides AI technologies being marketed to CEOs as a way to eliminate the jobs for humans.

They’re promising an AI jobs apocalypse. “AI jobs apocalypse” to employers looking to downsize their payrolls. So either AI makes jobs or it eliminates jobs. You can’t have it both ways. Back in 2023, there was a really disturbing story in the Daily Mail about people living near the Berwick, Pennsylvania, nuclear power plant in a rather rural, small-town setting.

And the headline actually reads, Residents of small Pennsylvania town are being driven mad by a huge Bitcoin mine. quote, I have a little pond in front of my house where I used to sit and have my coffee at. He added, I can’t even enjoy that because I can’t hear the water over the Bitcoin.

It is louder than a waterfall. The Salem Township Board of Supervisors president said,

quote,

the gentleman that’s house is the last house on Confer’s Lane. You could literally go inside his house, put your hand on his wall and feel the vibration from the fans. It was that bad. And the article goes on, quote, On Tuesday, fed-up residents told the power boss they had endured enough of the endless noise.

unquote.

So this is a Bitcoin printing facility. That’s what they’re doing there. But the article says,

quote,

Talen Energy won over locals with promises of hundreds of new jobs and an economic boom in the township of 6,000 when they announced plans for operation last year, unquote. And they sold it as if they were going to host this, you know, cloud computing services, but it’s just doing cryptocurrency.

And the article goes on to describe the volatility of the cryptocurrency state and how Jamie Dimon at the time of the article had said U.S. lawmakers should close it down. And the article says, quote, the first 1,500 bitcoins out of Salem Township were sold for 37.6 million after the 180 megawatt mine was plugged in this summer.

But that was little consolation to residents at angry Town Hall meeting on Tuesday, unquote. So then we have the New York Times article from July 2025 about Newton County, Georgia. Headline, their tap waters ran dry when Meta built next door by Eli Tan. It describes people who’ve had their lives made miserable since the data center opened.

One person interviewed described being stuck there, unable to stand the noise,

other problems,

unable to afford the utility bills and unable to move because they can’t sell their house. Quote, the hardest part, Ms. Morris said, is that the house now has just one usable bathroom, which they have to share with her adult son, John,

48,

who has Down syndrome. They tried selling the house with no luck, unquote. The article’s author has a voiceover if you go to The New York Times, and he describes how there’s just no way for them to sell their house. Same story coming from Texas.

I think this neighborhood is suing over it now because these people are now finding their homes unlivable. More Perfect Union in July 2025 reported that experts say that the decibel levels of noise should require these people to wear ear protection inside their houses 24-7.

The More Perfect Union video title is, I live 500 feet from a Bitcoin mine. My life is hell. And somebody in the video says, quote, it’s a different type of noise pollution. It’s not like truck traffic or anything like this. It’s a special noise. It’s a low frequency noise that is coming from these operations.

And it is incessant. Another person interviewed says, quote, the last thing we need was more pressure on the lake. I know I can survive without electricity. I do know that I can’t survive without water, unquote. They talk about the health effects of noise pollution, and that’s a real thing. That’s a serious problem. It’s bad.

One of the people interviewed said, quote, who would buy this place? You have to disclose. My property value has gone down 75 percent, and that’s according to the Hood County Appraisal District. The reality is my property value is worthless, unquote, because they can’t sell. And like they told the people in Berwick, Pennsylvania, it would be cloud computing.

Yeah, they told the people in Memphis that it was going to be a data center. Now it’s a power plant with unregulated gas turbines. on the property belching out pollution to power the Mechahitlerbot, a.k.a. Grok. And in September 2025, Brian Regli was described by an article in Trib Live as a consultant for

Allegheny, D.C.

property company, the land developer behind a proposed data center in Springdale,

Pennsylvania,

a town just outside of Pittsburgh, where a coal-fired power plant used to operate. I don’t know if they’re planning to fire up the coal plant or, again, but…

Obviously,

that’s been being talked about elsewhere, and that would be a way to power the plant. At the Panther Creek crypto facility in Carbon County, they’re burning coal waste and actually burning tires,

too,

now. And so I wouldn’t rule anything out. I looked up Brian Regli and his LinkedIn lists experience as having worked at Revere Suburban Realty for 24 years with a year and a half at the end of that as the president. Then Brian Regli reports on LinkedIn that he was named by Governor Josh Shapiro

in January 2023 to the chair of PENNVEST, which is the PA Infrastructure Investment Authority, from January 2023 to April 2025, and was in the Shapiro administration in the role of executive director, critical investments to oversee Pennsylvania’s implementation of more than $21 billion in federal funding from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.

of 2021 and the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022. And Brian Regli’s listed consultancy called Mad Hat Ventures is listed as May 2025 to present. Before and during Brian Regli’s serving in Governor Josh Shapiro’s administration, Brian Regli was reportedly the director of Asset Entities Incorporated from February 2023 to May 2024. According to the Asset Entities Inc.,

10K form for 2024. Asset Entities Incorporated SEC IPO form S1 reported Michael Gaubert as the executive chairman. Michael Gaubert is an attorney and, according to SEC forms, the cousin of Brian Regli. Asset Entities Incorporated merged with and is now known as Strive Incorporated, a Bitcoin company that was co-founded by Vivek Ramaswamy.

who stepped down as executive chairman to run for president in 2023. Strive’s website describes that it was founded in 2022, supposedly in response to,

quote,

large financial institutions advancing social, cultural, and political agendas in corporate America’s boardrooms. Yahoo Finance calls Strive an investment management company, and the Strive Incorporated LinkedIn page blurb describes it this way, quote, focused on maximizing returns through capitalism, meritocracy, innovation, American exceptionalism, and Bitcoin. What a… Bunch of words that set off red flags for me. A notice dated,

September 22,

2025,

reported that Strive would merge with Semler Scientific to combine the company’s ownership of 10,900 in Bitcoin. September 25, 2025, the U.S. DOJ issued a press release titled… Semler Scientific Incorporated and Bard Peripheral Vascular Incorporated to pay nearly $37 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations relating to FlowCheck and Quantiflow devices,

which says that there were violations by knowingly causing and conspiring to cause the submission of false claims to Medicare. Prior to this, in June, Stat reported that Semler Scientific had gone from being a medical device company to a Bitcoin-first company and the fourth largest Bitcoin holding in the U.S.,

So this guy is a consultant for a data center developer outside Pittsburgh, and he’s been in hip deep and Bitcoin stuff while he was in the government role in the Pennsylvania government.

Crypto.

Crypto. That’s what I find every time I start looking into any of the data, AI data center stuff. It’s, you know, it’s crypto. Here in Lackawanna County, the local businessman, Jim Marzolino, who wants to turn an old junkyard into a data center, supposedly, he has been reported to be into Bitcoin as a “hobby”.

So it’s not unreasonable to expect that these proposed facilities in Lackawanna County would be,

in fact,

Bitcoin printing facilities. And Ed Zitron had reported some months ago that there’s no realistic way to really switch a Bitcoin data center to another data center purpose. It’s basically it has to be stripped down to the ground and start over because it just isn’t fit for repurposing. And the locations near the Ed Staback Park in Lackawanna County,

a local bird watching spot with a lot of youth sports activities. They have sports fields. these sites are not big enough for one of those monstrosity data center palaces.

Like,

it’s just not big enough unless they plan to pave over Ed Staback and Archibald Pothole State Park or something. Who knows what these people have in mind. They have these network state bonkers ideas, of course. But what’s more is that the proposed sites adjacent to the Ed Staback Park is also

adjacent to a newly developed neighborhood of townhomes and Single-family homes from Powell Developments calls this the Highlands at Archibald. And it includes two streets of townhomes as well as a whole neighborhood of single-family homes. And the sale prices there are double the median home prices for our county. So not surprisingly, these houses are described as luxury accommodations.

So they’re talking about zeroing out home values for an entire luxury development that has just been built within the last few years. That’s a lot of new home value to get zeroed out a year after somebody purchases expensive property. And that’s what happens close to these data centers. So I know what they’re thinking, but…

I haven’t heard back from any of my local politicians to tell me where they stand on this. I’ve contacted all of the mayor my town council the county commissioners my state rep my state senator and I’ve asked them if they’ve signed these nondisclosure agreements that I’ve been hearing about happening in other places,

you know,

just to find out if they’re in fact,

you know,

keeping things secret from us and, you know, no response. No response yet. So I don’t know if they’re signing non-disclosure agreements in our area. But,

you know,

Governor Josh Shapiro seems to be totally on board with zeroing out people’s home values. Very cozy with crypto-connected people, you know, had… Somebody who was actively involved in crypto, on the board of directors of a crypto company, you know, while he was serving in the administration, you know, involved in infrastructure investments.

Seems like a conflict of interest to me. And then there’s Rob Bresnahan sending me a reply full of propaganda about data centers that, you know, I wrote a letter to the editor and it was published in the Scranton Times-Tribune in September 2025. in the print and online editions. I’ll read it here. And this was my response.

It’s all over the news that wherever these big data centers turn up, electricity and water bills skyrocket for communities, yet U.S.

Rep.

Rob Bresnahan keeps parroting the claim that monster data center palaces will magically unleash affordability when all evidence is to the contrary. Rep. Bresnahan’s reply letter to me about data center projects regurgitated State Senator Rosemary Brown’s talking point from the Archibald hearing falsely claiming monstrosity data centers are needed for photo backups and banking services.

But the tech industry openly admits it’s the AI that requires huge data center campuses. The world’s banks have… used computers for decades without huge clusters. Backups to the cloud take minuscule processing compared to what’s needed for large-language model-type AI companions that flatter users or for chatbots that conjure up fake citation footnotes.

Bresnahan is over-promising jobs at data centers because by now everybody knows that data centers don’t need lots of people. Besides, AI technology is being marketed to CEOs as a way to eliminate the need for humans. They’re promising data An AI jobs apocalypse to employers looking to downsize payrolls. Either AI makes jobs or eliminates jobs.

You can’t have it both ways. Bresnahan bragged about a government joint venture with Blackstone, but Blackstone is despised for their business practices in real estate and rentals. Why would we welcome that boondoggle? Bresnahan seems to think I would like Government rushing through environmental rules because politicians seem to think environment is just a political buzzword,

when what this means to me is the surroundings where I live and not wanting my home enveloped by unbearable noise and toxic fumes of data centers. AI booster politicians invested in tech companies think we’re not savvy here in NEPA and won’t know what’s up, but I’m not fooled. Northeastern Pennsylvania, let’s not do this.