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Senator Sacchieri Files Legislation to Address Unknown Impacts of Data Centers on Oklahoma Communities

Oklahoma Senator Proposes Data Center Moratorium to Study Infrastructure Impact
State Politics / Legislature

Oklahoma Senator Proposes Data Center Moratorium to Study Infrastructure Impact

Senate Bill 1488 would pause new data center construction until 2029 while Corporation Commission examines effects on utilities, water supply, and communities

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OKLAHOMA CITY — State Senator Kendal Sacchieri has introduced legislation that would temporarily halt construction of new data centers across Oklahoma while state regulators study the facilities’ long-term effects on infrastructure and natural resources.

Senate Bill 1488, filed by Senator Sacchieri (R-Blanchard), would establish a moratorium on new data center development extending until November 1, 2029, and direct the Oklahoma Corporation Commission to conduct a comprehensive examination of how these large-scale facilities impact state communities.

📋 Senate Bill 1488: Key Provisions
Establishes moratorium on new data center construction through November 1, 2029
Directs Oklahoma Corporation Commission to conduct comprehensive impact study
Requires examination of water supply, utility rates, property values, and siting practices
Mandates submission of findings and recommendations to Legislature
Filed for consideration during Second Regular Session of 60th Oklahoma Legislature
Currently awaiting committee referral

Areas of Investigation

During the moratorium period, the Corporation Commission would be tasked with reviewing several critical concerns related to data center development:

  • Water Supply Impacts: Assessment of data center water consumption and effects on local and regional water resources
  • Utility Rate Pressures: Analysis of how large-scale power demands affect electricity costs for residential and commercial ratepayers
  • Property Value Effects: Examination of data center facilities’ influence on surrounding property valuations
  • Optimal Siting Practices: Evaluation of best practices for determining appropriate locations for data center construction

The Commission would be required to submit its findings and policy recommendations to the Legislature, informing future regulatory decisions regarding data center development.

Legislative Rationale

Senator Sacchieri emphasized that the legislation responds to significant uncertainties about data centers’ effects on Oklahoma communities and infrastructure.

“As data centers continue to grow rapidly across Oklahoma, we are confronting serious unknowns about how these large facilities affect our communities, our utilities, and our natural resources. This bill stems from those unknowns, and there are real, serious concerns around what these data centers will bring to our state negatively.”
— Senator Kendal Sacchieri (R-Blanchard)

The senator stressed the importance of addressing knowledge gaps before making irreversible development decisions.

“We must be sincere in addressing these unknowns and finding the best solutions for the erection of these very large facilities. There may be better solutions out there than what we are currently doing—which is allowing data centers to be sited anywhere and everywhere without thinking through the long-term effects and repercussions.”
— Senator Kendal Sacchieri

Balancing Development and Protection

Senator Sacchieri characterized the moratorium as a prudent pause rather than a permanent prohibition, arguing that the state needs empirical evidence to develop appropriate regulations.

Legislative Intent
By temporarily suspending new development, Oklahoma can gather data on how large-scale data centers interact with state infrastructure and environmental resources. This information would enable policymakers to craft regulations that protect residents and ratepayers while maintaining the state’s economic competitiveness.
“The goal is not to halt progress, but to ensure that progress does not come at the expense of Oklahomans’ quality of life or their utility costs. We owe it to our communities to understand what we don’t yet know before we make irreversible decisions about where and how these facilities are built.”
— Senator Kendal Sacchieri

Legislative Status

Senate Bill 1488 has been officially filed for consideration during the Second Regular Session of the 60th Oklahoma Legislature. The legislation currently awaits assignment to an appropriate committee for initial review and consideration.

Next Steps
The bill must be assigned to a legislative committee, receive committee approval, pass both chambers of the Oklahoma Legislature, and be signed by the governor before taking effect. The legislative process typically involves committee hearings, floor debates, and potential amendments.

If enacted, the legislation would represent one of the first state-level efforts to comprehensively examine data center development impacts before allowing further expansion of these facilities.

The moratorium’s 2029 end date would provide the Corporation Commission approximately three and a half years to conduct its study and develop policy recommendations based on empirical findings from existing Oklahoma data center operations.

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