News
Riverkeeper: Council needs to know where residents stand on data center
Advocacy, Environmental, Sound Rivers, Tar-Pamlico Watershed, Water Quality
Posted on June 4th, 2026
On Monday night, Rocky Mount city councilmembers will cast votes that could pave the way for the construction of a data center on city-owned property.
The vote before the council is a rezoning of 171 acres of land on Arrow and Dozier roads from commercial to heavy industrial.
“Before it gets voted on, the City Council needs to know where residents stand,” said Pamlico-Tar Riverkeeper Katey Zimmerman. “There is zero information about this data center. The only thing we know is that it is a data center — when they postponed the vote during last month’s meeting, it was said that council would not be voting on the ‘data-center rezoning.’ That was the first time anyone from the city actually acknowledged the property is being rezoned for a data center.”
The meeting will take place at 7 p.m. on Monday, June 8, on the third floor of the Frederick E. Turnage Municipal Building, 331 S. Franklin St., Rocky Mount.
“We need people to let the Council know a data center will not be good for this community,” Katey said.
See talking points below.
Since the city’s planning board made the recommendation to approve the rezoning and passed it to the city council in April, no information has been released to the public about the project. Beyond an email acknowledging its receipt, there’s also been no response the public records request Katey made of the City more than three weeks ago.
“I sent the request through the City’s online portal, asking for any communication and documentation between city staff and a data center developer, and any communication about the rezoning in general,” Katey said.
It was the language of the rezoning proposal that alerted the public to a coming data center: noise limits; prohibiting use of diesel generators and using “non-water-intensive cooling methods.”
In addition to a potential Rocky Mount data center, Edgecombe County residents are also urging county commissioners to turn down a data-center proposal for Kingsboro Business Park. Energy Storage Solutions’ proposal to build a $19 billion, 900-megawatt data center has met with local resistance.
If approved, both sites would rely on Rocky Mount’s utilities infrastructure.
Concerns about data centers include massive energy and water consumption, straining local grids, increasing emissions and depleting water resources, leading to community conflicts, particularly in drought areas. Often, the water used to cool systems is super-heated in the process and then cooled with gases known to contain PFAs. Whether the water will be treated to remove the PFAs — if that’s even an option — or discharged straight into the Tar River is another concern.
Katey encourages those concerned about data-center impacts to attend the June 8 meeting and speak up during the required public hearing.
“This will be the last opportunity to do so before a decision is made on the industrial rezoning, and before Rocky Mount opens up this City-owned land to a data center developer,” she said.
Like the work your Riverkeeper is doing to protect the Tar-Pamlico? We do! Donate today to support her work!
Want to speak up at the meeting, but don’t know what to say? Read Katey’s Data-Center Talking Points below!
Related News
Interns build mini-trash traps for display
July 3rd 2026
Sound Rivers crew head out to investigate algal bloom
July 3rd 2026
Riverkeeper, mayor host Baileys Creek paddle
July 3rd 2026
Cummins/Sound Rivers host 7th joint cleanup
July 3rd 2026
Riverkeeper introduces Girl Scouts to water quality
July 3rd 2026
Data Center report delivered to Edgecombe commissioners
June 25th 2026
Slocum sampling comes with wild wildlife encounter
June 25th 2026
Convening highlights environmental justice, greater impact
June 25th 2026
