21 results for “data centers”
21 results for “data centers”
The Seattle Land Use and Sustainability Committee met on June 3, 2026, at 9:34 a.m. with five members present (Councilmembers Lin, Strauss, Foster, Hollingsworth, and Rinck). The Committee recommended passage of CB 121214, a data center moratorium ordinance that adopts a new definition for data centers and establishes a moratorium on filing, acceptance, processing, or approval of data center applications, approved 5–0. The Committee also recommended passage of CB 121220, approving an extension of a contract rezone for 5201 Rainier Avenue South originally approved under Ordinance 125632, approved 4–0 with Hollingsworth absent. CB 121215, relating to clarification of Council land use decision processes, was discussed without a recorded vote. The meeting adjourned at 11:20 a.m.
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The Parks and City Light Committee met on June 3, 2026, at 2:03 p.m. in the Seattle City Council Chamber with Councilmembers Juarez (presiding), Saka, and Strauss present and Councilmembers Kettle and Rivera excused. The Committee recommended adoption of Resolution 32204 regarding data center impacts on electrical grid capacity, water usage, utility rates, land use, jobs, and public health, with a 3–0 vote in favor. Resolution 32206 concerning the City Light Department's 2026 Integrated Resource Plan for the biennium September 2026 through August 2028 was discussed but no action was recorded in these minutes. The meeting adjourned at 4:18 p.m.
AI summary
The Seattle Land Use and Sustainability Committee met on May 20, 2026, with five members present (Councilmembers Lin, Strauss, Foster, Hollingsworth, and Rinck), chaired by Councilmember Lin. The committee recommended passage of CB 121196, a comprehensive zoning ordinance affecting the University District, Fremont, Madison/Miller, Rainier Beach, and Downtown neighborhoods that rezones land, amends development standards to increase housing supply, removes barriers to passive house and mass timber construction, and incentivizes community-serving uses, with the vote 4–1 in favor (Hollingsworth abstained). CB 121214, which introduces a new data center definition and establishes a moratorium on data center applications, and CB 121215, which clarifies council land use decision processes, were discussed but no votes were recorded.
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The Land Use and Sustainability Committee of the Seattle City Council met on May 11, 2026, at 2:05 p.m., presiding over by Councilmember Lin. The committee heard Information Item 2890 regarding a Data Center Overview and Discussion. The meeting adjourned at 2:50 p.m.
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This agenda document outlines the regular meeting of the Jackson, Mississippi City Council held on April 21, 2026 at 6:00 PM. The council addressed two street renamings: Lilly Street (from Woodrow Wilson Boulevard to Clover Hill Drive) to Damian Murriel Drive, and Wood Street (from Cohea Street to Peach Orchard Street) to Dr. Roderick Demond Little Drive, both scheduled for public hearing and adoption. The consent agenda included declaring parcel number 423-6 at 107 West Mayes Street as surplus property, authorizing a 48-month copier rental agreement with Advantage Business Systems Inc. for the Office of the City Attorney, and approving April 7, 2026 meeting minutes. Introduced ordinances included amendments to Chapter 2 of the City Code, a temporary moratorium on data center development and expansion, and a re-enactment of ordinance sections 86-51 through 86-62. The regular agenda encompassed claims, payroll, authorization to auction city-owned vehicles online through GovDeals, and an order amending a prior authorization for a $2,000,000 Economic Development Administration grant application.
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The Transportation, Waterfront, and Seattle Center Committee met on April 16, 2026, with three of four members present. The committee unanimously recommended adoption of Resolution 32195 to designate South Jackson Street between 28th and 29th Avenue South as "Dr. RL Manaway, Sr. Way." The committee also heard a traffic safety update reviewing 2025 data and 2026 Vision Zero projects, while deferring discussion of an overview of Waterfront Park to a future meeting.
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The Transportation, Waterfront, and Seattle Center Committee met on April 16, 2026, from 9:37 a.m. to 11:14 a.m. with three members present (Chairs Rob Saka, Alexis Mercedes Rinck, and Dionne Foster), one excused (Eddie Lin), and one absent (Robert Kettle). The Committee unanimously recommended adoption of Resolution 32195, which designates South Jackson Street between 28th Avenue South and 29th Avenue South as "Dr. RL Manaway, Sr. Way." The Committee also heard an information item on the 2025 Traffic Safety Data and 2026 Vision Zero Projects overview, while an information item on Waterfront Park was not heard during the meeting.
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