Infrastructure

Federal broadband policy is increasingly being recast around satellite

With few meaningful competitors, SpaceX's Starlink is the primary beneficiary.

Maine enlists AI to help combat rising home insurance rates

The state is administering a grant program for residents to retrofit their homes with climate resilient roofs, and an artificial intelligence-enabled platform looks to enhance program speed and efficiency.

Local Texas leaders believe data center plans may be behind delays to emergency water supply

Across Texas, a booming buildout of server farms is adding strain to water resources that are already stretched to their limit.

Utah’s fragile desert could feel like the Sahara if America’s biggest data center gets built

The Great Salt Lake is drying up. What happens when a data center as large as a city sits next to it?

Utah protesters want more sunlight on data center plan and its effects on water and air

Utah protesters demanded independent reviews of the planned Stratos project in Box Elder County and a “genuine public comment period.”

Data center dilemma: Who should decide where they go in North Dakota?

There is no formal environmental review or centralized body in charge of overseeing data center developers.

In rural Wisconsin, a town pushes aside a plan to build a massive data center

Residents and town leaders have been in the dark about who would build a $1B center or where it would go. They used zoning to block the plan.

New report aims to help states define the chief data officer role

The findings are intended to provide state leaders with the successes and limitations learned from other states’ efforts to establish the position.

Local governments race to attract data centers, often in spite of concerns from their constituents

Communities are sounding the alarm on an industry that stands to have a far greater impact beyond the walls of its warehouses.

Data centers are straining the grid. Can they be forced to pay for it?

As backlash grows, a nationwide search is underway for solutions to the AI energy crunch.

Data center restrictions signed into South Dakota law after push for incentives failed

After lawmakers rejected incentives for large data centers, Gov. Larry Rhoden signed a bill that puts new limits on them.

Efforts to meet HR 1 Medicaid rules can also ‘build for the future’

Strategies to implement major changes to state Medicaid systems today could also help states better field future updates, experts explained during a recent webinar.

North Carolina invests $26M to expand high-speed internet into additional rural areas by 2026

The additional funding targets 5,161 homes, businesses and community anchor institutions in 66 counties across rural portions of the state.

Granular driving and intersection data helps drive traffic safety investments

The Missouri Department of Transportation is turning to telematics data to identify high-risk intersections that officials hope will bolster their efforts to deploy solutions that can improve roadway safety.

Shifting politics around data centers scramble Healey AI push

A backlash to data centers is scrambling whether and how the AI industry takes hold in Massachusetts, how it plays politically for Democrats in a deep-blue state and how state officials manage the tradeoffs.

A new era of data center development is like a second industrial revolution

The rapid rise of artificial intelligence has changed the data center industry and thrust construction of giant server farms into the public eye in a way that’s triggering significant community opposition.

Federal government taps Utah to test new electric flight technologies

Utah is among eight states the federal government selected to test the future of electric flight technologies, which may include air taxis.

Questions about self-driving cars amplify after one blocked an ambulance responding to Austin shooting

While the encounter didn’t significantly hinder response to the shooting, it has raised concerns about the vehicles as they expand to more Texas cities and before new state regulations kick in.

Oklahoma lawmakers move to protect ratepayers from effects of data centers

There are at least 30 data centers in Oklahoma that are currently operating, planned or under construction.

It’s lights out for Washington legislature’s effort to regulate data centers

The bill died Monday amid a barrage of industry opposition. Supporters said it was a crucial step toward protecting the grid and utility ratepayers from the energy-hungry facilities.