Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Decision on DeKalb County data-center rules may be delayed until early next year

(PRISM DeKalb) -- DeKalb County Commissioner Ted Terry said Wednesday he believes a decision on zoning regulations for high-tech data centers will be delayed until early next year, as the county refines proposed rules for the massive buildings filled with energy-consuming computer servers.

The Board of Commissioners is scheduled to vote on proposed rules for data centers at its regular meeting next Tuesday. Commissioners set the date for the vote last month and specifically said there would be no public hearing, meaning there will be no comments from the public when the matter is considered.

During a community meeting on data centers held at the Porter Sanford Center on Wednesday evening, Terry urged the public to ask their commissioners for a deferral of the regulations and an extension of the existing moratorium on data centers, which expires on Tuesday.

"We do not believe we can do a permanent moratorium," he said.

Terry said he supports requiring a 500-foot buffer separating data centers from parks, trails or residential properties. He said every proposal to build or expand a data center should require a Special Land Use Permit, a separate county zoning application that would require meetings of Community Councils and the county's Planning Commission, before a vote by the full DeKalb County Commission.

"I have been consistently advocating for the regulations to be stronger to ensure our DeKalb County is protected and well-invested," Terry said in an email before the community meeting.

At the Board of Commissioners' November 20 zoning meeting, county planners said they planned to make further changes to the proposed zoning regulations that were presented that evening. 

However, no updated draft of the rules has been published by the county's Department of Planning & Sustainability. 

A document posted Tuesday on the planning department web site, purporting to be what commissioners will consider next week, contains a one-month-old staff analysis and a one-month-old draft of the text amendment -- the same materials that were presented to the Board of Commissioners on November 20.

Construction of data centers has grown rapidly in Georgia since 2018, when the General Assembly granted an exemption from sales taxes for the equipment in data centers. An attempt to repeal that exemption failed last year.

The Data Center Coalition, a national association representing major technology firms and the data center industry, seeks the removal of barriers to faster data-center construction and operations.

"Data centers are the digital foundation of our economy—powering everything from AI development and financial services to defense operations and secure communications. Accelerating the permitting process is critical to keeping pace with skyrocketing demand," the industry group says.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

State ethics board finds probable cause DeKalb County Commissioner Nicole Massiah violated campaign finance law

There are "reasonable grounds" to believe DeKalb County Commissioner Nicole Massiah violated state campaign finance rules three times in 2024 by failing to file disclosure reports related to her election until six months after they were due, the Georgia Ethics Commission said Thursday. 

The commission's unanimous decision, at the end of a preliminary hearing, cleared the way for a full hearing on allegations Massiah did not file a personal financial disclosure statement and two campaign-contribution reports on a timely basis, waiting until 2025 to submit them.

"Violations are violations and the violations speak for themselves," one ethics commissioner said.

Unless Massiah reaches a consent agreement with the ethics board in the next 30 days, the commission will schedule a hearing on the alleged violations under provisions of the state's Administrative Procedure Act.

During Thursday's probable-cause hearing, Ethics Commission Deputy Executive Secretary Steven Knittel said a financial disclosure statement that should have been filed within 15 days of qualifying as a candidate in April 2024 was not submitted until October 2024, a few weeks before the election.