Hays County Tightens Data Center Water Oversight with New Frameworks

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Hays County

The battle over data center growth is increasingly becoming a battle over water. In a move that reflects mounting concerns across Texas, Hays County commissioners voted unanimously to create a formal review framework for water-intensive developments, including data centers, placing resource availability at the center of future development decisions. The resolution establishes a new review board tasked with evaluating proposed projects that could place significant pressure on local water supplies. County officials will use water availability studies, drought contingency planning, and conservation assessments to guide recommendations before commissioners consider discretionary actions tied to those developments.

The decision marks one of the most structured local government responses yet to concerns surrounding data center resource consumption in Texas. The measure also introduces new disclosure requirements for developers seeking approvals in the county. Proposed projects must now provide transparency reports, projected water consumption estimates, and independent environmental surveys as part of the review process. County leaders say the framework is designed to improve visibility into long-term resource impacts before major projects move forward.

County Suspends Certain Data Center Incentives Through Year-End

Alongside the new review process, commissioners approved a temporary suspension of discretionary approvals related to data centers and other high-water-use developments through the end of 2026. The pause applies to county actions that can include development agreements, tax abatements, and other negotiated incentives that often support large-scale infrastructure projects. County Judge Ruben Becerra emphasized that the action does not represent a prohibition on data center investment. Instead, officials view the measure as a temporary assessment period intended to strengthen oversight while preserving future development options.

“The resolution does not create a blanket prohibition on data centers or other industrial projects,” wrote Hays County Judge Ruben Becerra in a message to KUT News. “What it does is establish a temporary review period for certain discretionary county actions and sends a clear policy message that Hays County is taking the issue of water availability and conservation seriously.” The distinction is significant because Texas counties face growing pressure to balance economic development ambitions with concerns over infrastructure capacity, water security, and population growth. As artificial intelligence accelerates demand for large computing campuses, local governments are increasingly examining how those facilities interact with finite natural resources.

Lessons From Hill County Influence Legal Approach

The final resolution differs notably from an earlier proposal advanced by Becerra in February. That version would have delayed consideration of new data center projects altogether. Commissioners ultimately postponed action at the time after raising concerns about potential legal exposure and challenges from developers. Those concerns gained urgency after events in neighboring Hill County. In May, Hill County commissioners approved a moratorium on certain data center developments. Days later, data center developer RCM Hill, LLC filed a lawsuit seeking more than $100 million in damages. The county subsequently withdrew its moratorium.

Against that backdrop, Hays County adjusted its approach. Rather than blocking projects outright, the adopted framework increases scrutiny while temporarily limiting discretionary county agreements. Consequently, county officials believe the revised language provides stronger legal protection while still addressing public concerns over water use. “ On this resolution I think we’ve limited our exposure pretty strongly,” said Chase Young, an assistant criminal district attorney for Hays County. The legal positioning reflects a broader trend emerging across North America, where local governments are attempting to manage data center expansion through environmental review processes rather than outright bans.

Water Becomes a Defining Issue in Texas Infrastructure Planning

For Becerra, the vote represents the culmination of months of advocacy around water conservation and development oversight. Although he recently lost his primary election to Commissioner Michelle Gutierrez Cohen, he described the resolution as a lasting contribution to county policy. “ This is something we’ve waited on,” Becerra said. “Something I started in February got passed. … We have 254 counties in the state, so that other counties that wanna follow suit and follow the same roadmap now can easily grab what we’ve done and personalize it for themselves and [it] will be used as a template, and I’m grateful for that. ” His comments point to a larger possibility: local governments may increasingly borrow regulatory frameworks from one another as they confront the infrastructure demands associated with AI-driven data center growth.

Water availability, once a secondary consideration in many project reviews, is rapidly becoming a primary factor in site selection and permitting discussions. The county’s action arrives only one week after the San Marcos City Council voted to prohibit data centers within city limits, creating a coordinated signal from multiple jurisdictions in the region. Together, the decisions suggest growing political alignment around concerns over water consumption and environmental sustainability. Residents and community activists who have opposed several proposed developments welcomed the outcome. Many have argued that local governments should evaluate long-term resource impacts before approving projects that could significantly increase water demand.

The Bigger Picture for Data Center Development

The Hays County vote highlights a shift occurring far beyond Texas. Communities are no longer evaluating data centers solely through the lens of jobs, tax revenue, and digital infrastructure investment. Increasingly, they are examining how those projects interact with water systems, energy grids, and long-term sustainability goals. As AI infrastructure expands, the industry’s next challenge may not be securing land or capital. It may be earning public confidence that rapid digital growth can coexist with increasingly constrained natural resources. Hays County’s new framework suggests that future approvals could depend as much on environmental accountability as on economic opportunity.

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