Data Center Expansion in Kansas City: Environmental and Fiscal Burdens on Local Residents
Kansas City has become one of the fastest growing data center hubs in the country, with 31 facilities currently under development in varying stages with major corporations establishing a large regional presence in the city. Investigating whether the economic benefits promised by data center expansion are proportionate to the environmental and fiscal burdens placed on local KC residents. And drawing investigative journalism, public records, environmental reports, and peer-reviewed policy research, this paper argues that Kansas City residents are absorbing costs that corporations and policymakers have largely obscured from public view. These burdens fall disproportionately on low-income households, raising urgent questions about environmental justice, corporate accountability and democratic participation in land use decisions. Research goal is to contribute to the growing body of research on the hidden costs of digital infrastructure and calls for more transparency standards and regulatory frameworks to protect communities from unchecked data center expansion.
Keywords: Data Centers, Kansas City
Topic(s):Justice Systems
Sociology
Sociology
Presentation Type: Oral Presentation
Session: TBA
Location: TBA
Time: TBA