DeKalb Commission denies data center regulations

Jonathan Holle speaks in opposition to data center development during public comment at the DeKalb County Commission meeting on June 23, 2026. (Zoe Seiler/Appen Media)

DECATUR, Ga. — The DeKalb County Commission, at its June 23 meeting, denied proposed land-use and zoning regulations for data centers. After an initial vote to defer Tuesday afternoon, a later motion to reconsider the ordinance was made and the commission shot down the proposal in a unanimous vote. 

The regulations were originally deferred until Aug. 11 in a 5-2 vote. 

The regulations had been up for consideration for about one year. The commission began discussing the regulations in July 2025, and a moratorium on data center construction applications has been in place since then. The commission voted last week to extend the moratorium for another 100 days, through Sept. 30.



DeKalb County has been working to put regulations in place that address land use and where data centers can or cannot be located. The current draft ordinance restricts facilities to industrial areas and requires a special land-use permit in most cases. The draft defines data centers of various sizes, up to a campus size.

An updated draft of the regulations, dated June 18, caps data center campuses at 1 million square feet of disturbed land and increases the buffer from residential properties to 750 feet. The buffer was previously 500 feet.

The draft also allows data centers as an accessory use by right if they take up at most 10 percent of a building’s total floor area. Minor data centers that are 20,000 square feet or less are also allowed by right in light and heavy industrial zoning districts.

A special land use permit (SLUP) is required for a data center that is 100,000 square feet or more. A SLUP would also be required for any redevelopment, reuse or reconstruction of an existing industrial site, as well as for any expansion or height increase for an existing data center.

Terry made an initial motion to defer for nine months, which Bolton seconded.

Presiding Officer Johnson later clarified that the ordinance could not be deferred to 2027 because the commission’s meeting schedule for the new year has not yet been set. Terry amended his motion to defer until Dec. 15.

Davis Johnson also moved to defer the regulations for two weeks, but the motion did not move forward. She later moved to defer the ordinance until Aug. 11. Patrick seconded the motion, and it passed.

This story was provided by WABE media partner Decaturish.