The pause in Denver will last several months, allowing officials to draft new regulations regarding land use, electricity rates, and resource consumption. Mayor Johnston, despite his history of promoting AI-driven infrastructure, acknowledged that the city's policy framework must evolve to protect the quality of life for residents. The decision arrives as local community groups, including the GES Coalition, continue to protest projects like the 170,000-square-foot CoreSite facility in the Globeville-Elyria-Swansea area.
Senator Bernie Sanders has championed this local move as evidence that resistance to the rapid expansion of AI facilities is a rational response to corporate overreach rather than a fringe movement. Sanders continues to advocate for a federal moratorium, citing reports that suggest AI and automation could displace nearly 100 million jobs over the next decade. Beyond labor concerns, environmental studies indicate that data centers consume water resources at a rate comparable to 10 million people while generating carbon emissions rivaling millions of vehicles.

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