News

Skagit County puts temporary hold on data center applications

Skagit County puts temporary hold on data center applications

Photo: Saga Communications/Joe Teehan


SKAGIT COUNTY, WA (MyBellinghamNow.com) – The nationwide debate around large-scale tech facilities is making its way to northwest Washington.

The Skagit County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously on Monday, June 1, to adopt a moratorium on new data centers in rural parts of the county. The interim ordinance will prevent any permits applications from being accepted for six months while the county crafts regulations.

The county is defining data centers as “facilities meant to house computers and related equipment that are larger than 2,000 square feet or have a total anticipated load of two megawatts or greater.”

Skagit County’s Senior Deputy of Natural Resources Will Honea told the board that the county can be seen as an attractive location for data centers.

“Data centers need a couple of things that we have in Skagit County. They can have relatively large footprints, meaning they require a considerable amount of acreage,” Honea said at the meeting. “We have a lot of open space here, a lot of land that hasn’t been intensively developed, because of our restrictive zoning. That means land here in Skagit County, particularly natural resource land, is actually quite cheap compared to other places.”

The county hasn’t received any applications for data centers yet but is aiming to get ahead of what it sees as an inevitable debate since there’s currently nothing in the county code that defines or regulates them.

“The Skagit Valley is subject to large floods, volcanic lahar, and other major natural risk, and summertime water limitations mean that Skagit farmers already have a hard time getting the water they need,” said Skagit County Commissioner Peter Browning. “As we contemplate the possibility of data centers in our community, we have a duty to recognize and respond to the limitations that nature imposes.”

The board will hold a required public hearing on the moratorium at 10:30 a.m. on July 14.

It comes as a bill that aimed to place guardrails on data centers in the state died on the House floor earlier this year.

Recent Headlines

5 hours ago in Crime, Local, Trending

Bellingham man accused of intentionally setting fire to his Barkley Village apartment

Witnesses extinguished the fire before firefighters arrived, no one was injured.

6 hours ago in Dedicated To Service, Local, Outdoors, Trending

South Whatcom Fire Authority to limit emergency response outside jurisdiction

Response times could rise around Lake Whatcom, Lookout Mountain, Chuckanut Mountain and parts of Galbraith Mountain.

9 hours ago in Dedicated To Service, Lifestyle, Local

Affordable housing development opens for families near Bellis Fair Mall

Additional housing for seniors will be available when Phase 2 of the project ends in spring 2027.

9 hours ago in Business, Elections, Local, Trending

Signatures submitted for rental price fixing initiative in Bellingham

If the signatures are verified, the initiative would be placed on the November general election ballot.

15 hours ago in Sports

Play is underway in ideal conditions on the opening day of Wimbledon

Among the early matches on the opening day of the grass-court Grand Slam: Fourth-seeded Jessica Pegula beat Darja Vidmanova 7-5, 6-3; rising Spanish teenager Rafael Jodar, in his Wimbledon debut, beat Felix Gill 6-3, 6-3, 7-5; and French Open finalist Maja Chwalinska, who needed a wild-card entry, was beaten 2-6, 7-5, 6-2 by Mananchaya Sawangkaew.

Bellingham Traffic