In Festus, city officials held secret meetings with developer CRG and described data center opponents as “a sideshow of uneducated people” in text messages. In Independence, the city council approved $150.6 billion in bonds for a Dutch AI company, then a court blocked residents from putting it to a public vote. In Webster County, the county commissioners didn’t even know about a proposed data center until they saw it on Facebook — because the county has no planning and zoning laws. In Joplin, 600 acres of residential land were rezoned to heavy industrial after a seven-hour council meeting. While your Governor pushes a sales tax expansion on you through HJR 173 & 174, data centers get a sales tax exemption. The pattern is consistent: NDAs, secret meetings, and zoning votes that move faster than residents can organize.
All 115 Missouri counties, shaded by data center development risk. The darker the county, the more structurally attractive it is to hyperscale developers — based on power availability, water capacity, land availability, and proximity to existing projects.
The nine marked counties have active, approved, or recently-withdrawn projects. Click any county to see its risk score and read the full report.
Festus voters ousted every council member who approved a $6B data center. In Nodaway County, residents formed opposition groups in weeks. Written opposition works.
Enter your address and pick your concerns. We research your commissioners, write a personalized letter citing state statutes and project data, and email it to every commissioner on your behalf.
Meta's 9.5M gallons/day in KC, Missouri DNR water permits, Ozark aquifer impact.
Read the brief →Ameren's new gas plants for data centers, SB 4 premium rates, Evergy large-load tariffs.
Read the brief →Cooling-tower hum, diesel generator testing, rural counties with zero noise ordinances.
Read the brief →Property impact studies from Virginia, Festus homeowner concerns, rural farmland devaluation.
Read the brief →Find the active project nearest you. 9 counties with confirmed projects across Missouri.
Read the brief →Diesel backup generators, new gas power plants, air quality near hyperscale cooling systems.
Read the brief →Missouri’s legislature has created a two-tier system: data center developers receive billions in tax breaks while the state pushes to expand sales taxes on everyday residents. HJR 173 & 174 passed both chambers in April 2026 and proposes eliminating the state income tax — which funds two-thirds of Missouri’s general revenue — and replacing it with expanded sales taxes on services. According to the Missouri Budget Project, 80% of Missourians would see a net tax increase under the scheme. Meanwhile, data centers continue to receive a sales tax exemption on construction materials, equipment, and utilities for up to 15 years.
At the local level, developers negotiate Chapter 100 industrial revenue bonds that exempt them from real and personal property taxes entirely. In Independence, Nebius received $150.6 billion in bonds with no property tax obligations. Many rural Missouri counties — including Webster County — have no planning and zoning laws, meaning a data center can be proposed with no public hearing, no zoning review, and no county oversight.
One email when filings, votes, tax deals, or new data center proposals hit your county. Sourced from public records and local reporting across Missouri.