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New Jersey Freezes $250 Million in Data Center Tax Incentives Amid Surging Public Backlash Over AI Infrastructure

VINELAND, New Jersey — The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence infrastructure is clashing head-on with local communities, forcing New Jersey officials to implement a dramatic policy reversal on tech industry subsidies. The New Jersey Economic Development Authority announced a temporary freeze on all future applications for a 250 million dollar data center tax incentive program, signaling a major shift in how states court energy-hungry computing hubs.

The temporary freeze follows a sweeping regulatory framework introduced by Governor Mikie Sherrill designed to establish strict municipal guardrails, enforce greater transparency, and protect residential utility ratepayers from grid-related cost increases. However, the regulatory pause will not retroactively apply to previously approved state subsidies, such as the major multi-million-dollar tax agreement secured by cloud-infrastructure operator CoreWeave.

The friction surrounding the tech boom is playing out in real time in rural Cumberland County, where the City of Vineland recently approved a controversial Payment in Lieu of Taxes ordinance for a massive, hyperscale AI computing hub. Developed by European infrastructure provider DataOne, the facility is on track to become one of the largest data center complexes in New Jersey. The approved municipal tax exemption grants DataOne a 100 percent discount on property taxes for its newly constructed facility in year one, followed by a sliding 20 to 80 percent discount throughout years two through five. Local business owners and residents have expressed deep frustration over the arrangement, questioning why highly profitable tech developers are receiving public subsidies to build in areas where they already intend to operate.

While Vineland’s municipal leadership strongly defended the temporary tax break—arguing that expanding the commercial and industrial tax base is the most effective long-term method to reduce the financial burden on residential taxpayers—public sentiment remains deeply strained. A nationwide Gallup poll conducted this spring revealed that 70 percent of Americans do not want artificial intelligence data centers built within their immediate communities.

The pushback in Vineland has already escalated into a formal legal battle, as a coalition of local homeowners recently filed a lawsuit against DataOne. The suit alleges that the newly operational first phase of the massive campus generates a continuous, low-frequency humming noise that disrupts the neighborhood day and night. Neighbors express deep anxiety that the constant acoustic pollution will permanently damage local property values and destroy the peace of their rural community.

A representative for DataOne issued a statement maintaining that the corporation takes local quality-of-life concerns seriously, noting the company has invested heavily in sound mitigation measures, conducted extensive independent testing, and continues to implement improvements to ensure compliance with New Jersey environmental standards. DataOne executives further emphasized that the tech facility provides significant regional economic offsets, generating more than 600 construction jobs and promising to deliver millions of dollars in stable, long-term tax revenue once the full property becomes 100 percent taxable after year five.

Despite promises of economic growth and digital utility, state policymakers are moving aggressively to dismantle existing tech incentives. Democratic Assemblyman Andrew Macurdy of Summit recently introduced a targeted bill aimed at permanently canceling 250 million dollars in future state tax credits earmarked for the data center industry.

According to an analysis by the National Conference of State Legislatures, at least 38 states currently offer aggressive tax incentives to attract high-density computer hubs. Industry trade groups, such as the Data Center Coalition, warn that states failing to offer competitive tax structures risk missing out on critical infrastructure jobs and technological development. Industry advocates point out that data centers serve as the physical backbone for everyday digital services, including emergency dispatch networks, telehealth appointments, online banking transactions, and mass consumer streaming platforms.

Perhaps most importantly, legislative sponsors argue that the baseline balance of power has shifted, noting that data centers need New Jersey's geographical and power resources far more than the state needs the centers. State officials intend to use the newly implemented application pause to thoroughly restructure future tech growth, ensuring that any incoming facilities operate responsibly and fund their own infrastructure upgrades without shifting environmental or financial burdens onto everyday citizens.

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By: NBC Palm Springs

June 4, 2026

New Jersey data center tax breaksDataOne Vineland NJGovernor Mikie Sherrill AI policyAssemblyman Andrew Macurdy billAI infrastructure noise pollutionNJ Economic Development Authority pause 2026
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New Jersey Freezes $250 Million in Data Center Tax Incentives Amid Surging Public Backlash Over AI Infrastructure