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Allentown data center proposal dropped from upcoming planning meeting; could come back in July

The applicant requested the meeting be postponed, according to city officials.

AllentownDataCenter3.jpg
The developer behind a proposed data center at 2401 W. Emaus Ave. asked city officials to table their review for a month.
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ALLENTOWN, Pa. — A data center project in South Allentown will not be reviewed by city officials next week.

The planning commission was due to look at a proposal for a 247,000-square-foot facility at 2401 W. Emaus Ave., but the applicant — Zach Jordan of Langan Engineering — requested the meeting be postponed, according to the agenda for the body’s meeting Tuesday afternoon.
That request came after dozens at a public hearing Wednesday night in City Hall spoke out against the proposal and in support of stronger regulations for data centers.

'Disney villain-level' optics

Lester Wenger voiced concerns about residents being priced out by the proposed facility’s potential electricity consumption and said he believes it’s “no coincidence” that a power substation is located on an adjacent lot.

Wenger lives within a half-mile of the proposed data center, which he said would be “neither productive nor prudent.”

The Emaus Avenue data center proposal has “Disney villain-level” optics, Julie Vitale said, as the property sits across the street from an apartment complex and Camelot for Children, a nonprofit serving children with special needs and medical complexities.

A data center opening there would create an “impossibly miserable situation,” Vitale said.

Mark Miller, a board member at Camelot for Children, urged council to do "whatever you can to protect the children, the families [and] volunteers of a 40-year community institution."

The proposal is expected to be on the agenda for the planning commission’s July 14 meeting.

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