Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Skybox Website Shows Wichita Falls PowerCampus
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Waiting on the 380 with Skybox
Please provide documents, communications, emails and texts relative to the City of San Angelo's economic development arrangement with Skybox Data Centers or whichever legal entity is developing the data center on former city land within the City Farm area in the northeast portion of town.This information could include a projected timeline, specific financial or tax incentives, and any other inducements, monetary or in-kind services.The Development Corporation website mentions the project with its statement: "Facilitated data center site development tied to renewable energy access." My request is relative to this specific City of San Angelo effort
The City petitioned the Attorney General to keep all relevant documents confidential and away from public view.
Only the City knows how comprehensive their Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) is with Skybox. Rest assured, Skybox has employed the best lawyers to keep their information, even the most basic, private.
The City of San Angelo has reviewed its files and has determined there are no responsive documents to your request.And this applies to contracted entities as well?
Data Center Sound Requirements Have Giant Loophole
San Angelo City Council will entertain design recommendations for data centers in this evening's meeting. Council members are likely attending the presentation by SkyBox Data Centers at a Chamber of Commerce event today.
The U.S. Department of Energy recently enacted such an emergency for backup power generators:
Currently, there are tens of gigawatts of readily available backup generation that have remained largely untapped until now. Deployment of backup generation resources (whether auxiliary, standby, directly-connected, battery storage or other, and whether synchronized or not to the bulk power system) at data centers (including but not limited to hyperscaler facilities), and at other large load industrial and commercial customer sites, can prevent avoidable blackouts, thereby saving lives and reducing costs to the American people. The employment of this backup generation is expected to reduce stress on the grid.This will permit orderly, safe, and secure operations during Winter Storm Fern. Consistent with my letter issued on January 22, 2026, ERCOT requested today that DOE issue an order pursuant to FPA section 202(c) to allow the deployment of backup generation during emergency conditions.
By overtaxing the Texas energy grid, data centers can fire up their generators and sell power back through ERCOT.
Abilene's giant AI facility started as a Bitcoin mining energy arbitrage play on stranded cheap renewable power. It happened to be in the right place at the right time to get scooped up into Trump II's White House AI initiative "Stargate."
Anyone care to hear what 160 emergency generators sound like when they are all fired up? Anyone else want to be downwind of their emissions?
We used to smell the rendering plant when the wind blew from the northeast. What will an energy emergency smell like in San Angelo's future?
TechGods bring a different kind of rendering which includes massive amounts of garbage from the internet. I expect this next round to be no different than their contributions to date.
Sunday, February 08, 2026
Kerr County Emergency Officials Confused on July 4th
Tuesday, February 03, 2026
Citizens Have to Pony Up to Learn about Skybox
Saturday, January 31, 2026
SkyBox on Council's Agenda for Closed Session
Please provide documents, communications, emails and texts relative to the City of San Angelo's economic development arrangement with Skybox Data Centers or whichever legal entity is developing the data center on former city land within the City Farm area, just outside city limits to the northeast of town. This information could include a projected timeline, the city's plans to annex the land or develop a special arrangement where the city provides services (police, fire, water, etc.) to an entity not within city limits, specific financial or tax incentives, and any other inducements, monetary or in-kind services. The Development Corporation website mentions the project with its statement: "Facilitated data center site development tied to renewable energy access." My request is relative to this specific City of San Angelo effort.
City leaders, both elected and employed, have signed non-disclosure agreements (NDA) regarding this project. That is why you will hear Mayor Thompson say things like "I've heard this number ($ investment, # of gallons of water use, number of cars using street after construction is completed)." The Mayor can share information that is already in the public sphere that approximates this particular SkyBox project. He has to keep the actual specifics confidential per the NDA.
Normally, an elected official would come up with critical information items that need to be shared with the public and ensure that occurs as part of the business recruitment process. Not anymore. Companies consider the most basic information to be confidential and require officials to sign NDAs.
City Council members have a fiduciary duty when approving a new economic development incentive. What happens when some Council members have access to more detailed information, financial and otherwise, on the project? Can the lesser informed Council members fulfill their fiduciary duties?
Recently, the City of San Angelo Development Corporation (COSADC) approved an economic development agreement with True Lighting Protection LLC. San Angelo's Chamber of Commerce produces the economic development impact analysis as part of their contract with the Development Corporation.
COSADC board member Travis Stribling asked for detail regarding the projections relative to that agreement. Rather than provide more detail or reveal projection assumptions, city staff restated the information on the slide. In the past more detailed economic development analysis have been included in board packets and presented in the meeting.
I requested a copy of that analysis for True Lightning Protection via a PIR and received what staff did not share with the board and a member who sought such information. What I received was totally appropriate for a board providing project funding.
It remains to be seen what is shared after the closed session on Tuesday, if anything. It is more common for no report to be given to the public after council meets in executive session.
Update 2-3-26: Mayor Pro Tem Tommy Hiebert stated there was nothing to report after Executive Session in today's City Council meeting. Many people gave public comment at the beginning of the meeting with several encouraging city leaders to share information with the public on Skybox. Speakers referenced the city's legal responsibilities under Texas Public Information law.
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Council Rezones Land for Light Manufacturing (Skybox Data Center)
San Angelo City Council rezoned a recently annexed area in the Northeast side of town for light manufacturing to accommodate a proposed Skybox Data Center project. Council heard from a large number of citizens in public comment prior to the Consent Agenda and during the rezoning item itself.
An article on the U.S. manufacturing boom promised by the White House stated:
When manufacturers build new plants, they also need housing for workers, warehousing for parts, and access to roads, ports, and rail. That drives up the value of surrounding land and rental housing — especially in overlooked areas just outside major metros. Real estate investors often move early in these cycles, buying up properties near confirmed development zones and holding for appreciation.
Abilene just approved a 1,000 space RV park to accommodate temporary workers building their gargantuan Lancium Project. It started as a squirrelly Bitcoin mining operation that would run an energy arbitrage, but morphed into Trump's giant AI project and renamed Stargate in conjunction with Sam Altman's OpenAI.
Most of the people who commented at Tuesday's Council meeting know what is coming. Many opposed it, while a number of people supported the Skybox project. Citizens know our electrical bills will go up no matter where in Texas these data centers go. They know construction will involve lots of imported workers, higher truck traffic and put pressure on housing and hotels. It happened during the shale boom and will return with Skybox.
Council is yet to ask what happens if this thing busts in fiver years. Are they prepared to take the keys to the building if owners and lenders walk away?
Cooling in West Texas is a significant challenge in any summer, but 2024 levels of summer heat make that far more expensive, assuming that much power is actually available.
Citizens want to know if power will remain affordable and actually be there when needed. That concern grows when Vice President of Economic Development Michael Looney stated two other data centers are currently looking at Tom Green County.
Prior to Council's 6-1 vote approving the zoning change, Mayor Thompson complimented public comment. A number of issues were raised that the Mayor said could be addressed via a 380 economic development agreement which provides restrictions in order to receive those benefits.
Actually, a number of issues raised require Skybox to share information that likely sits under a current non-disclosure agreement (NDA) with the city and city leaders, including the Mayor.
Mayor Thompson said during the zoning item regarding the economic value of the proposed data center:
"I've heard lots of different numbers brought up."
Later he said:
"A lot of questions were answered. There's a lot of questions that still are yet to be answered. There's a lot of information out there. A lot of it is correct. More of it's incorrect. But a lot of things are opinion."
Time and actions will reveal how open Skybox and the City are in regard to answering citizen questions and concerns. That is the Mayor's job, NDA or not.