Thursday, May 07, 2026
Local Tax Abatements for Private Equity Backed Projects
Wednesday, May 06, 2026
SA1 Data Center Has Giant Hat, City Provides No Meat
The following public information request was submitted on April 27th.
“Please provide documents relative to the following information from Emergent Data Centers that references the City of San Angelo: Municipal Partnership Built for Speed
"San Angelo has annexed the site and fast-tracked data center zoning by-right. The city has confirmed water and sewer capacity for full-scale development. This is a city-backed infrastructure project with committed resources."
The document also states the City of San Angelo is providing "exceptional municipal support." Please provide documents delineating this exceptional municipal support. Thank you.”
This letter is to clarify what information you are seeking from the City of San Angelo.PLEASE CLARIFY THE DOCUMENTS YOU ARE REQUESTING.
I request documents delineating the "committed resources" to this "city-backed infrastructure project" (Emergent/Skybox Data Center). Also, I request the specific levels of service the city is providing Emergent/Skybox to achieve the "exceptional municipal support" level, As the partnership is "built for speed" I request a projected timeline with key development steps and an anticipated start date. Thank you.
The City of San Angelo has reviewed its files and has determined there are no responsive documents to your request.
No documents for a "city backed infrastructure project with committed resources." How can that be?
Friday, April 24, 2026
Citizens Speak on Emergent/Skybox's SAI
"We are finished with public comment. Thank goodness."
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Emergent Data Center Show at McNease Convention Center
San Angelo Mayor Tom Thompson interviewed two executives from Emergent Data Center, CEO Chris Sumter and Chief Technology Officer Mike Coleman, about the proposed Skybox Data Center project in the Northeast portion of town. This followed a presentation by Planning & Development Director Aaron Vannoy on ordinance changes based on development research from other communities with current and proposed data centers.
The Mayor's structured interview covered the following areas:
- Emergent Executives background
- Why San Angelo
- Water Use
- Noise Mitigation
- Construction
- Operation - jobs created
- Grid - electricity impact
- Community responsibility
- Tax revenue (no specifics given)
The panel discussion had several explicit sales pitches embedded in it as well as promises to solve any problems that arose. There was no indication that any panel member thought the project itself was problematic for San Angelo and this part of West Texas.
Not addressed by the panel or the city's planning director: economic development incentives currently under consideration for the project.
I submitted that question on April 9th using the online form:
Please provide information about any public subsidies, direct or indirect, that the city is providing or plans to consider to support the development of the Skybox/Emergent Data Center. I submitted a public information request to this effect in December 2025 but have received no response at the City of San Angelo appealed to the Texas Attorney General to keep such information confidential.It's interesting that city leaders can share research on design parameters from other cities but not on economic development incentives. Last night's meeting would have been the perfect opportunity for city leaders to share their thinking in this arena. They expressly have not to date and likely won't until it goes before Council for an up or down vote. The hint that tax breaks will be included is the five to six year time frame to accrue community financial benefit.
I did learn that Chris Sumter started Emergent after a meeting with a private equity firm, something like Emphoric Capital. Also, the city may steer its reclaimed water to the project (away from Wall farmers). Whoever Emergent/Skybox leases the data center to may or may not pay sales taxes on the equipment they place in the facility (currently a State of Texas tax break). The Mayor said it is not the city's right to demand anything from the company in terms of good community relations.
The city posted documents relative to the meeting/project. Emergent mentioned "exceptional municipal support" and a "municipal partnership built for speed."
I was unable to stay for the public comment portion of the meeting but hope to view the video. At least I got to hear the commercial.
Friday, April 17, 2026
Dove Creek Tells Beacon Data Centers to Go Elsewhere
Water - At this stage they believe their water needs will be met from the existing water rights to several hundred acre feet from Spring Creek, dam reconstruction, mesquite eradication and rainwater harvesting. They said their are no plans to utilize groundwater. Surface water means the Concho River Watermaster and TCEQ. Apparently there are two diversion points, one on each side of the creek of the existing property.I spoke with Vice President of Corporate Affairs Lauren Armstrong after the meeting and shared the vagaries of surface water dependability in West Texas. We lose creek flow completely due to upstream irrigation. The irrigation stops and the creek flows again. And we are far closer to the headwaters than Beacon's site. That said, there are springs up and down the creek but many spots are dry for months at a time upstream of the Dove Creek Technology Campus. She said they would haul in water for their daily needs if needed.
"We are not for sale."
Power - The Beacon model is 100% natural gas turbine power generation. They need to tie into a natural gas pipeline and that is part of the project's feasibility assessment.
"Go away."
Wastewater - There would be a wastewater treatment facility onsite.
"We don't want you."
Traffic - There would be no access to the property down 2335. The entrance would be just after the railroad tracks and new roads would be built within the property to meet their construction and operating needs. They floated a reworking of the dangerous curve at 67 & 2335 as a public benefit of the project.
"Please leave us alone."
Thursday, April 09, 2026
Dove Creek Next for Data Center?
The meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 16, at The Four56 Church, located at 13218 Westcross Lane.
“I told them I am getting phone calls left and right, I don’t have any information to give them,” Nanny said. “I told them ya’ll have got to have one meeting immediately followed up by several meetings, but the ball is in their court. I am not conducting this meeting; the only say-so I had was please have a meeting so the people can hear about you.”Citizens need to hear from County officials as well regarding public infrastructure needed to support such data centers. That includes County Judge Lane Carter, Commissioner Nanny and County Emergency Response leadership.
The State of Texas allows landowners to drill wells and potentially take as much as they want.
In Texas, corporations have significant rights to pump groundwater under the "Rule of Capture," allowing unlimited use for beneficial purposes unless limited by local Groundwater Conservation Districts (GCDs).
It remains to be seen if the Dove Creek location falls within an existing Groundwater Conservation District.
The site is either just inside the Lipan-Kickapoo WCD or just outside it.
Update 4-16-26: The community of Dove Creek expressed their near universal opposition to the Beacon AI data center. County Commissioner Shawn Nanny closed public feedback by joining his constituents in opposing the project.
Friday, March 27, 2026
Kerr County Disaster Coordinator Retires March 31st
Houston Public Media reported:
Kerr County’s emergency coordinator, Will Thomas, said he was ill and asleep as floodwaters began to rise and didn’t participate in early response calls on July 3. Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha also said he was asleep as the river rose, while Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly, who oversees emergency management, said he was out of town.
And no first responder went to their home and knocked on the door?
William "Dub" Thomas is retiring effective March 31, 2026. County Judge Rob Kelly, also retiring, said they would miss Dub and that Dub cannot be replaced. I would say as Emergency Management Coordinator Dub was critical to the "asleep, asleep, out of town" leadership approach to the County's flood disaster response on July 4, 2025.
The first disaster was the abject failure to respond, to set up a command post and coordinate efforts in a timely manner. The second was a failure of communication regarding actions not taken and not holding responsible people accountable. The third was a failure to drill for flash flooding under Dub's tenure (as the County could produce no documents of such).
The County and Dub are yet to release their "after action" report on the July 4th flood disaster. Conducting such evaluations are a basic in the emergency response arena. It could happen in the next four days, but I doubt it. This transitioned to an accountability avoidance/liability minimization exercise long ago.
These are the words that welcomed Dub to his role with Kerr County in 2015:
This is very important, the position that Dub has as Emergency Management Coordinator. The City has an Emergency Management Coordinator; now the County has an Emergency Management Coordinator. These are the guys that are literally in charge if there's an emergency, a major fire, major flood or whatever. And as the Sheriff pointed out the other day, the document is this thing, so Dub helped to prepare that. So, I think this county, with Dub in place, and with the city there, it's taken us a year to redo this thing, but I think this county is going to have the best emergency management plan probably in the state. So, welcome, Dub.
Those words did not hold up so well. All hat (plan), no cattle (implementation-flood drill or actual response).
Update 3-30-26: Hill Country Community Journal reported:
Thomas was authorized to purchase his county service weapon, a Glock 45, for $100 under a state law permitting such sales to honorably retired law enforcement officers.
"had not seen the official weather warnings before the storm, did not convene a staff meeting about the potential flooding and acknowledged that the camp did not have a detailed, written flood evacuation plan."
The cascade of ignorance and lack of preparation was widespread in Kerr County.
Update 4-16-26: The Texas Rangers have joined the case regarding camper deaths at Camp Mystic. So far, local emergency officials inability to do their job has been overlooked by investigators. Kerr County is yet to release an after action report on their disaster "response" on July 4, 2025.
Update 4-20-26: Texas Tribune reported Camp Mystic's security guard testified as to events that evening/early morning:
The security guard at Camp Mystic the night of last year’s deadly flood acknowledged Wednesday that if a general evacuation order came early in the storm, lives could’ve been saved.
Update 4-22-26: KXAN reported:
According to the House’s resolution, the committee would be tasked with investigating contributing factors, allocation of resources, effectiveness of preparedness and effectiveness of response and coordination between local, state and federal entities. The Senate’s resolution called for a broader “complete and thorough examination of the facts and circumstances surrounding the flooding events.”
So how did this broad mandate get reduced to summer camps? It appears there may never be an assessment of Kerr County emergency official's response (non-response) to the disaster.