LETTERS: Boulder is a major street; reflections on the Monument protest

LETTERS: Boulder is a major street; reflections on the Monument protest

News ClipColorado Springs Gazette·Colorado Springs, El Paso County, CO·3/30/2026

A Colorado Springs resident sent a letter to the editor, strongly warning the city against welcoming large-scale data centers due to the extraordinary strain they place on already scarce water resources. The letter emphasizes the region's long-term water crisis and the environmental risks exacerbated by climate change. The author urges city leaders to prioritize the long-term sustainability of the community over the profits of tech corporations.

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Gov: Colorado Springs City Council
A resident of Colorado Springs has penned a letter to the Colorado Springs Gazette, issuing a stern warning to local leaders regarding the potential approval of large-scale data centers within the community. The author expresses deep concern over the severe strain these facilities would impose on the region's limited water resources, particularly in light of an ongoing long-term crisis with the Colorado River and record-hot, dry conditions. The letter highlights that data centers are notoriously resource-intensive, requiring immense amounts of water for cooling while offering minimal value to host communities. The resident cautions against believing Colorado Springs would be an exception to the pattern of strained infrastructure and depleted resources observed in other cities that have welcomed such developments. The author asserts that tech companies are driven by profit, not civic goodwill, and that their expansion would directly compromise the city's long-term sustainability in an alpine desert environment. The resident urges both public and private leaders to "do right by the people of our city" by preventing the construction of new data centers.