Two proposals that potentially will eliminate the Rural Area are winding their way though the system towards a Board of County Supervisors vote. The first proposal is the revival of the Bi-County parkway, this time called the Va. 234 Bypass. The second proposal is from Maryanne Gahaban and Page Snyder. The two Rural Area large landowners are pushing a proposal to convert almost 800 acres of agriculture zoned land (in which they each have significant ownership) to industrial data centers. They are calling their proposal the PWC Digital Gateway and would add up to an additional 20 million square feet of data center space to Prince William’s existing 5 million square feet. In this rezoning the value of the land would go from about $20-$40 million to $800 million to $1.3 billion dollars.
The Board of County Supervisors or at least the Democratic
block on the Board seem inclined to go along with both proposals. The three
Republicans (Candland, Lawson and Vega) have already come out against the
Bypass and development of data centers in the Rural Area. If these proposals pass, this will eliminate
the protections that the Rural Crescent provides to our regional water
resources and the protection from increasing rates the Rural Crescent provides
to the Prince William County water and
electricity rate payer from the expense of building the infrastructure to deliver
water, sewage and power to the rural area so that data centers can have cheap
water and electricity and the specific property owner can get a billion dollar
windfall.
Though, it is often believed that when you own land you can
do what you want with the land, but that is not true. Zoning determines use and
value of land. It is not in the public interest to allow anyone to put a
hazardous waste dump in their backyard, build a manufacturing plant along the
Occoquan, mine uranium next to the water supply for the county or other
undesirable activities. Is it in the public interest to build 20 million square
feet of data centers in the rural area where just a few landowners make hundreds
of millions of dollars?
To evaluate the Rural Crescent you must consider its impact
on water resources and water ecology. While the Rural Crescent may have been
the wrong policy to preserve our agricultural heritage, it has been a success
at preserving water resources, protecting our groundwater and supporting the
ecosystem of our county. In addition, continued redevelopment of areas with
preexisting infrastructure would allow Prince William County to improve storm
water management in those areas and reduce sediment and nutrient pollution
under the EPA mandated TMDL as well as revitalize older areas of the county and
support of sustainable development. The Rural Crescent is about water, and
the costs to build out the infrastructure to support the rural area and replace
the groundwater resources diminished by development.
Prince William Service Authority, PWSA, obtains most of the
drinking water they distribute in the county wholesale from Fairfax Water.
Besides purchased water from Fairfax Water, PWSA operates the Evergreen water
wells that draw water directly from the Culpeper Basin and thousands of home
owners have private wells that also draw from the aquifer. The
Virginia-American Water Company also distributes water purchased from Fairfax
Water. Any changes in land use have the potential to negatively impact
groundwater, the watershed and the Occoquan Reservoir and significantly
increase demand for water.
Back in 2009 Amazon estimated that a 15 megawatt data center
can require up to 360,000 gallons of water a day- that is equivalent to more
than 1,000 households. In addition, their power usage is a 24/7 load- a base
load not easily replaced by renewable power sources and this proposal is to
quadruple the data centers currently existing in the county. Northern Virginia
reportedly has 166 data centers. This represents 1,027 megawatts of power
capacity-more than anywhere in the nation. Sixty percent of the currently
planned data centers nationally are to be built in Northern Virginia. That
represents a tremendous ongoing demand for power and water. By the way,
despite the PWC Digital Gateway proposed site being near to the existing
transmission lines, the existing infrastructure is inadequate to supply the
power need of 20 million square feet of data center-which is equal to all the
data centers (including those under construction) in Loudoun County. Based on estimates from the PEC and Greenpeace
that would require between 4.5 to 6 gigawatts of power. That is the power for 1-1.5
million households. Prince William County has fewer than 150,000 households currently.
While I would prefer to see the Rural Area left open space, I
do not know if that is even possible with our current elected Board of
Supervisors. Another proposal under consideration by the Board of Supervisors
is a TDR program. In a TDR program a landowner sells his or her development
rights to a developer leaving the land behind that can only be used for open
space or agriculture. The TDR program identifies sending areas, the Rural Area where
the rights can be purchased, and receiving areas where the rights can be used. Rationally,
receiving areas would be within or adjacent to well developed areas with roads,
power connections, water and sewer infrastructure as well as fiber optic cable
connections. Normally, these programs
are only used to increase the density of housing in receiving areas and
preserve open space.
Optimizing the “demand” for development rights in the receiving
areas was found in practice to be tricky. For the TDR market to thrive and
accomplish the locality’s policy goals, demand for development in receiving
areas must exceed the supply of “exported” development rights from sending
areas and they must be have adequate economic valuable to justify the effort to
accumulate and consolidate development rights.
The solution for Prince William County is obvious. All TDRs in
the Rural Area should be banked by the county for convenience of the purchasers. The
TDRs must grant the right to develop additional data centers outside the current
data center overlay district, and preferably also outside of the Rural Area
where infrastructure would need to be built. However, whatever land is used
should already have water, sewer and power infrastructure available at the
property edge to save the county residents the expense of building miles of
infrastructure. In addition, it is essential that only the Transferred Rural
Area Development Rights can grant that zone change to targeted properties. In this way all the rural property owners with
available development rights can sell those rights and share in the tremendous
windfall that rezoning land to data center grants and the Data Center developers
would be forced to buy them.
In this way all the development rights in the Rural Area can
be used up. All large parcel property owners can share in the wealth generated
by developing data centers and leave the citizens of Prince William County to
deal with the negative impacts.
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