Hill County, Texas voted unanimously on Thursday 4 June to rescind its moratorium on data-centre development, not because a court ordered it but to cap taxpayer liability. The county had blocked RCM Hill LLC's 1,235 MW Project Aquila campus near Hillsboro; on Thursday 28 May the developer sued for $100 million, calling the freeze an unconstitutional taking of property . Seven days later the county folded. 1
Rescinding the moratorium did not end the litigation. RCM Hill still seeks a court declaration that the original freeze was unlawful, plus damages dated from the day it passed. That keeps the Fifth Amendment taking question alive even with no moratorium left to challenge. The Fifth Amendment bars government from taking private property without compensation, and developers are now testing whether a building freeze counts as exactly that. A ruling for RCM Hill would chill every other county weighing a ban.
The county did not abandon oversight altogether. It replaced the moratorium with disclosure rules: applicants must now declare water use, traffic, noise and economic effect, and notify the public more widely than before.
Three moratoriums have now fallen by three different routes. Maine's first-in-nation statewide ban fell to a governor's veto ; Prince William County's fast-track rezoning fell to an appellate court ; Hill County fell to a single lawyer's letter. Each consent tool has met a sharper instrument of restraint, and developers have learned that the threat of a ruling can work faster than the ruling itself.
