Lawmakers, stakeholders are ready for summer of data center negotiations
[June 18, 2026]
By Nikoel Hytrek and UIS Public Affairs Reporting (PAR)
Lawmakers have a busy summer of negotiations ahead of them with pressure
from both the governor’s office and their constituents to craft data
center regulations that stakeholders and legislators can live with.
The pressure comes after lawmakers failed to pass any regulations during
the spring session, despite widespread concerns from Illinois
communities about data centers’ impact on energy demand, water, and
quality of life. Lawmakers say the issue is complex, and like with other
energy-related bills, they needed more information and time to decide
how to structure guardrails.
Early in June, Gov. JB Pritzker took executive action to pause tax
benefits for data centers and called on the General Assembly to pass
regulations that resemble those in the POWER Act, a bill that was
discussed in committee meetings but was never voted on.
Advocates earlier had lamented Pritzker’s “lack of engagement” in
legislative negotiations despite his clear record of calling for added
regulations.
From 2020-2024, the state pledged about $983 million in lifetime tax
benefits to 27 data centers, according to a state report.
Rep. Ann Williams, D-Chicago, said lawmakers will continue negotiating
data center regulations with stakeholders this summer, but no dates have
been established.
“I support the pause while we get a handle on how we’re going to put
some guardrails in place regarding data centers,” she said. “But I know
some of my colleagues are very interested in the development and the job
creation and the economic benefits that development on the scale of a
data center can provide.”
Williams chaired three House Executive Committee hearings about data
centers and their effects on energy demand, water and Illinois
communities. The hearings dealt with House Bill 5513, also known as the
POWER Act.

‘Wasn’t even close’
The bill would have required data centers to pay for and supply their
own renewable energy, track and report water usage and enter community
benefits agreements with the municipalities where they’re based.
Williams said it’s normal for large bills dealing with energy-related
issues to require a lot of negotiation and to take time to pass. The
2025 Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act and the 2021 Climate and
Equitable Jobs Act both passed in veto sessions after failing to advance
in the spring.
“We have a lot of stakeholders that are interested in the topic, a lot
of diverse viewpoints in the caucus,” she said. “So those are the kind
of issues that generally take a lot of conversations before they get
across the finish line.”
A last-minute push among some lawmakers to pause tax incentives also
failed because there was disagreement in the House Democratic caucus,
House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, said.
“Not only did it struggle, it wasn’t even close in my caucus. I believe
it was similar in the Senate,” Welch told Capitol News Illinois.

That hurdle is one of the major issues to overcome, and Williams said it
will be important to strike a balance between economic development,
protecting resources and protecting communities.
Williams said she personally plans to hold a few town hall-type meetings
in her district to hear what regulations people want to see, and she’s
interested in taking the question to residents across the state.
“Nothing is planned yet, but that’s just something a few of us— the
sponsor, or the Majority Leader (Robyn Gabel)—and I have talked about
with some of our working group members, so we’ll see if that comes,” she
said.
Communities around Illinois have resisted data centers, and there’s
bipartisan interest in creating guardrails for them, but the split
between environmental concerns, labor, and the data center industry is
significant.
What lobbyists say
Lobbyists from stakeholder organizations said they’ve been ready to meet
at the negotiating table and they’re only waiting for lawmakers to set
dates.
“I think it’s unfortunate that we didn’t actually really begin any
stakeholder negotiations,” Brad Tietz, director of state policy for the
Data Center Coalition, said. “We were prepared and able to do that. It
just never came to fruition.”
Tietz testified at every POWER Act hearing, and his position has long
been that the industry can negotiate on energy, water reporting and
community impact regulations. but he’s maintained the bill in question
is too broad and it unfairly singles out data centers when industries
like farming and manufacturing have similar energy and water impacts.
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Advocates rally for greater data center regulations at the Capitol
in April 2026. Ultimately, lawmakers adjourned their spring session
without taking action on the bill known as the POWER Act. (Capitol
News Illinois photo by Jenna Schweikert)

He said the Data Center Coalition suggested language to amend the
Illinois Water Use Act of 1983 and require all large water users to
report their usage. They’ve also suggested making the “bring your own
clean energy” provision voluntary and incentivizing data centers to do
it by letting them connect to the electricity grid faster. The POWER Act
made “bring your own clean energy” mandatory, but it also allowed data
centers to connect to the grid faster for doing it, and for meeting
other standards in the bill.
“The (POWER Act) language itself we don’t believe should be the starting
point,” he told Capitol News Illinois. “Like, let’s identify the broad
framework of things that we want to tackle in the Illinois General
Assembly and work from there.”
Tietz said he had some informal meetings with lawmakers to give them
more information and to get a sense of their priorities, but real
negotiations need to happen sooner rather than later.
“I think this kind of uncertainty is not helping the industry, but it’s
also obviously not helping the communities as well,” he said.
Labor unions
Climate Jobs Illinois, a collection of labor organizations dedicated to
a pro-worker, pro-climate agenda in Illinois, opposed Pritzker’s freeze
on data center tax benefits, saying the move will send developers to
other states where labor and environmental protections are weaker.
“Illinois didn’t become a national leader in clean energy policy by
reacting to polling and headlines,” it said in an emailed statement. “We
got here by doing the hard work of building durable frameworks that
protect workers, consumers, and the environment. This pause abandons
that approach entirely.”
The organization declined to comment on what it wants in negotiations,
saying it needs to see how the pause plays out. Joe Duffy, the lobbyist
representing the group, did attend committee hearings during session.
Environmental groups
Jen Walling, the executive director of the Illinois Environmental
Council, said she’s also ready to get into detailed negotiations.
“I know what we want in terms of guardrails, but I don’t know what labor
or some of the data center companies are going to want to see,” she
said.
The IEC is part of the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition, the group that has
advocated for the POWER Act, and the bill contains their regulatory
priorities.
“The coalition introduced the POWER Act because it offers the solutions
Illinoisans – and this moment – are demanding,” they said in an emailed
statement after Pritzker announced his tax benefit pause. “Consumers
cannot afford more delays. Now is the time to begin negotiations on
policies that will stop rising utility bills, protect our water, and end
backroom development deals, and we look forward to working with the
governor, legislators, and stakeholders to get this done in the Fall
veto session.”
Walling said she expects the POWER Act to be pared back in some areas,
but she doesn’t have details because she hasn’t met with the Data Center
Coalition. The IEC had some informal meetings with lawmakers during the
session, but she said those never went into detail or involved other
groups.
“I want lawmakers in the room to help us get this done,” she said.
“That’s the way we’ve done everything else, and that’s what I expect to
happen here.”
She said she expects something will pass either in veto session later
this year or in the January lame duck session.
A key obstacle for getting regulations over the finish line, Walling
said, was that both legislative chambers were rarely in session at the
same time this year. Before May, the House and Senate were only in
session at the same time for four weeks — two in February, one in March
and one in April.
“And so there’s very little time to have in-person meetings that
included leaders from both chambers. That made it really hard to get
anything done,” Walling said.
Though no dates have been established, she said there’s currently
“promising movement towards negotiations.”
“I do think the vast majority of General Assembly members want to do
something about it,” Walling said. “It’s just figuring out what.”
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