LANSING, Mich. – As proposals for large AI and data-center campuses in both Saline Township and Howell Township face mounting resistance and regulatory delays, Senate Majority Leader Winnie Brinks says Michigan must be prepared, but only with proper protections, transparency, and community input.
“Data centers are coming to the United States, and the entire world, you know, very quickly,” Brinks said in an interview at the WDIV studios in Downtown Detroit on Monday, Dec. 8. “And there are huge advantages to us from the computing power that those centers create.”
Saline Township: Regulators pass deadline, project in limbo…