Sedgwick County commissioners on Jan. 14 adopted a 90‑day interim development control that pauses new data center applications in the county’s unincorporated areas while staff studies regulatory standards and community impacts. Chairman Ryan Beatty moved to adopt the resolution and the commission approved it by roll call.
Supporters said the pause will give county planning staff and the Metropolitan Area Planning Commission time to draft zoning amendments tailored to data-center operations. Deputy county counselor Kirk summarized the draft resolution’s core elements: it would freeze applications submitted after adoption for conditional use permits or building permits relating to data centers; define data centers as facilities that “principally house a group of networked computer servers for the storage, processing, management and dissemination of data”; assign MAPD and MAPC to review the unified zoning code; and set an expiration date of April 17, 2026, unless extended.
Commissioners described the action as a cautious, short-term step. Commissioner Wise and Commissioner Bluebaugh said the solar‑policy process provides research models and urged staff to apply lessons learned. Commissioner Howe asked that planning staff loop back to commissioners with questions and flagged that battery‑storage facilities may require parallel consideration. The chair said the pause is meant to allow “staff to thoroughly review the issue, provide feedback, provide data, and other research” before rules are adopted.
The resolution is legislative in character and applies countywide in unincorporated Sedgwick County; it does not target any existing applicant or specific parcel. The draft text (summarized by Kirk) allows the commission to extend, shorten or terminate the pause by subsequent resolution. The board recorded ayes on the motion to adopt, making the interim control effective immediately.
Next steps identified by commissioners include drafting concrete zoning amendments, soliciting input from the Greater Wichita Partnership and comparable jurisdictions, and clarifying utility, water‑use, setbacks and reuse policies that commissioners said are most relevant to data centers’ long‑term impacts.
The county’s action does not create permanent rules; staff expects to return with proposed ordinance language and recommendations before the pause expires.