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Residents press Harlingen commission for transparency on data‑center water deals and urge return of moratorium discussion

May 07, 2026 | Harlingen, Cameron County, Texas


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Residents press Harlingen commission for transparency on data‑center water deals and urge return of moratorium discussion
Residents used the city commission's citizen‑communication period to demand clarity and action over reported water deals tied to proposed data centers.

Luis Valdespino, who identified himself by address, asked the commission to publicly discuss a reported contract between Harlingen Water Works and RGV Property LLC that, he said, would charge the company $0.75 per 1,000 gallons up to a set threshold and could amount to roughly a $3.375 million annual discount compared with published effluent rates. "This means HWWS agreed to at least a $3,375,000 annual discount for 4,600,000 gallons of water per day for the data centers," Valdespino told commissioners, asking for transparency about whether the city has budgeted matching obligations for grant applications and what the ecological impact on the Arroyo Colorado would be.

Isaac Amani Newman pressed the commission to restore a previously discussed moratorium on data centers and any extraordinary water‑supply commitments. Newman told the commission the moratorium item "was added to the agenda in March ... and then it was taken off of the agenda," and asked that commissioners clarify the city's position at the upcoming State of the City. He criticized the process as opaque and urged elected officials to act publicly rather than through closed meetings.

Why it matters: Commenters tied concerns about municipal water pricing and long‑term water supply to broader questions about economic development, public oversight and environmental effects on the Arroyo Colorado. The claims in public comment referred to a press report and arithmetic that were not adjudicated during the meeting; staff did not provide a detailed rebuttal on the record during the citizen‑comment period.

What commissioners and staff said: Commission members thanked the speakers and invited them to follow up with staff; staff and the commission did not announce an immediate scheduling of a moratorium or a public staff response to the specific contract arithmetic during this meeting.

Next steps: Public commenters asked for the commission to put water‑supply commitments and any proposed moratorium back on the agenda and to provide a public accounting of contract terms and projected impacts to the Arroyo Colorado. Staff and commissioners indicated they would take up follow‑up tasks but did not commit to a date in the transcript.

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