Oselote/Getty Images
- Oklahoma residents attended a meeting to discuss a proposed data center in Claremore.
- During the public comment portion, authorities arrested a man for trespassing.
- The man spoke for about 30 seconds over his allotted time.
Applause broke out during an Oklahoma man's speech at a city council meeting on Tuesday to discuss a proposed data center. A minute later, shouts of disbelief rang out across the room.
"Disgusting!" one woman shouted as Claremore Police Department officers handcuffed and escorted Daniel Blanchard out of the room.
Authorities said they arrested Blanchard, whose speech exceeded the three-minute time limit, for trespassing.
Over 100 people, including Blanchard, had gathered in a ballroom at Rogers State University in Claremore to voice their opinions about the large data center project. The developer, Beale Infrastructure, is proposing a campus in the Claremore Industrial Park that includes data centers, supporting infrastructure, and office space.
Blanchard was among the residents who opted to speak during the public comment portion, which limits each person to three minutes. In his speech, Blanchard spoke about what he considered compliance issues related to the potential data centers.
"The Claremore Industrial Economic Development Authority has a fiduciary responsibility to the public, not to build infrastructure. And this act of overreach is putting the health and safety of members of this community at risk," he said.
AI is driving a data center construction boom across the United States. While companies like OpenAI argue that building new data centers will reindustrialize the US economy and create jobs, residents of towns where developers are proposing new data centers worry about their impact on power grids, water resources, pollution, and overall quality of life.
In an investigation published in September, Business Insider reported that over 1,200 data centers had already been built or were approved for construction across the country.
The proposed data center in Claremore, a suburban hub of Tulsa home to about 20,000 people, has divided the town. During the three-hour meeting on Tuesday evening, dozens of residents spoke both in favor and against the project.
Blanchard exceeded his three minutes by about 30 seconds before police officers approached him. He gathered his notes and calmly followed the officers to the front of the hall, where town officials were sitting.
In a video of the meeting posted by the town on its YouTube channel, Blanchard appears to hand his notes to a council member. At that point, police arrested Blanchard, placing him in handcuffs. The crowd hollered in shock.
In a statement, the Claremore Police Department said officers aren't responsible for enforcing city council rules and only become involved in city council meetings when an official orders them to remove an individual.
"The man's position on the issues, what he said, or his unwillingness to follow rules of the meeting played no part in the officer's decision to arrest him," the statement said. "He was arrested for trespassing in compliance with the law and with the hope of restoring order to an important meeting."
A local politician fighting the data center project posted to X on Wednesday that Blanchard has been released from jail. The next council meeting is scheduled for March 2.