See It. Snap It. Text It.

DEKALB County seal, police badges, and stars displayed on a map with the motto "Forward Together".

As a reminder, you are able to submit anonymous tips via text messages directly to DeKalb County Police Department.

If you see something suspicious in our community or have specific information about a crime that has occurred in the area, please submit any information, photos, or videos via text message to the DeKalb County Police Department, text the keyword DKPD and your tip to 847411.

There are additional options to submit concerns or tips at https://tip411.com/landing/dekalbcogapd
Tips will be reviewed by our agency personnel, who may respond to ask for more details and continue the anonymous conversation with you. Tips are entirely anonymous, and your contact information is not transmitted to our agency. Learn more about this effort here: DeKalb County Police Launch New tip411 Anonymous Tip System for Customized Crimefighting | DeKalb County, GA

Please do not use this form to report emergencies or requests that require immediate law enforcement response. In an emergency, always call 911. If you have a non-emergency request for agency assistance, please contact us at 404-294-2911.

Taking Charge of Our Future: DeKalb’s New Data Center Playbook

For too long, local governments have played defense when massive tech companies roll into town. The old playbook was just trying to mitigate the damage—making a data center slightly less noisy or slightly less ugly. But mitigation isn’t a community benefit. It just makes a massive industrial intrusion slightly less painful.

These hyperscale facilities extract immense value from our land and our power grid. In exchange, we must extract generational value for our neighborhoods. As recent reporting highlights, the under-the-radar climate impacts of data centers are staggering—these buildings are essentially giant heaters. We aren’t going to let our communities absorb the costs while tech giants walk away with the profits.

If a data center wants to build here, they have to become an active, positive part of our civic and ecological infrastructure. Here is the strict new baseline we are demanding before any facility gets a green light.

Part 1: Strict Zoning Limits & A Hard Cap on Size

We are ending the era of rubber-stamping unchecked industrial sprawl.

  • The 500,000 Sq. Ft. Cap: We are drawing a line in the sand. No single data center facility in DeKalb County will be permitted to exceed 500,000 square feet. Massive, million-square-foot mega-campuses are simply not a fit for our communities.
  • Mandatory Special Land Use Permits (SLUP): Data centers are no longer a “by-right” use. Every proposed facility will be required to go through the SLUP process. That means they face intense county scrutiny, community input, and a public vote by the Board of Commissioners before they can build.

Part 2: Environmental & Power Protections

Before a shovel hits the dirt, developers have to prove they aren’t harming our microclimates or draining our local grid.

  • 100% Renewable Energy Mandate: Data centers cannot just plug into the grid and burn fossil fuels. We are requiring operators to power their facilities with renewable sources, relying on on-site solar energy generation and clean energy power purchase agreements to offset their massive footprint.
  • Ban on Toxic Diesel Generators: When the grid blinks, data centers usually fire up massive, polluting diesel generators. Not in DeKalb. We are mandating the use of industrial-scale battery storage systems for all backup power needs. Leave the diesel in the past.
  • Neighborhood Battery Microgrids: Since we are requiring those massive battery systems, they shouldn’t just sit there. Facilities must design their battery storage to act as a bidirectional microgrid, pushing power back into the surrounding residential grid to keep the lights on in our neighborhoods during a blackout.
  • Targeting the Urban Heat Island Effect: Data centers blast out industrial levels of heat, fundamentally changing the temperatures of the surrounding blocks. Developers must conduct comprehensive Environmental Impact Assessments measuring this thermal impact at the property line.
  • Mandatory Cooling Interventions: To counteract this heat, we will require massive on-site mitigation, including a mandated 50% tree canopy coverage, “cool” high-albedo roofs, and green roofing.
  • Neighborhood Cooling Funds: If the developer physically cannot meet the on-site canopy requirements, they will pay a fee-in-lieu directly into a ring-fenced fund. Those dollars will be spent only in the immediate surrounding neighborhoods to plant street trees, build park shade structures, and protect the community from the heat.

Part 3: Water Stewardship & Environmental Justice Auditing

Data centers are notorious for consuming millions of gallons of local drinking water for their massive cooling towers and then dumping the heated, chemically treated water back into the municipal sewer system. In DeKalb County, our water is a vital public resource, not a cheap industrial coolant.

  • Mandatory Closed-Loop Cooling: We are banning “open-loop” and evaporative cooling systems that constantly drain municipal water. All data centers must utilize advanced “closed-loop” cooling systems that recycle water continuously or use state-of-the-art liquid and air-cooling technologies. If they need water, they must use reclaimed gray water, not DeKalb’s potable drinking supply.
  • On-Site Pre-Treatment: Any wastewater that a facility does discharge must be fully pre-treated on-site. We will not allow data centers to dump PFAS laden chemically treated industrial runoff into our aging sewer infrastructure or place an undue burden on the Snapfinger Wastewater Treatment Plant and the South River watershed.
  • Auditing by the Environmental Justice Commission: We are not just writing these rules; we are enforcing them. The newly established Environmental Justice and Sustainability Resident Review Group will act as the public watchdog. This resident-led commission is legally empowered to audit the water, energy, and thermal data reported by the data centers. They will conduct regular reviews to ensure these facilities are hitting their sustainability targets, protecting our high-risk neighborhoods, and fully honoring the terms of their Community Benefit Agreements. If the developers break their promises, the EJ Commission will bring it directly to the Board of Commissioners to hold them accountable.

IF A DATA CENTER IS APPROVED….

Part 4: The “Public Dividend” Community Benefit Agreement

We are requiring a Community Benefit Agreement (CBA) to get a zoning permit or a tax break. This is the new cost of doing business.

  • The “DeKalb AI” Compute Carve-Out: We are requiring a 2% in-kind capacity carve-out. The developer must provide free, dedicated, high-speed server space to power the DeKalb County School System’s next-generation tech, run local government services, and—crucially—host a secure, private “DeKalb AI Assistant” that is totally free and accessible to every single one of our nearly 800,000 residents.
  • Small Business Access: If you run a local business with under 50 employees, you will get access to a portal powered by this free capacity, giving mom-and-pop shops the same AI logistics and marketing power as corporate giants.
  • Emory Health Research Mission: We will dedicate a portion of this free server space strictly to local university partners like Emory, giving researchers the massive computing power they need to run models to cure cancer and drive public health breakthroughs.
  • The AI Tech Dividend Fund: As a firm fiscal policy from the Board of Commissioners, we will not allow all of the new tax revenue generated by these massive developments to vanish into the county’s general fund. Instead, we are ring-fencing a dedicated ratio of those tax revenues directly into a neighborhood fund. This money will be used to install rooftop solar, upgrade HVACs, and weatherize the homes of low-income residents and seniors living near the facility, wiping out their power bills and offsetting the neighborhood grid strain.
  • Waste-Heat Indoor Farming: Instead of venting heat into the sky, we will require developers to pipe that thermal exhaust into adjacent vertical indoor farms. We will partner with local agricultural co-ops to grow fresh food year-round for our local food banks.
  • WorkSource DeKalb Global Training: We are mandating a tech training pipeline focused on residents living within a 3-mile radius. We aren’t just training folks to work in the local facility—we are paying for globally recognized certifications so our neighbors can step into high-paying tech jobs anywhere in the world.

Have Your Say

This is a turning point for how we handle industrial growth. We want to hear from you. Please step up to the mic during public comment and let us know what you think about stopping massive data centers, holding them accountable, and securing a true public dividend for our neighborhoods.

Short-Term Rental Licensing and Compliance

Chalkboard shaped like a house with "Rental Law" text, next to a wooden gavel.

The DeKalb County Planning & Sustainability Department launched the short-term rental program on May 20, 2026. All DeKalb County short-term rental owners/operators must apply for and obtain a Short-Term Rental License within 30 days to comply.

What is a Short-Term Rental (STR)?

A short-term rental is the rental of any room, lodging, or overnight accommodation for a period not exceeding thirty (30) consecutive days, including properties advertised through platforms such as Airbnb, VRBO, Booking.com, and similar services.

Beginning May 20, 2026: Owners/operators of short-term rentals in unincorporated DeKalb County will be required to:

• Apply for and obtain a Short-Term Rental license

• Designate a 24-hour local contact/agent

• Comply with noise, nuisance, parking, and safety regulations

• Remit the required 8% Hotel/Motel Excise tax on the 20th of every month

Important Information

• Short-term rentals are prohibited from being advertised or used as party houses or event venues.

• Short-term rentals located within locally designated historic districts are not eligible for approval.

• All applications will be submitted annually through the County’s Business License Division.

Please Note: If you are applying for a Short-Term Rental license, do not utilize the County’s ePermitting system. The official Short Term Rental application process launched on May 20, 2026, and is available at the following link: https://portal.deckard.com/ga-dekalb-str-portal

Stay Informed

Visit the Engage DeKalb Short-Term Rental webpage for updates, ordinance information, FAQs, and implementation details: https://engagedekalb.dekalbcountyga.gov/short-term-rental

DeKalb Commissioner Ted Terry Advocates for Equitable Policies And Compost Expansion Amidst Proposed Sanitation Rate Increase

May 29 UPDATE: The DeKalb County Board of Commissioners will be hosting a Stormwater and Sanitation Rate Increase Town Hall on June 10, 6:30 PM at 178 Sams Street, Decatur, GA 30030 (Multipurpose Room A1201). For more information and RSVP click here. This Town Hall is hosted by the entire Board of Commissioners. This is a public meeting, open to all, RSVP is not necessary.

DEKALB COUNTY – On May 22, 2026, the DeKalb County Public Works and Infrastructure Committee held a special called meeting that included discussion on Agenda Item 2026-0930 “Sanitation Department Increase of Commercial & Residential Service Fees, Landfill, and Transfer Station Tipping Fees.”

“I have heard directly from my constituents living by the landfill that they were told in the 70s or 80s that the landfill would close after 20 years and become a park. Many longtime residents moved into the neighborhood without knowing a landfill was nearby,” said DeKalb Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry. “When they hear landfill expansion and new cell construction in 2027, they hear environmental injustice. If we increase our Sanitation Rates, we must also achieve environmental redress for these disproportionately burdened communities. This should include financial relief, assistance with air filters, and diverting our food waste which we know decreases methane air pollution and smell.”

Commissioner Terry’s Policy Priorities Included:

  • Adjusting the “Minimum Scale Fee- Any Material Up to 999 lbs” to a tiered rate system based on weight: In 2023, this fee was increased from $16.50 to $48 and disproportionally affects those that wish to dump small items, such as a bag of trash. Commissioner Terry is advocating for a tiered system modeled after Rome, GA’s that will allow DeKalb residents with small tonnage to pay an equitable fee.
  • Adjusting the Tire Tip Fee: This is currently being discussed at the Board of Commissioners in the form of Agenda Item 2025-0744. Commissioner Terry’s office has found since increasing the Tire Tip Fee in 2023 from $1 to $10 there has been a 56% decrease in tires received at the landfill under the “Resident-Paying” account. Keep DeKalb Beautiful, the beautification unit that hosts illegal dumping clean ups, has increased their tire tipping by 359% from 2022. It is believed this previous rate increase has exasperated a tire dumping problem throughout DeKalb County and the fee should be adjusted to encourage tipping at the landfill rather than dumping.
  • Enhance Environmental Equity: This is currently being discussed at the Board of Commissioners in the form of Agenda Item 2025-1787. It includes details such as an air purifier / HVAC filter rebate policy, composting program, residential notification, real time monitoring and alert system, and odor monitoring adjustment. Most pivotal to this item is the proposed 50%-10% discount for residents within a 2 mile radius. Commissioner Terry’s office found following the current proposed rate increase by 2030 the cost of this discount would be a little more than $2.1 million for the County.
  • Make Right on DeKalb County’s Promise to Expand Food Scraps Composting through Funding a Composting Feasibility Study: In previous policies, including the last Sanitation Rate Increase, DeKalb County has committed to enhancing composting services. Commissioner Terry is advocating that DeKalb County should fund a Compost Feasibility Study to establish the best place the county could develop a compost facility that includes food scraps compost.
  • Incentivizing Municipalities to Offer City Wide Food Scraps Composting Programs by Keeping the 2022 Base Rates and Possibly Lowering Yard Waste Tip Fees Should a Threshold Percentage of Composting Participants Be Met: In 2023, Avondale Estates, Chamblee, and Decatur kept their 2022 base rates, avoiding the tipping rate increase of $95 at Seminole and $100 at the Transfer Stations. Commissioner Terry’s office found by avoiding this rate increase the cities may be saving $90k – $600k a year. Commissioner Terry is advocating these tipping fees not be right sized if cities provide food waste composting programs city wide to residents. Additionally, he is advocating for the possibility of yard waste tipping fees to decrease if cities reach at least 35% of resident compost participation. It is believed these savings would allow cities to fund composting programs.
  • Providing a Senior Discount on the Sanitation Fee for Seniors who Qualify for the Senior Homestead Exemption

The Proposed Rate Increase as Stated in the “Purpose” of the Agenda Item:

“To approve Sanitation’s proposed increase in commercial service fees, residential fees, and landfill & transfer station tipping fees. The increase will occur incrementally over the next five (5) years, beginning 2026 through 2030 (see below).

 ActualProposedProposedProposedProposedProposed
 202520262027202820292030
Residential Service Fee0%24.8%10%10%10%5%
Commercial Service Fee0%24.8%10%10%10%5%
Landfill/Transfer Station Service Fee0%5%5%5%5%5%
All Other Services Fee0%24.8%10%10%10%5%

This item is still in committee and may change, given the committee requested the administration run additional scenarios that may allow for a lower percentage in the first year to ease residents into the rate increase. Additionally, the committee discussed continuing the conversation with residents in a town hall tentatively set for Thursday, June 4. The goal of this Town Hall would be to discuss both the proposed Storm Water Rate Increase (Agenda Item 2026-0587) and the Sanitation Fee Rate Increase.

Commissioner Terry Introduces Resolution That Allocates Tax Revenue Generated by Data Centers to Support Direct Resident Equity and Environmental Restoration

The resolution establishes a “DeKalb for the People AI Tech Dividend Fund,” the mechanism in which tax revenues can be captured and dedicated towards qualifying expenditures.

*media interviews available*

DEKALB COUNTY – On January 6, 2026, Commissioner Terry introduced a resolution to “Establish aDeKalb For The People AI Tech Dividend Fund and Fiscal Stability Policy” which if approved will allocate 50% of ad valorem tax revenue generated specifically by High-Technology Data Centers to support direct resident equity and environmental restoration, 25% to bolster the “human touch” of county government, including Libraries, Senior & Youth Services, and Beautification, to forestall residential tax increases, and 25% towards a General Fund Reserves “Rainy Day Fund until the County achieves a fiscally prudent 90-day operating fund balance.

“Data centers are here and knocking on DeKalb County’s door. I am proud DeKalb County has committed to developing strong regulations that will ensure community protections if one may be built,” said Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry. “But we can’t stop at regulations. One data center is estimated to bring in millions of dollars of tax revenue into the county. We must ensure these funds go directly back into the community that may be the most burdened by these facilities. That these funds purchase greenspace, build sidewalks, assist with energy burden through weatherization projects, provide job training infrastructure, and so much more the community may need. That is environmental justice for our DeKalb residents.”

The resolution also indicates the “For the People AI Tech Dividend Fund” shall prioritize those most directly affected by industrial growth and outlines “Primary Impact Zones [as] neighborhoods within a 3-mile radius of a data center or heavy industrial cluster shall receive priority for “Greenway” connectivity and energy relief” as well as “Equity Priority Areas [where] funding shall be targeted toward census tracts meeting Justice40 criteria and having high Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) burdens, ensuring the dividend reaches those with the greatest need.” Further, the resolution highlights “Humanity First” pillars that emphasize qualifying expenditures for funding. These pillars include:

  • “The Energy Equity Pillar: Direct residential utility assistance and grants for home solar/weatherization to shield families from industrial-driven grid inflation.
  • The AI Workforce Transition Pillar: Scholarships and retraining via WorkSource DeKalb to “future-proof” residents against AI-driven economic shifts.
  • The Digital-to-Green Trust: Funding of the County-wide Green Infrastructure Network—comprised of trails and sidewalks and buffer land acquisition—connecting neighborhoods to parks and schools, with an emphasis on creating physical forest buffers in industrial zones.”

This resolution will be deferred to the Finance and Budget (FAB) Committee, which is the committee of jurisdiction to vet before it is returned to the Board of Commission for approval.  FAB meets on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the Month from 3:30pm to 5:00pm and can be viewed live or at a later time on the DCTV website.

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ABOUT DeKalb County Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry:

In 2020, Commissioner Ted Terry was elected to serve as the Super District 6 Commissioner of DeKalb County. His district includes half of the County with portions of South, Central, and North DeKalb, totaling approximately 350,000 residents. He successfully was reelected and began his second term in January 2025.

Commissioner Terry’s policy priorities include the DeKalb Green New Deal and former President Biden’s Justice 40 initiatives, affordable housing, transit equity, protecting voting rights for DeKalb residents, and criminal justice reform. Commissioner Terry serves as the Chair of Finance and Budget (FAB) and is a member of the Planning, Economic Development and Community Service (PECS) committee. He previously served as the Chair of the Employee Relations and Public Safety committee (ERPS) and Chair of the Operations Committee (OPS) and as a member of the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee (PWI).

The Commissioner also serves as a member of the National Association of Counties (NACo) as a member of the Healthy Counties Advisory Board, International Economic Development Task Force, Large Urban County Caucus (LUCC) Member, Resilient Counties Advisory Board Member, and Environment, Energy, and Land Use (EELU) Policy Steering Committee. Locally serves on theGeorgia Council for International Visitors Board of Trustees.

Prior to his election, Commissioner Terry served as the Mayor of the most ethnically diverse square mile in America: Clarkston, Georgia from January 2014 – March 2020, where he was the youngest Mayor in Clarkston’s 135-year history.

He resides in DeKalb County with his wife Andrea and 4-legged fur-babies.

To learn more about Commissioner Terry, his platforms and how to stay up to date on the latest from his office, visit www.commissionertedterry.com.

Follow the Commissioner on social media:

Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn

Opinion: Campaign slogans promising ‘all-or-nothing’ property tax relief are reckless

couple reviewing paperwork

We can protect Georgia’s older residents without gutting public services for our communities. Let’s choose a targeted policy.

Re: “Stop using Georgia seniors as a piggy bank. Give them property tax relief.,” by state Rep. David Clark, R-Buford.

Rep. Clark and I agree on a fundamental truth: No Georgian who has spent a lifetime building a community should be forced out of it by a tax bill.

The anxiety of rising property assessments is real, and for seniors on fixed incomes, it is an existential threat to their ability to age in place.

However, acknowledging a problem is easy; solving it responsibly is the hard work of governance.


As a DeKalb County commissioner who must balance a nearly $2 billion budget every year — prioritizing public health, safety and core services — I know that catchy slogans like “taxes are un-American” do not pave roads, put out fires or staff ambulances.

Clark’s proposed “Seniors Security Act,” while well-intentioned, is a blunt instrument that threatens the very services our seniors rely on. We need a surgical approach, not a sledgehammer.

Clark’s plan to waive taxes on the first $500,000 of home value for all seniors, regardless of income, is fiscally reckless. Under his “all-or-nothing” approach, a wealthy retiree in a luxury estate would receive the same tax break as a retired teacher struggling to pay for groceries. Why should working families subsidize tax cuts for millionaires who can easily afford their fair share?

How DeKalb County helps older residents today


In DeKalb County, we already have a framework for senior exemptions — with escalators based on age and income up to 70 years old, that provide additional tax breaks.

Currently, our county-level exemptions — which apply to the maintenance and operations taxes that fund services like police, parks and roads — are tied to income limits that haven’t always kept pace with inflation.

Instead of abolishing this portion of the tax base entirely, we should aggressively expand targeted exemptions.

I’d suggest Clark focus first on raising the base income threshold for senior tax exemptions to $75,000 with increased income limits as residents age (in DeKalb, that is $110,568 federal adjusted gross for seniors age 70-plus). This would provide substantial relief to the working- and middle-class seniors who truly need it, ensuring they are not priced out of their homes, while maintaining the revenue necessary to run the county.

Clark tries to offset the massive cost of his plan by pointing to “waste,” citing $1.7 million in arts funding within a $37 billion state budget. This is a distraction.

That sum is a rounding error that wouldn’t cover a fraction of the deficit his plan would create. If we want to talk about “piggy banks,” let’s discuss the massive tax breaks Georgia hands out to billionaire tech giants and data centers that strain our power grid, and increase power bills while creating few permanent jobs.

Furthermore, if we truly want to help seniors’ pocketbooks, we must look beyond just property taxes to utility bills — often a senior’s second-largest expense. Many seniors live in older, poorly insulated homes. Yet, the state Legislature has dragged its feet on “energy freedom” policies that would allow homeowners to easily generate their own power via solar and invest in efficiency. Enabling seniors to lower their energy costs could save them thousands annually — permanent, structural relief that doesn’t bankrupt the local fire department.


Tackle housing and utility costs as a solution
We also cannot ignore the housing crisis itself. True “family values” means creating a housing cycle that works for every generation. Currently, restrictive state building codes and local zoning laws largely prevent the construction of “missing middle” housing — smaller cottages, duplexes and accessory dwelling units.

Many seniors want to downsize to more manageable, cost-efficient homes in their own neighborhoods, but those options simply don’t exist. By encouraging this type of housing, we allow seniors to cash out their equity and reduce their expenses, while freeing up larger family homes for young families just starting out. This is a free-market solution that supports aging in place without a government handout.

Finally, we must reject the cynical notion that funding our community is “un-American.” Investing in the places we live is the most American thing we do. Property taxes fund the “Core Four”: health, public safety, infrastructure and education. When a senior calls 911, they expect professionals to respond to their emergency with speed and care. When they drive to the pharmacy, they expect a safe road. These are not “government waste.” They are the bedrock of the freedom we cherish.

We can protect our seniors without gutting our communities. Let’s choose a targeted policy that supports the vulnerable, demands fairness from the wealthy, and embraces energy and housing freedom. That is how we deliver real security — not with a slogan, but with a plan.

See Commissioner Terry’s Atlanta Journal Constitution here.

DeKalb County Board of Commissioners Passes Resolution to Establish the Environmental Justice and Sustainability Resident Review Group

Recognizing the importance of equitable protection for the environment and residential health while giving community members a seat at the table to further environmental justice in DeKalb County.

*media interviews available*

DEKALB COUNTY – On December 16, 2025, The DeKalb County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution establishing an Environmental Justice and Sustainability Resident Review Group. The stated mission of the advisory group is to provide professional and resident advice to the Board of Commissioners for their use in policy decisions involving issues of sustainability, green jobs, energy initiatives and environmental justice as well as monitor the progress and make recommendations towards current environmental efforts such as the County’s 100% Clean Energy and Transportation Transition Plan. The resolution, introduced by Super District 6 Commissioner, Ted Terry, comes amid growing concerns by residents about the proliferation of data centers and their impact on the environment and public health.

“Today, environmental justice topics manifest in the form of data centers, energy burden, and pollution,” said Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry. “If we are to prioritize environmental justice and a clean energy transition, we must do so with the input of those who are directly affected and relevant professionals who can provide vital data to inform policy decisions. We cannot advocate for the community that we serve without centering community voice.”

The resolution charges the Review Group with an annual report, which would include a review of statutes, rules and policies related to DeKalb County’s siting and land use decisions, with a focus on sites which would pose a threat to human health. The report would also include a review and recommendation of potential policies and operating procedures that would highlight considerations of environmental equality, environmental justice, and protection of high-risk areas.

More details about the resolution can be found here.

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ABOUT DeKalb County Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry:

In 2020, Commissioner Ted Terry was elected to serve as the Super District 6 Commissioner of DeKalb County. His district includes half of the County with portions of South, Central, and North DeKalb, totaling approximately 350,000 residents. He successfully was reelected and began his second term in January 2025.

Commissioner Terry’s policy priorities include the DeKalb Green New Deal and former President Biden’s Justice 40 initiatives, affordable housing, transit equity, protecting voting rights for DeKalb residents, and criminal justice reform. Commissioner Terry serves as the Chair of Finance and Budget (FAB) and is a member of the Planning, Economic Development and Community Service (PECS) committee. He previously served as the Chair of the Employee Relations and Public Safety committee (ERPS) and Chair of the Operations Committee (OPS) and as a member of the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee (PWI).

The Commissioner also serves as a member of the National Association of Counties (NACo) as a member of the Healthy Counties Advisory Board, International Economic Development Task Force, Large Urban County Caucus (LUCC) Member, Resilient Counties Advisory Board Member, and Environment, Energy, and Land Use (EELU) Policy Steering Committee. Locally serves on theGeorgia Council for International Visitors Board of Trustees.

Prior to his election, Commissioner Terry served as the Mayor of the most ethnically diverse square mile in America: Clarkston, Georgia from January 2014 – March 2020, where he was the youngest Mayor in Clarkston’s 135-year history.

He resides in DeKalb County with his wife Andrea and 4-legged fur-babies.

To learn more about Commissioner Terry, his platforms and how to stay up to date on the latest from his office, visit www.commissionertedterry.com.

Follow the Commissioner on social media: Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn

Commissioner Terry Advocates for an Extension of the Data Center Moratorium for 12 Months- Calls for Independent Environmental and Public Health Study

Data Center image

The motion fails by a 3-4 vote. The final vote on the item extended the moratorium for six months, to June 23, 2026.

*media interviews available*

DEKALB COUNTY – On December 16, 2025, Agenda Item 2025-1694: “Application of the Director of Planning and Sustainability to extend a moratorium on the permitting or other authorization of any new data centers, or the expansion of any existing data centers, in Unincorporated DeKalb County” was discussed to extend the data center moratorium to March 26, 2026.

Commissioner Ted Terry advocated instead the moratorium be extended for 12 months, to the last meeting in December 2026, to allow for additional time for DeKalb County to conduct an independent Environmental and Public Health Study.

“Residents are worried about noise near homes, parks, and trails. They are worried about air quality and the health impacts of diesel generators and increased fossil-fuel generation. They are worried about water use, stormwater runoff, and potential impacts on local streams and drinking water systems. They are worried about grid reliability and whether massive energy users will strain neighborhood power systems. And they are worried about equity — about whether communities that have historically hosted landfills and heavy industrial uses are once again being asked to absorb the impacts of yet another speculative development with adverse outcomes.” Said Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry.

In a statement by Commissioner Terry, he indicated the study should examine but not be limited to noise, air quality, diesel emissions, water use, stormwater impacts, heat, grid strain, and climate implications. He also indicated it should evaluate how these impacts intersect with existing environmental burdens and health disparities across the county.

This motion failed by a 3-4 vote. The final vote on the item extended the moratorium for six months, to June 23, 2026, but did not include mention of the independent Environmental and Public Health Study.

Additionally, the DeKalb County Board of Commissioners voted on Agenda Item 2025-0972 “Application of the Director of Planning and Sustainability to amend Chapter 27 to Establish a Definition, Regulatory Guidelines, and Development Standards for Data Centers in M (Industrial), M-2 (Heavy Industrial), O-I (Office-Institutional), and O-D (Office-Distribution) zoning districts. This text amendment is County-wide.” To better align with the moratorium and allow the regulations to include details from a possible independent Environmental and Public Health Study, Commissioner Terry advocated to defer to June. The final vote deferred the item to January 27, 2026.

A data center moratorium was originally introduced as Agenda Item 2025-0996 by Commissioner Ted Terry and approved on July 8, 2025. Agenda Item 2025-1694, voted on today, is the fourth data center moratorium introduced this year.

###

ABOUT DeKalb County Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry:

In 2020, Commissioner Ted Terry was elected to serve as the Super District 6 Commissioner of DeKalb County. His district includes half of the County with portions of South, Central, and North DeKalb, totaling approximately 350,000 residents. He successfully was reelected and began his second term in January 2025.

Commissioner Terry’s policy priorities include the DeKalb Green New Deal and former President Biden’s Justice 40 initiatives, affordable housing, transit equity, protecting voting rights for DeKalb residents, and criminal justice reform. Commissioner Terry serves as the Chair of Finance and Budget (FAB) and is a member of the Planning, Economic Development and Community Service (PECS) committee. He previously served as the Chair of the Employee Relations and Public Safety committee (ERPS) and Chair of the Operations Committee (OPS) and as a member of the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee (PWI).

The Commissioner also serves as a member of the National Association of Counties (NACo) as a member of the Healthy Counties Advisory Board, International Economic Development Task Force, Large Urban County Caucus (LUCC) Member, Resilient Counties Advisory Board Member, and Environment, Energy, and Land Use (EELU) Policy Steering Committee. Locally serves on theGeorgia Council for International Visitors Board of Trustees.

Prior to his election, Commissioner Terry served as the Mayor of the most ethnically diverse square mile in America: Clarkston, Georgia from January 2014 – March 2020, where he was the youngest Mayor in Clarkston’s 135-year history.

He resides in DeKalb County with his wife Andrea and 4-legged fur-babies.

To learn more about Commissioner Terry, his platforms and how to stay up to date on the latest from his office, visit www.commissionertedterry.com.

Follow the Commissioner on social media:Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn

South DeKalb Data Center Town Hall

Data Center Town Hall meeting

Join Commissioner Terry and the Super District 6 Team in learning more about the proposed DeKalb County Data Center regulations, Commissioner Terry’s goals for the regulations to be stronger and greener and share your thoughts and questions. This Town Hall is set up to be primarily for audience participation, comments, and questions. See the latest update on the data center text amendments here.

  • A virtual option was available but experienced technical difficulties. This recording occurred after recognizing technical difficulties and therefor, does not include the entire Town Hall.

DeKalb County Board of Commissioners Asks Public Service Commission to Defer December 19th Vote on Georgia Power All- Source RFP

GA Power truck

Concerned additional electricity needs to power data centers across Georgia will be reliant on fossil fuels, despite municipalities’ 100% clean energy goals. 

*media interviews available*

DEKALB COUNTY – On November 18, 2025, The DeKalb County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution urging the Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) to delay its vote on Dockets 56298 and 56310, Georgia Power Company’s Application for the Certification of the 2029-2031 All-Source Capacity RFP and for the Certification of Supplemental Resources for 2028-2031 Capacity, respectively. The resolution, which comes on the heels of the Public Hearing concerning the aforementioned dockets, was introduced by Super District 6 Commissioner, Ted Terry, and unanimously approved by the Board of Commissioners. 

In addition to affirming DeKalb County’s commitment to its adopted clean-energy, sustainability, and resilience goals, the resolution recognizes the need for collaboration from the Public Service Commission in realizing those goals. In passing the resolution, the DeKalb County Board of Commissioners implores the PSC to ensure that all energy resource decisions are fully evaluated for potential long-term impacts on local governments. These impacts include grid reliability, customer costs, public health and environmental quality. 

“It has been stated by Georgia Power Company that 60% of the energy sourced in this RFP would come from fossil fuels – either coal or natural gas-fired power, for the purpose of meeting Data Center power demands,” said Commissioner Terry. “That means that any Data Center applying to be built in DeKalb County in the next 2-3 years would be powered by those 10,000 megawatts of fossil fuel energy. This is harmful for our environment, our health, and the power bills of DeKalb residents. This is important because this decision will impact future decisions that we make here, at the DeKalb County Board of Commissioners. It deserves careful and informed deliberation.”

The DeKalb County resolution also emphasizes the fact that two new Commissioners have been elected to the PSC; and that the vote takes place just before they are seated, which precludes their participation in the deliberation. 

The DeKalb County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution in April 2025 adopting a Clean Energy Transition Plan, with the goal of 100% Clean Energy by 2050.

DeKalb County has intervened before in 2023 and 2025 alongside the city of Decatur, Atlanta, Savannah, and Athens Clarke-County to form the Local Government Coalition. This intervening took place during the Georgia Power Integrated Resource Plan process advocating, again, for polices that support the municipalities’ clean energy goals on behalf of residents.

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ABOUT DeKalb County Super District 6 Commissioner Ted Terry:

In 2020, Commissioner Ted Terry was elected to serve as the Super District 6 Commissioner of DeKalb County. His district includes half of the County with portions of South, Central, and North DeKalb, totaling approximately 350,000 residents. He successfully was reelected and began his second term in January 2025.

Commissioner Terry’s policy priorities include the DeKalb Green New Deal and former President Biden’s Justice 40 initiatives, affordable housing, transit equity, protecting voting rights for DeKalb residents, and criminal justice reform. Commissioner Terry serves as the Chair of Finance and Budget (FAB) and is a member of the Planning, Economic Development and Community Service (PECS) committee. He previously served as the Chair of the Employee Relations and Public Safety committee (ERPS) and Chair of the Operations Committee (OPS) and as a member of the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee (PWI).

The Commissioner also serves as a member of the National Association of Counties (NACo) as a member of the Healthy Counties Advisory Board, International Economic Development Task Force, Large Urban County Caucus (LUCC) Member, Resilient Counties Advisory Board Member, and Environment, Energy, and Land Use (EELU) Policy Steering Committee. Locally serves on theGeorgia Council for International Visitors Board of Trustees.

Prior to his election, Commissioner Terry served as the Mayor of the most ethnically diverse square mile in America: Clarkston, Georgia from January 2014 – March 2020, where he was the youngest Mayor in Clarkston’s 135-year history.

He resides in DeKalb County with his wife Andrea and 4-legged fur-babies.

To learn more about Commissioner Terry, his platforms and how to stay up to date on the latest from his office, visit www.commissionertedterry.com.

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