Because trickle down economics has been shown to work, right?
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We did this here in Sweden...
Datacenters provide almost no local jobs, yeah sure, one or two technicians, a few security guards and one or two janitors, but that's it.
Datacenters doesn't need a lot of local staff once built.
Meanwhile, they draw a huge ammount of energy at a super low cost that won't support upgrading infrastructure.
Microsoft has experimented with self contained underwater datacenter pods, which has no local staff and super cheap cooling.
If it’s a colo data center I can see it bringing lots of local jobs. For each unique tenant in the building they’ll need at least 1-2 people within driving distance. But if it’s just like a big remotely managed AWS data center… not so much.
Why would you need 1-2 techs per client?
That seems extremely inefficient
No the DC won’t have 1-2 techs per client, the clients themselves will have at least 1-2 techs or sysadmins or what have you to manage the hardware. And those guys will need to be somewhere in the general vicinity of the DC to go there if there’s a problem, physical inspections, etc.
It wouldn’t necessarily create jobs at the DC itself but in client companies utilizing it.
Corporate welfare do be like that
The average annual cost to the state at that time was projected to be $53.3 million between 2015 and 2019.
That doesn't sound too earth-shattering.
More than 65% of the savings since 2018 have gone to Redmond-based Microsoft, a company with reported net earnings of $72.4 billion last year.
The company said in an emailed statement that the data center tax break from which it benefits “aligns with the intentions of lawmakers.”
I don't know if the policy is actually a good idea, but I would imagine that Washington probably does benefit pretty substantially from having Microsoft around. I don't think that Microsoft has to have datacenters in-state, but meh.
And speaking purely as someone in California who doesn't particularly want to pay California datacenter rates, but likes datacenter service and access to services that make use of datacenters, if Washington wants to subsidize datacenters to try and get West Coast business, I'm not complaining.
https://www.digitalcorereit.com/portfolio/market-overview/northern-california/default.aspx
Northern California has a reliable and extensive electrical grid. In the Santa Clara/San Jose data center cluster, power is provided by both Pacific Gas & Electric and Silicon Valley Power. These companies encourage using renewable power such as solar, wind, and the more exotic biomass solutions. However, these “green” power sources can often increase a data center’s total cost of ownership. The average power cost throughout Northern California is extremely high. These high costs often factor into the decisions for Northern California-based companies to co-locate in Portland, OR or Seattle, WA, where the typical power cost for data center users is approximately two times less.
"Environmentally friendly"? No, they use crazy amounts of power.
"High-paying, long-term" jobs? Working in a data center may be in the tech field, but it doesn't offer what people think of as "tech money" and your opportunity for advancement is slim. Data centers also don't need to employ large numbers of people. They just suck up space and resources.
Edit:
The data center industry’s demand for electricity is growing so much that it could threaten Washington’s efforts to transition to a carbon-free power grid....
The original bill required each data center to create at least 35 permanent positions at 150% of the surrounding area’s average personal income.
A second bill, approved just a month after lawmakers passed the first tax break, gave recipients the choice between creating 35 jobs or just three positions per 20,000 square feet of server farm space, whichever was less.
Oh look, I was right. Could have told you all that before the state wasted money on this.
If the headline asks a question, the answer is almost always “no”.
We should make all servers move to China
I do NOT trust China with those servers.