News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files
NJ data center

More than half of New Jersey residents support banning new AI data centers from being built, Stockton poll finds

Nearly three-quarters of voters believe AI will eliminate more jobs than it creates.

Alexandra DeMatos

May 5, 2026, 3:47 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

More than half of New Jersey voters support banning new artificial intelligence data centers from being built in their communities, according to a new Stockton poll.

The poll, released Tuesday by the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University, found 56% of voters support such a ban as residents grow increasingly wary of the expansion of AI data centers across the state.

Nearly three-quarters of voters think AI will eliminate more jobs than it creates. Just 7% believe it will create more jobs, while 13% believe it would have no impact.

A plurality of voters — 41% — believe society’s increased use of AI will make their lives worse, the poll found. That is up from 36% in a 2024 Stockton poll of New Jersey residents.

Despite rising public concern, demand for AI technology has fueled rapid growth in data center development across New Jersey.

Former Gov. Phil Murphy offered tax incentives to attract data center projects as part of an effort to position the state as an AI hub.

Kenilworth residents recently criticized the town’s planning board after it moved forward with a proposal to build an AI data center on the former Merck property in Kenilworth bordering Union Township.

In February, the New Brunswick City Council reversed plans to include a data center as part of a major redevelopment plan for the city after residents pushed back.

Pemberton Township became the first municipality to pass a local ban on the construction and operation of data centers in February. Several towns have since followed with their own restrictions.

A majority of voters said they are very concerned (54%) or somewhat concerned (27%) about the impact of data centers on electricity costs statewide - roughly the same share said they are concerned about environmental impacts, including energy and water use, the poll found.

Energy demand from data centers is rising as many residents already struggle to afford utility bills.

A Stockton poll last year found nearly half of New Jersey residents had to cut back on everyday spending to pay for utilities.

“New Jersey is home to many energy-intensive industries, from pharmaceuticals to advanced manufacturing to technology, and the growth of data centers anywhere in the region will only add to existing demand pressures,” said Hughes Center assistant director Alyssa Maurice.

More Stories

Top Stories

JohnMadukotn

Former CSCU chancellor sent sexually explicit texts for two years, new records reveal

01:10
HEAT CHANCE

Warm this weekend, near record heat next week

00:21
GoatLady_2026-05-15-08-15-26

Redding woman accused of neglecting dozens of goats has died

03:19
John1130_2026-05-14-11-34-39

Republican Erin Stewart drops bid for governor amid spending investigation

02:31
Mark8aml515_2026-05-15-08-19-17

Main Street Connecticut: Mayflower Home Organizing

02:06
marissapkg0514_2026-05-14-16-53-13

Police: 2-year-old falls from 2nd-floor window of Bridgeport home

02:07
Asha2_2026-05-15-05-33-32

Dermatologist says one sunburn can increase risk of skin cancer

02:24
Shakira

FIFA announces Super Bowl-style World Cup final halftime show featuring Madonna, Shakira and BTS

02:54
BEAGLES RESCUED

‘Metal and concrete was their world.’ CT native and animal welfare groups free 1,500 beagles from WI breeding facility

00:23
THCgummy_2026-05-13-11-44-07

Manchester woman charged after juvenile given THC infused gummy

00:50
BridgeportScams

CT police warn of jury duty scam where scammers identify themselves as officers

01:59
justinpkg0514_2026-05-14-21-11-53

'Something bad can happen.' Stratford police increasing staff for 'Bike Rideout' planned for this weekend

00:54
SWIMROUTE_051426_2026-05-14-16-59-48

Swim Across the Sound moves to Connecticut

00:40
policememorial0514_2026-05-14-16-53-46

Norwalk honors National Police Week with Police Memorial Ceremony

00:27
dojyale0514_2026-05-14-16-41-27

Department of Justice: Yale Medical School discriminated based on race in admissions

00:24
kimberlysullivanhouse0514_2026-05-14-16-41-08

Agreement reached to sell Waterbury home of woman accused of holding her stepson captive

01:38
Screenshot 2026-05-13 174829

George Washington Bridge reopens after falling debris shuts down Cross-Bronx lanes

00:25
5142026MIDDLETOWNCHILDABUSE_2026-05-14-05-37-03

Connecticut man faces child exploitation charges in Orange County

02:21
0514CT_BeardsleyZoo_2026-05-14-06-13-56

Road Trip Close To Home: Bridgeport's Beardsley Zoo highlights new exhibits, rare species and spring arrivals

00:33
illegal gun dealing

Southington man sentenced for selling ghost guns and drugs

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices