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Proposed data center seeks wastewater services from Hutto

Iron Mountain officials are planning a data center in Central Texas, and are seeking a deal with the city of Hutto for wastewater services.

About the project: During a presentation on March 12, Iron Mountain officials told Hutto City Council the project would feature:

  • Seven data center buildings with closed-loop water systems
  • An electrical substation
  • Utility yards
  • New county roads that would be constructed as part of the overall development
  • Detention basin to manage stormwater

What we know: 
Although the approximately 500-acre site on CR 404 is in Taylor’s extraterritorial jurisdiction, the project, south of Samsung Austin Semiconductor, is not in a sewer service territory.

However, the property takes up a portion of a tract that was previously approved for what was called the Taylor Meadows Development—a residential project that had an existing wastewater service agreement with the city of Hutto for sanitary sewer service.

The data center buildings are expected to use about 30,200 gallons per day, which Steven Walton of Iron Mountain said is less than that estimated for the Taylor Meadows Development.

 
Latest News
Typhoon Texas opens applications for 600 seasonal jobs in Pflugerville

Typhoon Texas Waterpark is hiring more than 600 seasonal employees as it prepares for the upcoming summer season.

What you need to know: The Pflugerville waterpark is seeking workers age 15 and older for a range of positions, including lifeguards, admissions staff, food and beverage workers and park services employees.

Applications are available online, and hiring will continue on a rolling basis, park officials said.

 
METRO NEWS MONDAY
New sports club, outlet mall updates: Check out top stories in the Austin area

Check out some of the most-read stories in Austin from March 16-19. 

1. 44,000-square-foot indoor sports club headed to Leander, Cedar Park

2. Round Rock outlet mall to get refresh

3. Luxury retailer in San Marcos outlets prepares to close with major sale

4. 320-unit apartment complex coming to Liberty Hill, Georgetown line

5. 'Future of aviation': Air taxi testing coming to Austin under federal pilot program

6. From breakfast to barbecue: Check out these 15 business updates in Southwest Austin
 

 
On The Transportation Beat
Delta Airlines to launch Phoenix route, expand Bozeman flights from Austin airport

Delta Airlines is expanding its flights out of Austin-Bergstrom International Airport with new routes launching to Phoenix and Bozeman, Montana, later this year.

Additionally, the global airline plans to offer new routes from Austin to Asheville, North Carolina; Columbus, Ohio; Kalispell, Montana; and Kansas City, Missouri, in 2026.

What's happening: Delta Airlines announced it will launch twice-daily nonstop flights to Phoenix from ABIA beginning Nov. 9.

The new route to Bozeman will begin June 13 with Saturday-only flights. Delta will expand the route with daily trips from Austin to Bozeman from Dec. 19 to March 28.

The impact: The new Phoenix route will connect Central Texans to Arizona’s Sonoran Desert, which is known for its championship golf courses, culinary scene, desert hiking and access to Scottsdale and Sedona, according to Delta Airlines information.

The additional Bozeman flights will allow flyers to travel to Montana during peak ski season and visit Yellowstone National Park.

 
CI Texas
Data: See where the most Texas students are applying for education savings accounts

More than 229,000 students have applied to receive state funds for private education or homeschooling under Texas’ education savings account program, according to the state comptroller’s office.

By the numbers: State data indicates that the most applications have been submitted on behalf of students living in urban areas and the surrounding suburban communities. As of March 8, students living in Houston ISD’s boundaries led the pack with over 8,900 applications, followed by 6,700 applicants in Dallas ISD.

The data reflects how many students living in each district's boundaries have applied, including those not currently enrolled in a public school.

The background: State lawmakers created the Texas Education Freedom Accounts program in 2025.

Students accepted for the 2026-27 school year will receive $10,474 for private education or up to $2,000 for homeschool. Students with disabilities can receive up to $30,000 each.

More details: Of the first 152,000 program applicants, nearly three-quarters were not enrolled in a public school during the 2025-26 school year, data obtained by the Texas Center for Voucher Transparency shows.

 

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Amy Leonard Bryant
General Manager

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