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Judge rules Oak Valley-Digital Gateway will move forward, final day set for Monday

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A scheduled four-day trial in a lawsuit challenging the PW Digital Gateway data center project, originally set to end Friday, was extended to a fifth day and is now set to close Monday.

The lawsuit involves the Oak Valley Homeowners鈥 Association and 11 individual plaintiffs, all Gainesville-area residents.

Tension was palpable right from the outset Friday morning as Circuit Court Judge Kimberly A. Irving had the opportunity to dismiss the plaintiffs鈥 case entirely following a Thursday聽聽on the part of the defense.

Defendants in the suit are the Prince William Board of County Supervisors and two developers involved with Digital Gateway, H & H Capital Acquisitions and GW Acquisition Co. At full build out, the Digital Gateway near Gainesville would be the largest data center corridor in the world, with over 22 million square feet of data centers spread out across over 2,100 acres in western Prince William.

Irving ultimately denied the motion to strike, ruling the plaintiffs do indeed have standing 鈥 signifying they each suffered a 鈥減articularized harm鈥 and were in fact in 鈥渃lose proximity鈥 to the rezoning at hand.

The plaintiffs are hoping to halt the Digital Gateway project and have the board鈥檚 decision be declared void due to an alleged violation of state law and county zoning ordinance.

On Friday, Christopher Wall, an attorney and plaintiff assisting the Oak Valley homeowners鈥 principal attorneys, Craig Blakeley and Kathleen McDermott, as a self-described 鈥減laintiff liaison,鈥 told InsideNoVa their objective is clear.

鈥淩e-notice, re-hear, re-vote,鈥 Wall said of the plaintiffs鈥 hopes for the Digital Gateway.

Mark Looney, an attorney representing H & H Capital Acquisitions, an affiliate of Compass Datacenters, declined to comment for this story.

The Morgan case, Irving said, is comparable to the Oak Valley data center suit in that both involved a rezoning from agricultural land to industrial business purposes. She established a key differentiation between the Morgan precedent and the 2013 case聽, also from the Virginia Supreme Court.

Due to the scale and length of data center construction 鈥 estimated at 10 to 15 years, according to Blakeley 鈥 Irving ruled the plaintiffs possess enough 鈥渟kin in the game鈥 to merit standing and that speculative harm can apply in certain situations.

One footnote in that regard was that Roger Yackel and John Hermansen, two plaintiffs who were not available to testify this week, were dismissed due to an ensuing lack of standing.

As a result of Irving’s denial, the trial proceeded to the defense鈥檚 case, whereupon the defense called its witnesses to the stand on the crucial issue of actual notice.

The PW Digital Gateway project would include 37 data centers overall, roughly the size of 144 Walmart supercenters. There are three separate rezonings involved: Digital Gateway North, Digital Gateway South and the Compass property.

First up was Michael Kitchen, an engineer and senior principal with IMEG 鈥 who worked exclusively on the Digital Gateway North and South properties. Kitchen said the county instructed him to post 73 double-sided notice signs for Digital Gateway North and 24 for Digital Gateway South near the planned data center campus. Kitchen said driving up and down Pageland Lane prior to the December 2023 Digital Gateway public hearing was 鈥渓ike a picket fence of signs鈥 鈥 and defense attorneys submitted several 24×36 signs as exhibits into evidence.

The defense鈥檚 second witness was Ryan David, a 27-year employee of Irvin Engineering Associates who was involved in the Compass application for the Digital Gateway and produced approximately 147 sign locations front and back, according to his testimony.

The defense then entered depositions from three Washington Post employees as exhibits for Irving to read. The employees are Carmen Alianza-Javier, Brenda Barbee and Bryan Pokusa.

, Andrea Madden, clerk to the Board of County Supervisors, testified as to some confusion regarding December 2023 email exchanges with Barbee on the timing of public notice advertisements for the Digital Gateway public hearing.

Barbee had temporarily substituted for Alianza-Javier, an account executive for The Post, during the weeks prior to the public hearing. According to a copy of Barbee鈥檚 pre-trial deposition entered into the public record and viewed by InsideNoVa, Barbee did not recall many elements of her December 2023 communications with Madden.

The Digital Gateway ads ultimately ran on Dec. 2, 5 and 9, 2023, prior to the Board of County Supervisors鈥 public hearing and vote on the Digital Gateway on Dec. 12 and 13.

In the final stages of Friday鈥檚 session, Blakeley called a rebuttal witness, Michael Donegan, to counter the defense鈥檚 reading of further depositions 鈥 which pertained largely to email exchanges between Wall and the plaintiffs, as well as their resulting impact on the notice issue 鈥 but ultimately concluded the questioning early due to time constraints.

Blakeley said he would call a final witness via videoconference testimony on Monday and potentially Jose Medina, another plaintiff who has already testified.

According to Irving, there will be a recess after Monday, whereupon the two sides will submit their closing arguments as de facto pre-trial briefs before waiting 鈥渁 week or two鈥 for a final hearing during which she will deliver her ruling.

Monday鈥檚 session will start at 10 a.m.

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