⚡ Data centers and your electric bill | Morning Newsletter

A Philadelphia-area woman woman turns down her thermostat in attempt to save on electricity in this January 2023 file photo.

Morning, Philly. The ice on your neighborhood’s crosswalks may finally be cleared soon as the city hires 300 additional workers to chip away at the lingering mounds. Meanwhile, police are begging people to not walk on the frozen Schuylkill.

Lawmakers in Pennsylvania and New Jersey are working to keep consumers’ bills from rising with demand for data centers, like those under construction in East Vincent Township and Vineland.

And ahead of Valentine’s Day, we found 12 romantic, under-the-radar restaurants in the city and suburbs.

— Julie Zeglen (morningnewsletter@inquirer.com)

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A plan to curb energy costs

Data centers require a lot of energy, which can increase consumers’ bills. Elected officials in Pennsylvania and New Jersey hope to help as the centers proliferate across the country and region.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro says he’ll prevent data center developers from “saddling” residents with higher energy costs with the Governor’s Responsible Infrastructure Development plan. Presented during his 2026-27 fiscal year budget address Tuesday, the GRID plan would require data centers to supply their own energy or pay for any new generation they need.

In New Jersey, Gov. Mikie Sherrill has prioritized energy costs by freezing utility rates, expanding programs to spur new power generation in the state, and ordering electric utilities to report energy requests from data centers.

Other lawmakers in the two states have proposed legislation related to data centers, too. Nearly 30 bills address the facilities’ energy sources, water usage, environmental impacts, and general regulation, as well as rising consumer costs.

Consumer reporter Erin McCarthy has more on the data center demands.

Further reading:

Feeling romantic

Not to alarm the procrastinators among us, but Valentine’s Day is in 10 days. Still need to make a dinner reso? Consider these picks beyond the typical date-night dining spots, courtesy The Inquirer’s food team:

🍷 Malbec Argentine Steakhouse in Society Hill offers heart-shaped flan (cute!) and special anniversary deserts alongside lots and lots of meat.

🍷 Abyssinia in West Philadelphia invites you to share a platter of Ethiopian comfort food, then cap off the night with a visit to the cozy cocktail bar upstairs.

🍷 Spring Mill Cafe in Conshohocken is a white tablecloth-type place, yes, but one set in a 19th-century farmhouse.

See the map of romantic, under-the-radar restaurants.

More food news: February brings a slew of Philly-area restaurant openings, including a slick lounge in Center City and the reboot of a South Jersey brewery. And you simply must try the pho cocktail at Gabriella’s Vietnam, an homage to family tradition.

What you should know today

Quote of the day

The countdown to the 2026 baseball season began Tuesday as the Phillies loaded up the truck for spring training in Clearwater, Fla. Packed items included thousands of baseballs, hundreds of batting gloves, several children’s bicycles, and one very important hot dog launcher.

Plus: We rounded up everything you need to know about Phillies spring training, from key dates to storylines to watch.

🧠 Trivia time

Strip club Lou Turk’s, a Delaware County staple for more than 50 years, announced it is changing its name to The Carousel Delco — but that it will continue its annual sale of what?

A) Irish potatoes

B) Carnival goldfish

C) Unlimited beer raffle tickets

D) Mother’s Day flowers

Think you know? Check your answer.

What we’re …

🏛️ Noting: This Task stuntman’s turn as Kennett Square council appointee.

🎹 Watching: Sun Ra: Do the Impossible on PBS’s American Masters.

🐴 Obsessed with: Miniature horse Doug, the star of Jason Kelce’s stinky new Super Bowl ad.

🏘️ Reviewing: James Ijames’ Good Bones, a play about gentrification in Philadelphia.

📚 Considering: The enduring need for Black History Month, despite the president’s disdain.

🧩 Unscramble the anagram

Hint: The name of America’s oldest warship

PHILLIP AHEAD

Email us if you know the answer. We’ll select a reader at random to shout out here.

Cheers to Lauri Jacobs, who solved Tuesday’s anagram: Starbucks. The coffee chain’s Schuylkill Yards location is the latest to unionize in Philadelphia.

Photo of the day

A pile of snow and ice sits on Eakins Oval in front of the Philadelphia Art Museum days after a fierce winter storm dropped more than nine inches of snow and sleet, with freezing temperatures leaving large banks of ice and snow on streets and sidewalks.

Someday, all that snow will melt. Probably. Until then, be well.

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