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Growth of data centers and AI expose tensions in organized labor – University of Cincinnati

Editorial Staff
Last updated: June 19, 2026 9:12 pm
Editorial Staff
14 hours ago
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Bloomberg Law reports that the growth of data centers to power artificial intelligence is exposing a tension within organized labor on how the new technology will affect their jobs. 
Construction of those centers could benefit union members in the skilled trades and construction industry while other unions representing other private and public sector workers raise concerns over future job loss to AI. The divide is seen in the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest federation of labor unions and its affiliates over the issue.
Bloomberg Law spoke with Anne Lofaso, a professor in the Donald P. Klekamp College of Law, along with other industry observers about the divide. Lofaso, a former attorney with the National Labor Relations Board, teaches labor law, employment law, employment discrimination law, and constitutional law
“The AFL-CIO kind of always has this tension because the unions have very different interests,” Lofaso told Bloomberg Law. “But this truly is existential. This is about jobs.”
The North America’s Building Trades Unions, one of the AFL-CIO’s largest members, has been one of the most vocal champions of data centers that its leaders say will provide jobs, reports Bloomberg Law.
“These aren’t the only things that are being built in the United States or Canada right now, but this is where a lot of the action is,” Mike Monroe, chief of staff at NABTU, told Bloomberg Law. His organization represents more than 3 million building trade workers in the United States and Canada.
In April, about a half-dozen union leaders affiliated with the AFL-CIO stood with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) when he asked Congress to pass a moratorium on data center construction until lawmakers passed guardrails on artificial intelligence in the workplace. 
The dispute reflects the wave of pushback over the impact of the more than 4,000 data centers across the country used to power AI, reports Bloomberg Law.
Data center construction is becoming an increasingly prominent part of construction unions’ business models as they rely on partnerships with companies to keep their members employed and account for 2.3% of all US construction spending, according to a June report from the US Census Bureau.
Read the full story in Bloomberg Law online.
Learn more about Anne Lofaso, professor of law at the University of Cincinnati.
Featured top image of the Vernon, California, Data Center. Photo/iStock.

January 27, 2026
The Columbus Dispatch follows the US Supreme Court's refusal to review a $45 million civil lawsuit award for an Ohio Innocence Project exoneree’s wrongful imprisonment. OIP at UC Law has help exonerate 43 people who served collectively more than 800 years behind bars for crimes they didn't commit.

October 22, 2025
Lucy May, host of WVXU's Cincinnati Edition, recently interviewed Ohio Innocence Project exoneree Rickey Jackson. He is the subject of the recently releasesed documentary titled, “Lovely Jackson.”

November 8, 2024
Richard Horton and Nancy Smith, two exonerees of the Ohio Innocence Project at UC Law, speak with WYSO about wrongful conviction. OIP was founded in 2003 and is continuing its initial purpose: working to free every person in Ohio who has been convicted of a crime they didn’t commit.

University of Cincinnati
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University of Cincinnati | 2600 Clifton Ave. | Cincinnati, OH 45221 | ph: 513-556-6000
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© 2026 University of Cincinnati
University of Cincinnati
2600 Clifton Ave.
Cincinnati, OH 45220
513-556-0000
© 2026 University of Cincinnati

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