Community Consent Amendment Overview The Amendment FAQ Volunteer Guide Signing Events

Community Consent Amendment

Volunteer Messaging Guide

Scripts, pitches, and talking points for canvassers and signature collectors. Everything you need to have confident conversations at the door.

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Copy & Use

Not every large-scale project is bad. Some bring real jobs, real investment, real partnerships. We’re not trying to lock those out.

What we’re trying to stop is the developer who shows up with a great PowerPoint, schmoozes the right people, gets approved before anyone knows what happened, and leaves the community holding the bag for decades. We’re seeing it play out in cities all over the country right now.

The Community Consent Amendment gives good-faith developers something valuable: a direct path to community buy-in. If your project is genuinely good for Grove City, make your case to the people who live here. Win their vote. Now you’re not just permitted. You’re welcomed. That’s a stronger foundation than any council approval.

If you can’t make that case, if your project doesn’t hold up to scrutiny from the people it affects, then maybe Grove City isn’t the right fit. And that’s okay too.

Door Tips

1
Read the mood fast. Use the one-liner first. Only go to the full pitch if they engage.
2
The most common objection is "council is already handling it." Lead with the moratorium being temporary.
3
You don’t need to win the argument. You need to get to "would you be willing to sign?" Keep moving toward the close.
4
Complicated language objection? That’s actually your best opportunity. Walk them through it: 50 acres, 20 MW, 500K gallons.
5
Have the FAQ and amendment download links handy. Offer to send them a link so they can read before deciding.
6
Verify they’re a registered Grove City voter before they sign. Township residents can’t sign, but they can help spread the word.

One-Liners

For the door, the table, or any quick ask. Pick the one that fits the moment.

Option 1: Empowerment Framing

"We’re asking Grove City voters to sign a petition that puts YOU (not whoever sits on council) in the driver’s seat on massive industrial projects like data centers."

Option 2: Clean and Direct

"Sign our petition so Grove City residents, not politicians, decide if a massive data center gets built in our community."

Option 3: Amendment Name Forward

"The Community Consent Amendment is simple: before any massive industrial project can be approved in Grove City, the people who live here get to vote on it."

Elevator Pitch

30-45 seconds. Use at the door or any quick one-on-one conversation.

Script

"Hi, I’m a volunteer with Protect Grove City. We’re circulating a petition to put the Community Consent Amendment on the November ballot.

Right now, a developer is trying to build a massive data center campus in Grove City, and city council can approve it without ever asking residents. Our amendment changes that permanently. Any project above certain size or power thresholds has to go to a public vote first. Community says yes, it moves forward. They say no, it doesn’t.

And here’s what makes it real: a yes vote isn’t a blank check. The amendment locks in exactly what was approved. If the company wants to do more, they come back and ask again.

We’re targeting 2,500 signatures from Grove City registered voters by early July.

Would you be willing to sign today?"

Optional closing lines for pushback:

  • "It doesn’t ban data centers. It means residents get a vote."
  • "The City passed a moratorium, which is great, but that’s temporary. This is permanent."
  • "Even if you’re neutral on the project, you probably believe the community deserves a say."

Full Pitch

For community events, tabling sessions, or speaking to a small group. About 3 minutes.

Script

"Hi everyone, I’m a volunteer with Protect Grove City, a grassroots group of residents who believe that decisions that permanently reshape our community should be made by the people who live here, not by whoever happens to sit on council at any given moment.

Here’s what’s happening. A developer is currently seeking approval to build a massive data center campus in Grove City. When residents found out, they showed up. Because of that pressure, the City passed a moratorium to buy us some time while they study the issue. That was a win, and we’re proud of it.

But a moratorium is temporary. The same council that passed it can lift it. And when the moratorium expires, we’re right back where we started, with council able to approve something this massive without ever asking you.

Here’s the thing: not every large-scale project is bad. Some are genuinely great for a community. They bring real jobs, real investment, and real partnerships. We’re not trying to lock those out. What we’re trying to stop is the developer who shows up with a great PowerPoint, schmoozes the right people, gets approved before anyone knows what happened, and leaves the community holding the bag for decades.

The Community Consent Amendment actually gives good-faith developers something valuable: a direct path to community buy-in. If your project is genuinely good for Grove City, make your case to the people who live here. Win their vote. Now you’re not just permitted. You’re welcomed. If you can’t make that case, if the project doesn’t hold up to scrutiny from the people it affects, then maybe Grove City isn’t the right fit. And that’s okay too.

That’s why we’re here. We’re circulating a petition to place the Community Consent Amendment on the November ballot. It’s the permanent protection the moratorium can’t be. If voters approve it, it becomes part of Grove City’s City Charter. No future council can touch it without another vote of the people.

Here’s what the amendment actually does. Any project that hits even one of three thresholds (50 or more acres, more than 20 megawatts of power, or more than 500,000 gallons of water per day) has to go to a public vote before it can be approved. Those thresholds are deliberately set high. Your doctor’s office, your favorite restaurant, the new retail center down the street... none of them come close. We’re talking about truly massive industrial projects. The kind that permanently change a neighborhood.

And here’s something important: this amendment doesn’t ban anything. If a developer wants to build a project that big, they’re welcome to make their case to you, to your neighbors, to every registered voter in Grove City. If the community says yes, the project moves forward. And a yes vote isn’t a blank check. The amendment locks in exactly what was approved. If the company wants to do more than what voters said yes to, they have to come back and ask again.

Others will say this hurts economic development. But Grove City stays wide open for business. Restaurants, offices, medical facilities, retail... the amendment doesn’t touch any of that. It only applies to the rare project massive enough to permanently reshape our community. For those, voters get the final word.

Now some people will ask about the task force the City set up. Isn’t that handling it? And the answer is: the task force does important work. It can recommend stricter standards that Council adopts by ordinance. But ordinances can be changed by a future council with different priorities. The amendment is the floor nobody can pull out from under you. The task force decides how high to set the bar. The amendment makes sure there’s a bar at all.

What we need from you today is simple. If you’re a registered Grove City voter, we need your signature on this petition. We’re targeting 2,500 signatures by early July. Every signature gets us one step closer to putting this on the November ballot and letting every Grove City resident have their say.

The developer has lawyers, lobbyists, and money. We have Grove City residents. Let’s make sure their voices count.

Will you sign today?"

Questions or want to share new talking points? info@protectgrovecity.org
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