News

Register now for Groundwater to the Gulf: A summer institute for Central Texas Educators!May 21, 2013 11:45


Register now for Groundwater to the Gulf: A summer institute for Central Texas Educators! Every year, water experts from over 13 agencies in Central Texas combine forces to take 50 teachers to the aquatic hotspots in and around Austin. We go caving, canoeing, hiking, and splash in streams--all in the name of science. It is the most fun, free way to earn 22 continuing education credits.
Sign-up is limited to 50 teachers... and there are about 8 slots left...


Register now for Groundwater to the Gulf: A summer institute for Central Texas Educators! 
Every year, water experts from over 13 agencies in Central Texas combine forces to take 50 teachers to the aquatic hotspots in and around Austin. We go caving, canoeing, hiking, and splash in streams--all in the name of science. It is the most fun, free way to earn 22 continuing education credits.

Sign-up is limited to 50 teachers... and there are about 8 slots left.  It's free, but you have to mail in a $50 check--which we give back once you complete the training.  Join us!  More info below!



Register by May 31 to reserve your place and freebies (lunches, t-shirt, coffee cup, water bottle, arctic bandana, teaching materials, etc.)



Robin Havens Gary
Senior Public Information and Education Coordinator
Barton Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation District
1124 Regal Row
Austin, TX 78748
512-282-8441 phone
512-282-7016 fax
Posted: May 21, 2013 11:45   Go to blog
Neighbor to Neighbor News - Hill Country AllianceMay 21, 2013 10:25

Neighbor to Neighbor News 
May 20, 2013

Hill Country News
Save Bracken Cave Reserve
What happens when you put 10,000 people next to more than ten million bats (and sensitive Edwards Aquifer recharge land)? Bat Conservation International (BCI), GEAA and others are urging participation this Wednesday, May 22nd in San Antonio. Learn more from BCI. You can also find extensive information about this issue from GEAAincluding how to contact your elected officials. We simply cannot afford to continue to make these kinds of mistakes in the Hill Country...

Neighbor to Neighbor News 
May 20, 2013


Hill Country News

Save Bracken Cave Reserve
What happens when you put 10,000 people next to more than ten million bats (and sensitive Edwards Aquifer recharge land)? Bat Conservation International (BCI), GEAA and others are urging participation this Wednesday, May 22nd in San Antonio. Learn more from BCI. You can also find extensive information about this issue from GEAAincluding how to contact your elected officials. We simply cannot afford to continue to make these kinds of mistakes in the Hill Country.

A water generation gap portends confrontation between Texas’ past, future
“If people understand how rich this state is in springs, and how those springs provide most of the flow for many of our rivers, then maybe they’ll pay more attention to how they’re depleting them...” Sharlene Leurig, Andy Sansom and David Langford, all friends of HCA’s, share stories in this thoughtful article about Hill Country water resources. A must read from Texas Climate News.

2013 Scholarship Contest Winners Announced
The Barton Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation District has announced the winners of the Kent S. Butler Memorial Groundwater Stewardship College Scholarship Essay Contest and its Aquatic Science Adventure Camp Scholarship program. Read More
More Hill Country Headlines


We'd like to take this opportunity to say thank you to all of the amazing volunteers that donate their time and effort to further HCA's mission.  Thank you for being a part of the HCA family. 






 
May

May 22 in San Antonio - Join GEAA at City Hall in San Antonio on May 22nd - GEAA invites you to engage the Mayor and City Council of San Antonio in a dialogue about development on the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone, and whether or not to expand SAWS service into Comal County - Details
May 22 in Fredericksburg - Texas Watershed Steward Workshop on water quality and availability issues related to the Pedernales River - Details

May 23 in Austin - Westcave Preserve presents: “Welcome to the Wild Country,” an introduction to the unique assemblage of wildlife and plants of the Texas Hill Country - Details
May 28 in San Antonio - Native Plant Society of Texas, San Antonio meeting - Topic: Gardening for butterflies using native and adapted plants - Free and open to the public - Details
May 29 in Wimberley - Screening of the new film by Robert Redford, "Watershed" - Details
May 30near Hunt - Range and Wildlife Management Field Day - For landowners, land managers and brush control contractors operating in possible endangered species habitats - Details
June

June 1 in Junction - "Well Trained" - A one day training for people who rely on household wells - Details

June 7 in Hunt - Streamside Landowner Workshop: Understanding Riparian Areas - Details

June 18 in San Antonio - Sierra Club meeting, "The Battle for the Warbler" - Details
Posted: May 21, 2013 10:25   Go to blog
Texas bill would drastically revamp water agencyMay 20, 2013 17:00
By By Paul J. Weber And Ramit Plushnick Masti
AP News

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — New revisions to a major water bill calls for ousting the six-member Texas Water Development Board and its top official before the state embarks on a new $2 billion fund to provide low-interest loans for projects.

A historic drought in 2011 spurred Gov. Rick Perry and lawmakers to propose the fund, which would provide communities the money to push ahead with long-needed infrastructure projects...
By By Paul J. Weber And Ramit Plushnick Masti
AP News

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — New revisions to a major water bill calls for ousting the six-member Texas Water Development Board and its top official before the state embarks on a new $2 billion fund to provide low-interest loans for projects.

A historic drought in 2011 spurred Gov. Rick Perry and lawmakers to propose the fund, which would provide communities the money to push ahead with long-needed infrastructure projects. The revamped bill is being returned to the Texas House and Senate for final approval with just one week remaining in the 140-day legislative session, in which the urgency of water funding has snagged budget talks and led to Perry to threaten lawmakers he would extend their work into June should they not deliver on the fund.

The measure, obtained by The Associated Press, calls for a drastic overhaul of the water board, cutting the number of board members in half and requiring regions to prioritize projects, something lawmakers have blasted the current board for failing to do. None of the current board members would be eligible for reappointment — meaning the entire current six-member state water board, as well as executive administrator Melanie Callahan, would be replaced.

Billy Bradford, current chairman of the Texas Water Development Board, did not return a phone message Sunday seeking comment.

Agency spokeswoman Merry Klonower said the agency cannot comment on proposed legislation. As of Friday afternoon, she said they had not seen the proposed bill.

Republican House Speaker Joe Straus favorably greeted the revised bill, which is a compromise between House and Senate negotiators that was wrapped up this weekend.

"Speaker Straus has stressed the importance of meeting our growing state's water needs for well over a year and in building the agenda for this session, and is pleased that there is a way forward to fund the state water plan," spokeswoman Erin Daly said Sunday.

Environment groups applauded the revised bill that was wrapped up this weekend. Laura Huffman, state director of the Nature Conservancy, said the proposal would provide good oversight of the distribution of funds.
"If you look at the water plan right now, it's a completely unstructured capital improvement program," Huffman said Sunday.

The combination of the water board setting priorities based on a community's ability to repay a loan and regions considering a project's viability is key, she added.

"I also like the fact that the state is not just writing a blank check. That's incredibly important," Huffman said.
The overhaul would only take effect if Texas voters in November approve the creation of the new water fund, which would be called the State Water Implementation Fund for Texas. It would be initially stocked with $2 billion to finance projects in the state water plan, and lawmakers say that money would multiply through interest earnings and revenue bonds.

Some lawmakers have criticized the state water board, which has overseen water planning in the state for decades, as inefficient. The proposed bill aims to address those issues.

Bradford, the board's current chairman, has defended the agency's performance and management.
One major change calls for the three new board members — all of whom would be appointed by Perry — to serve full-time. Currently, board members are appointed by Perry but serve part-time.

Board members and the agency have rebuffed criticism that they don't prioritize projects, saying they don't have that authority. In March, the AP obtained an $8 billion list of priority projects the agency had compiled after repeated prodding by lawmakers. Those projects included several in large population areas, but the agency's criteria for compiling the list was unclear.

The proposed bill requires regional planning boards to prioritize projects using set standards, including how soon it is needed, as well as its feasibility, viability and sustainability. A comprehensive and approved list would have to be submitted by September 2014.

The board itself would then establish a point system for awarding loans, giving the highest grades to those that serve large populations and provide assistance to diverse urban and rural areas. Consideration would also be given to a town or city's available capital to help finance a project.

Before anything could happen, though, Perry would need to appoint new, full-time board members by September 2013. The bill says that one member would have to have engineering experience, another would need a background in finance and the third would have to be from either the field of law or business.

The water board was established in 1957 as a direct response to a nearly decade-long drought that remains the basis of all water planning in Texas. The agency distributes grants and low-interest loans to towns and cities and oversees the publication of a statewide water plan every five years. That plan has been unfunded, and state lawmakers prioritized providing money for the projects this session.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________
Plushnick-Masti reported from Houston. Follow her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP .
Follow Weber on Twitter at https://twitter.com/pauljweber.



Posted: May 20, 2013 17:00   Go to blog
Screening of the new film by Robert Redford - WatershedMay 16, 2013 14:39
Join us for a screening of the new film WATERSHED
The film is Executive Produced and Narrated by Robert Redford and Directed by award-winning filmmaker, Mark Decena, WATERSHED tells the story of the threats to the once-mighty Colorado River and offers solutions for the future of the American West. There will be a discussion after the film and update on current local water issues in the Wimberley Valley.

 http://watershedmovie.com/
 https://www.facebook.com/WatershedMovie
 http://www.twitter...
Join us for a screening of the new film WATERSHED
The film is Executive Produced and Narrated by Robert Redford and Directed by award-winning filmmaker, Mark Decena, WATERSHED tells the story of the threats to the once-mighty Colorado River and offers solutions for the future of the American West. There will be a discussion after the film and update on current local water issues in the Wimberley Valley.

 http://watershedmovie.com/
 https://www.facebook.com/WatershedMovie
 http://www.twitter.com/WatershedMovie


Date of Event: Wednesday May 29, 2013
Starting Time: 6:30pm
Ending Time: 8:30pm
Cost:  FREE
Location Name: Wimberley Community Center
Location Address: 14068 Ranch Road 12 Wimberley, TX 78676

Executive produced & narrated by Robert Redford
Produced by the Redford Center and Kontent Films



Executive Produced and Narrated by Robert Redford and Directed by award-winning filmmaker, Mark Decena, WATERSHED tells the story of the threats to the once-mighty Colorado River and offers solutions for the future of the American West.

As the most dammed, dibbed, and diverted river in the world struggles to support thirty million people and the peace-keeping agreement known as the Colorado River Pact reaches its limits, WATERSHED introduces hope.

Can we meet the needs of a growing population in the face of rising temperatures and lower rainfall in an already arid land? Can we find harmony amongst the competing interests of cities, agriculture, industry, recreation, wildlife, and indigenous communities with rights to the water?

Sweeping through seven U.S. and two Mexican states, the Colorado River is a lifeline to expanding populations and booming urban centers that demand water for drinking, sanitation and energy generation. And with 70% of the rivers’ water supporting agriculture, the river already runs dry before it reaches its natural end at the Gulf of California. Unless action is taken, the river will continue its retreat – a potentially catastrophic scenario for the millions who depend on it.

In WATERSHED, we meet Jeff Ehlert, a fly fishing guide in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado rancher Dan James, Delta restoration worker Edith Santiago, Navajo Council member Glojean Todacheene, Rifle Colorado Mayor Keith Lambert, Los Angeles native Jimmy Lizama and a group of Outward Bound teens rafting down the Colorado River as they all reflect a compelling new water ethic—one that illuminates how letting go of the ways of old can lead to a path of coexisting with enough for all.

The Redford Center created WATERSHED as a inspirational social action tool for people who want to engage. Promoting personal water conservation pledges of 5% – symbolic of the small amount of the rivers’ flow required to reconnect the river to its delta – and garnering donations to help purchase the water rights necessary to restore the connectivity, WATERSHED is a central tool in a larger grassroots effort focused on saving the Colorado River and supporting the communities throughout the river basin.

Contact Information
Wimberley Valley Watershed Association
David Baker
Posted: May 16, 2013 14:39   Go to blog
HB 3918 - Needmore Ranch MUD Approved with AmendmentsMay 16, 2013 12:35
Despite strong opposition from the citizens and elected officials of Wimberley and Hays County, the Texas House and Senate have approved the Needmore Ranch Municipal Utility District (MUD) #1 for approximately 4,020 acres of the 5,000-acre ranch just east of Wimberley.   
While the existence of a giant MUD district, with special powers far beyond traditional property rights, has serious potential to do great harm to the Wimberley area and its other property owners, local citizens won a partial victory in their intense stand against legislation circumventing local input and opinion...
Despite strong opposition from the citizens and elected officials of Wimberley and Hays County, the Texas House and Senate have approved the Needmore Ranch Municipal Utility District (MUD) #1 for approximately 4,020 acres of the 5,000-acre ranch just east of Wimberley.   

While the existence of a giant MUD district, with special powers far beyond traditional property rights, has serious potential to do great harm to the Wimberley area and its other property owners, local citizens won a partial victory in their intense stand against legislation circumventing local input and opinion. 

Acknowledging the overwhelming opposition to the MUD by area citizens and local elected officials, Representative Jason Isaac authored last minute amendments to House Bill 3918 and presented them on the floor of the House. The amended bill was approved and sent to the Senate for concurrence. The amendments include:

  • Eminent domain is prohibited except to provide right of way for importation of groundwater or surface water from sources other than the local Trinity or Edwards Aquifers.
  • If a residential subdivision or planned community is developed within the MUD, water for that development must be imported - presumably, but not clearly stated - from sources other than the Trinity or Edwards Aquifers.
  • If a residential subdivision or planned community is built, the MUD must develop a wastewater treatment plant in coordination with the state TCEQ, Hays County, and Wimberley.
  • Land adjacent to the MUD may not be annexed into the MUD except by a petition signed by the owners of two-thirds majority of the assessed value of the land to be annexed. 

The amendments made to the Needmore Ranch MUD appear to be significant steps toward protection for the water resources of the Wimberley Valley and western Hays County.   Water needed for development inside the MUD would come from connections to a pipeline that might in the future be built along RR 12 from the San Marcos area, bringing groundwater from Lee and Bastrop County aquifers.

 Hays County currently is seeking a water supplier to bring in up to 50,000 acre feet (16 billion gallons) of groundwater annually to serve future growth and to reduce groundwater pumping within Hays County.   

Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD) thanks County Commissioner Will Conley, Judge Bert Cobb, Wimberley Mayor Bob Flocke, City Administrator Don Ferguson and the hundreds of citizens of Hays County and the Wimberley Valley who attended the Town Hall meeting April 25, wrote letters, made calls and signed petitions to help achieve this compromise.   

CARD strongly supports property rights, including the right of the Needmore ownership to develop the property in accordance with the subdivision rules of Hays County and applicable provisions of State and Federal law. We hope the property owner will review the Growth Corridor Plan - available on the CARD website (www.cardtexas.org, under Current Events) - and help maintain the low density and rural character that has always been the hallmark and attraction of central Hays County.   

 CARD Steering Committee Louis Parks, Chairman




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Posted: May 16, 2013 12:35   Go to blog
FERN BANK (LITTLE ARKANSAS) PUBLIC HEARING- Friday May 17th 5:30pm-8:30pmMay 16, 2013 12:00
Fern Bank Springs aka Little Arkansas The USFWS is having a hearing about the critical habitat designation for this spring, and is holding their hearing on May 17 in San Marcos at the Activity Center.  The informational meeting will be held from 5:30p.m.-6:30 p.m.followed by a break and then the public hearing will be held from 7:00 p.m.–8:30p.m 
http://www.fws.gov/southwest/docs/comalNRdEA.pdf

Southwest Region (Arizona ● New Mexico ● Oklahoma ●Texas) www.fws.gov/southwest/
For Release: May 2, 2013
Contacts: Adam Zerrenner, 512-490-0057, ext. 248, Adam_Zerrenner@fws.gov
Lesli Gray, 972-569-8588, Lesli_Gray@fws...
Fern Bank Springs aka Little Arkansas
The USFWS is having a hearing about the critical habitat designation for this spring, and is holding their hearing on May 17 in San Marcos at the Activity Center.  The informational meeting will be held from 5:30p.m.-6:30 p.m.followed by a break and then the public hearing will be held from 7:00 p.m.–8:30p.m 
http://www.fws.gov/southwest/docs/comalNRdEA.pdf

Southwest Region (Arizona ● New Mexico ● Oklahoma ●Texas) www.fws.gov/southwest/
For Release: May 2, 2013
Contacts: Adam Zerrenner, 512-490-0057, ext. 248, Adam_Zerrenner@fws.gov
Lesli Gray, 972-569-8588, Lesli_Gray@fws.gov
 

SERVICE ANNOUNCES AVAILABILITY OF DRAFT ECONOMIC ANALYSIS FOR THREE ENDANGERED COMAL INVERTEBRATES

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) today released an analysis that estimates the cost related to the revised proposed critical habitat for the Comal Springs dryopid beetle, Comal Springs riffle beetle and Peck’s cave amphipod over the next 20 years. In addition, the Service is announcing the reopening of the comment period for 30 days to allow all interested parties the opportunity to comment on the draft economic analysis, the amended determinations sections and the revised proposed critical habitat rule.
 

The Service will hold a public informational meeting followed by a public hearing on Friday, May 17, 2013, at the San Marcos Activity Center. The informational meeting will be held from 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. followed by a break and then the public hearing will be held from 7:00 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
On October 19, 2012, the Service proposed revised critical habitat for the three endangered Comal invertebrates. The Service is proposing approximately 169 acres in four units in Comal and Hays Counties, Texas.


Critical habitat is a term in the Endangered Species Act that identifies geographic areas containing features essential for the conservation of a threatened or endangered species, and which may require special management considerations or protection. Designation of critical habitat does not affect land ownership, establish a refuge or preserve and has no impact on private landowners taking actions on their land that do not require federal funding or permits.


When specifying an area as critical habitat, the Endangered Species Act requires the Service to consider economic and other relevant impacts of the designation. If the benefits of excluding an area outweigh the benefits of designating it, the Secretary may exclude an area from critical habitat, unless that would jeopardize the existence of a threatened or endangered species.


The draft economic analysis quantifies economic impacts of the conservation efforts for the three Comal invertebrates associated with the following categories of activity if these activities are federally assisted or carried out: changes to existing flow regimes; introduction or augmentation of nonnative species; and physical, biological, or chemical changes to the proposed revised critical habitat area. Total present value impacts anticipated to result from the critical habitat designation of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
 

News Release
Public Affairs Office
PO Box 1306
Albuquerque, NM 87103
505/248-6911
505/248-6915 (Fax)
 

all units for the three Comal invertebrates is $14,000 for water use actions and $57,000 for other actions over a 20 year period.

All three Comal species are freshwater invertebrates found in spring systems – Comal, San Marcos, Hueco, and Fern Bank – associated with the Edwards Aquifer, one of the most prolific artesian aquifers in the world. The Trinity Aquifer may also provide some water to these spring systems, especially at Fern Bank Springs. The Comal Springs dryopid beetle and the Comal Springs riffle beetle are found in both Hays and Comal Counties. The Peck’s cave amphipod is only found in Comal County.
Comments on the revised proposed critical habitat will be accepted until June 3, 2013, and may be submitted by one of the following methods:


(1) Electronically: Go to the Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. Search for Docket No. FWS–R2–ES–2012–0082, which is the docket number for this rulemaking, and follow the directions for submitting a comment.


(2) By hard copy: Submit comment on the listing proposal by U.S. mail or hand-delivery to: Submit by U.S. mail or hand-delivery to: Public Comments Processing, Attn: FWS–R2–ES–2012–0082; Division of Policy and Directives Management; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, MS 2042–PDM; Arlington, VA 22203.


For additional information, contact Adam Zerrenner, Field Supervisor, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Austin Ecological Services Field Office, 10711 Burnet Road, Suite 200, Austin, TX 78758; by telephone at 512-490-0057, extension 248; or by fax at 512-490-0974. Persons who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800–877–8339.
America’s fish, wildlife and plant resources belong to all of us, and ensuring the health of imperiled species is a shared responsibility. The Service is actively engaged with conservation partners and the public in the search for improved and innovative ways to conserve and recover imperiled species. To learn more about the Endangered Species program, go to http://www.fws.gov/endangered/.
 

The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with others to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. We are both a leader and trusted partner in fish and wildlife conservation, known for our scientific excellence, stewardship of lands and natural resources, dedicated professionals, and commitment to public service. For more information on our work and the people who make it happen, visit www.fws.gov. 

Connect with our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/usfws, follow our tweets at www.twitter.com/usfwshq, watch our YouTube Channel at http://www.youtube.com/usfws and download photos from our Flickr page at http://www.flickr.com/photos/usfwshq.
http://www.fws.gov/southwest
Posted: May 16, 2013 12:00   Go to blog
Groundwater Bulletin: Environmental Stewardship Coalition Scores Stunning Victory for Conserve First, Move Water Later!May 15, 2013 17:39

Coalition Position on PermitsThe people of Bastrop and Lee counties gained a MAJOR VICTORY at last night's Lost Pines Groundwater Conservation District hearings.  The Board of Directors listened ... and they acted on our behalf. THANK YOU Lost Pines BOARD MEMBERS!1)  LCRA's request for 10,000 acre-feet/year was cut back 50% to 5,000 acre-feet/year except in years when the counties are in drought conditions.

2)  Forestar's request for 45,000 acre-feet/year to export was cut back 75% to 12,000 acre-feet/year...

PERMIT THIS NOT BANKRUPTCY
Coalition Position on Permits
The people of Bastrop and Lee counties gained a MAJOR VICTORY at last night's Lost Pines Groundwater Conservation District hearings.  The Board of Directors listened ... and they acted on our behalf.
THANK YOU Lost Pines BOARD MEMBERS!
1)  LCRA's request for 10,000 acre-feet/year was cut back 50% to 5,000 acre-feet/year except in years when the counties are in drought conditions.

2)  Forestar's request for 45,000 acre-feet/year to export was cut back 75% to 12,000 acre-feet/year.

3)  Environmental Stewardship and a group of landowners were accepted for timely filing of their request for "party status" at the End Op contested case hearing to be held before the State Office of Administrative Hearings.

Lead by a coalition of Environmental Stewardship, Neighbors for Neighbors, Lost Pines Sierra Club, Groups United to Advocate Responsible Development ("GUARD") and Independent Texans, and with another large turnout of concerned citizens and landowners, the Board heard testimony for almost two hours before getting down to business.  When they did get down to business, they had heard the wishes of the people and elected to ignore the recommendations of the General Manager. 

After considering the General Manager's recommendation to approve, Board member Prinz said "we're going to do it a little different" and proceeded to cut back the applications by Forestar and the LCRA in order to protect the adopted desired future conditions of the District.  Persuaded by the Bastrop Commissioners Court resolution on LCRA's request, the Board adopted the "extreme drought conditions" limitations and incorporated these conditions into their permit. 

Earlier, the Board set the stage for their dramatic actions by granting a contested case hearing for End Op and denying the request by Aqua Water Supply Corporation for contested case hearing on the Forestar and LCRA applications.  These actions set the stage for the general meeting where the Forestar and LCRA applications were reigned in to pumping levels that can be defended and that reasonably protect the Simsboro aquifer from over-pumping.  

We owe the Board of Director a tremendous vote of GRATITUDE for patiently listening to our comments and concerns over the last few months and then acting to protect our precious groundwater resources.  Please write the Board members, the County Juges, and your Commissioners and thank them for leading our counties through to this victory.  
Please use these links to write emails of gratitude:
Steve Box
Executive Director
Environmental Stewardship  
512-300-6609    
                                                   
                                                                             Forward to a Friend   
ES logo jpg

GROUNDWATER BULLETIN  
May 2013
Lost Pines Groundwater Conservation District Hearings


LCRA's Contribution to BANKRUPTCY
PERMIT THIS NOT BANKRUPTCY
LCRA's contribution to  Water Bankruptcy
The following Images demonstrate the impact of LCRA's pumping of  100% of the requested 10,000 acre-feet/year, and 25% of the requested amount on the Simsboro Aquifer in Bastrop and Lee Counties. 

Currently the LCRA pumps water from the Colorado River to Lake Bastrop to provide for the cooling needs of the LCRA power plant located on the reservoir. 

The LCRA is requesting a permit for groundwater so that they can maintain their ownership of the Colorado River surface water and sell that amount to users in the Highland Lakes and elsewhere in the basin. 

Pumping of groundwater from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer (including the Simsboro) from the Lost Pines Groundwater Conservation District Permits and other Groundwater Districts in GMA-12 are predicted, by their own models, to BANKRUPT flows from the aquifers into the Colorado River (Image 3 below).  Based on this modeling, the Colorado River will likely go from being a "gaining" river to a "losing" river. 

The Lower Colorado River Authority has never taken a serious look at these impacts in order to protect the river, but rather, are seeking to participate in the pumping that will damage the river.

NOTICE:  Please keep in mind that the images below are for the PROPOSED permits ONLY (124,226 acre-feet/year) and DO NOT include EXISTING permits (45,365 acre-feet/year). 


LCRA 100%
Image 1:  Draw-down impact of LCRA pumping around Lake Bastrop and the Colorado River.  LCRA 25%
Image 2:  Draw-down impact of LCRA pumping if reduced to 25% of the requested pumping.  GMA12 Discharge to CR Tribs
Image 3:  Pumping of groundwater from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer (including the Simsboro) from the Lost Pines Groundwater Conservation District Permits and other Groundwater Districts in GMA-12 are predicted, by their own models, to bankrupt flows from the aquifers into the Colorado River.  The Colorado River will likely go from being a "gaining" river to a "losing" river.  The Lower Colorado River Authority has never taken a serious look at these impacts in order to protect the river, but rather, are seeking to participate in the pumping. 

DrawdownDraw-down:  A Visual Perspective
PERMIT THIS NOT BANKRUPTCY
PRINT FLYER
What does "draw-down" resulting from groundwater pumping look like on a map?  As you may know, the Desired Future Conditions are established in terms of the draw-down, in feet, of aquifers in Bastrop and Lee counties and throughout the District. 

Recently, Environmental Stewardship obtained visual images based on the Groundwater Availability Model (GAM) used by the Lost Pines Groundwater Conservation District to evaluate the impact of proposed pumping from current permit applications on the Simsboro Aquifer.  Draw-down, measured in feet, is indicated on the contour lines of the maps below.  Click on Maps below to Enlarge

NOTICE:  Please keep in mind that the images below (except for Image 1) are for the PROPOSED permits ONLY (124,226 acre-feet/year) and DO NOT include EXISTING permits (45,365 acre-feet/year). 

GMA-DFC-Drawdown
Image 1.  PERMIT THIS - The draw-down, in feet, expected when the Adopted Desired Future Conditions (DFC) are met in Bastrop and Lee counties. The dark area in Burleson County is from Post Oak Savannah GCD pumping.  Click on Map to Enlarge

AllPermits100%Drawdown
Image 2.  NOT WATER BANKRUPTCY - The draw-down, in feet, expected if ALL current applications are approved and pumped to the maximum permitted.  Notice the red area in Lee county where draw-down is 1000 ft, and orange area in Bastrop County where draw-down is 750 ft.  Click on Map to Enlarge
Forestar100%
 Image 3.  WATER BANKRUPTCY - The majority of draw-down, in feet, in Lee County is from the proposed Forestar well field.  Click on Map to Enlarge

EndOp100%
Image 4.  WATER BANKRUPTCY - The majority of draw-down, in feet, in Bastrop County is from the proposed End Op well field, which is directly below Houston Toad habitat.  Click on Map to Enlarge

PERMIT THIS:  If permitted at all, individual permits should first be reduced to levels actually supported by the application and then all permits reduced overall as necessary to an aggregate level that, including existing permits, protects the Adopted Desired Future Conditions.  In summary, if permitted at all, Forestar and End Op qualify for less than 5% of the water they are seeking.  In addition, the district needs to factor in the impact of existing permits before issuing any new permits. This has not been done. (See Image 1). 
Forestar25%
Image 5.  This image depicts Forestar pumping reduced to 25% of requested pumping volume but DOES NOT include existing permits.  Click on Map to Enlarge

EndOp25%
Image 6.  This image depicts End Op pumping reduced to 25% of requested pumping volume but DOES NOT include existing permits.  Click on Map to Enlarge

Lost Pines Groundwater Statistics
Region K
 
Below are some statistics about current applications, existing permits and facts from the Lost Pines Management Plan. 






Current Simsboro Aquifer Applications Pending:
-  45,000 acre-feet/yr          Forestar Group      Contested
-  10,000 acre-feet/yr          LCRA                    Contested
-  56,000 acre-feet/yr          End Op                 Contested
-    3,226 acre-feet/yr          Manville WSC        Approved
-    3,360 acre-feet/yr          Heart of Texas      Withdrawn
-    1,613 acre-feet/yr          City of Bastrop      Approved
119,199 acre-feet/yr     TOTAL APPLICATIONS FOR SIMSBORO WELLS

Currently Permits in the Simsboro Aquifer 
-  23,627 acre-feet/yr            Aqua WSC
-    6,653 acre-feet/yr            Manville WSC 
-  11,023 acre-feet/yr            Lee Co. WSC 
-       100 acre-feet/yr            Lee Co. FWSD 
-         67 acre-feet/yr            Hunters Crossing 
-    3,850 acre-feet/yr            Alcoa (currently pumping 6201 acre-feet/yr)
45,365 acre-feet/yr        TOTAL PERMITS FOR SIMSBORO WELLS


164,884 acre-feet/yr TOTAL SIMSBORO APPLICATIONS + PERMITS 
  4.4 times the Available Water (2060 MAG) for the Simsboro Aquifer
  5.6 times the Available Water (2010 MAG) for the Simsboro Aquifer
************************** 

A FEW FACTS From the Lost Pines Management Plan
-  Total Available Groundwater (MAG) in the District by 2060 is 58,888 acre-feet/yr.
-  Bastrop County projected water demand by 2060 is 65,266 acre-feet/yr.
-  Lee County projected water demand by 2060 is 6,603 acre-feet/yr.   
-  Current discharge to surface waters from all aquifers is 78,612 acre-feet/yr.  
-  Net recharge to all aquifers (recharge - discharge) is 7,249 acre-feet/yr.   
-  Current pumping for all aquifers in the District is 47,811 acre-feet/yr (website)
-  Current permits for all aquifers 73,000 acre-feet/yr (Austin-American Statesman) 

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Posted: May 15, 2013 17:39   Go to blog
ELEMENTAL Documentary - Partnership May 15, 2013 15:04
ELEMENTAL
Monday, June 3rd at 7 pm Stateside Theater, 719 Congress AvenueFollowed by a Q&A with Director Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee
For advance tickets & group sales, 
contact: sara@filmpresence.com
"A rare, fresh look at environmental issues and sustainability...Director Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee ties these threads together masterfully." -John Fink, The Film Stage
Elemental tells the story of three individuals united by their deep connection with nature, confronting the most pressing ecological challenges of our time. 

The film follows Rajendra Singh, a former  Indian government official, on a 40-day pilgrimage down India’s once pristine Ganges river...

Monday, June 3rd at 7 pm 
Stateside Theater, 719 Congress Avenue
Followed by a Q&A with Director Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee
For advance tickets & group sales, 
contact: sara@filmpresence.com

"A rare, fresh look at environmental issues and sustainability...
Director Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee ties these threads together masterfully." 
-John Fink, The Film Stage

Elemental tells the story of three individuals united by their deep connection with nature, confronting the most pressing ecological challenges of our time. 

The film follows Rajendra Singh, a former  Indian government official, on a 40-day pilgrimage down India’s once pristine Ganges river. Singh works to shut down factories, halt construction of dams, and rouse the Indian public to treat their sacred “Mother Ganga” with respect. 

In northern Canada, Eriel Deranger mounts her struggle against the world’s largest industrial development, the Tar Sands, an oil deposit larger than the state of Florida. A young mother and native Denè, Deranger struggles with family challenges while campaigning tirelessly against the Tar Sands and its proposed 2,000-mile Keystone XL Pipeline, which are destroying Indigenous communities and threatening an entire continent. 

And in Australia, inventor and entrepreneur Jay Harman searches for investors willing to risk millions on his conviction that nature’s own systems hold the key to our world’s ecological problems. Harmon finds his inspiration in the natural world’s profound architecture and creates a revolutionary device that he believes can slow down global warming.

More Information:  website || facebook || twitter || trailer
Co-Directed Produced Co-Composed by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee
Co-Directed & Produced by Gayatri Roshan
Running Time: 93 minutes

Posted: May 15, 2013 15:04   Go to blog
National Kids to Parks Day May 18, 2013May 15, 2013 14:00
National Kids to Parks Day
    Saturday May 18th
Jacob's Well Natural Area

Join Hays County Parks and Hays County Master Naturalist for a day of tours, activities and demonstrations at Jacob's Well Natural Area. 

Open and free to the public 10am-4pm! Students & Families Welcome! 
Parking at 221 Woodacre Drive, Wimberley, Tx. 78676

Contact Briane Willis for further details briane.willis@co.hays.tx...
National Kids to Parks Day
    Saturday May 18th
Jacob's Well Natural Area

Join Hays County Parks and Hays County Master Naturalist for a day of tours, activities and demonstrations at Jacob's Well Natural Area. 

Open and free to the public 10am-4pm! Students & Families Welcome! 

Parking at 221 Woodacre Drive, Wimberley, Tx. 78676

Contact Briane Willis for further details briane.willis@co.hays.tx.us


Posted: May 15, 2013 14:00   Go to blog
Fill Up the Rainwater Tank May 15, 2013 0:00

Posted by Mary Simon on Tuesday, May 7, 2013 
In late March, as we neared completion of construction on their new home, the sisters –Candy and Sue (see related story) — began to fret just a bit. “There’s been no rain. Should we go ahead and buy some water for the tank?”

Wayne shook his head. “Wait,” he told them. “Let’s see what happens. April showers, right?”

We broke ground in October. It took just a little over six months to build their home...
raintank bobber
In late March, as we neared completion of construction on their new home, the sisters –Candy and Sue (see related story) — began to fret just a bit. “There’s been no rain. Should we go ahead and buy some water for the tank?”

Wayne shook his head. “Wait,” he told them. “Let’s see what happens. April showers, right?”

We broke ground in October. It took just a little over six months to build their home. The 30,000 gallon rainwater tank was one of the first things to be installed, and we had a truck deliver about 2,000 gallons of water for use during construction. The metal roof went on in December. (If you’re collecting rainwater, you want a metal roof.) Gutters and pipes were installed in January, and they were connected and ready for rain in February. And then it didn’t rain. And it didn’t rain. Remember?

And then came April, woohoo. A couple of good storms the first two weeks of April dumped up to four inches of rain in the area. Now, we didn’t have a rain gauge to the measure the specific rainfall at Candy and Sue’s house. But take a look at the photo and see what happened. I snapped this photo in mid-April. The red bobber indicates the tank’s water level. Almost half full, right? How is that possible, with just 4” or so of rain?

Well, get out a pencil, and let’s do the math.
The sisters’ house has 3,532 square feet of air conditioned space. Add the garage, front porch, the lovely screened porch at the back of the house, and two-foot eaves on all sides, and you’ve got 5,661 square feet of total house coverage. The roof surface is a whopping 6,289 square feet.
Got all that? Now here’s the magic: One inch of rain on 1,000 square feet yields about 600 gallons of water. Every time it rains one inch, the sisters harvest 3,773.4 gallons of water, or about 12% of the tank’s capacity. Those 4 inches of rain during the first two weeks of April produced about 15,093 gallons of water. The tank is half full.

If you’ve lived long enough in central Texas, you’ve figured out by now that our rain often comes in big bucketfuls all at once. Yes, we’ve got water problems in Texas, but the answer falls from the sky. We’re all drinking rainwater; it’s just that some people choose to catch and store it locally instead of waiting for it to flow into rivers, lakes, and aquifers, where it’s stored and later pumped miles and miles (at great cost) to reach homes and businesses.

The sisters decided to invest in a 30,000 gallon tank rather than a 20,000 gallon tank in order to have extra storage capacity to capture as much rainfall as possible during the “rainy” periods of the year. Chris Maxwell-Gaines of Innovative Water Solutions, who designed and installed the system, calculates that a “20,000-gallon tank would be sufficient to supply a 4-person household. Their system should allow them ample water supply even during drought years.”

Of course, the way the home operates and the behavior of its inhabitants have a lot to do with water use. Naturally, the sisters’ home was designed, built, and furnished to conserve water — the way the plumbing runs were laid out, the water heating system, the water-saving plumbing fixtures. A moderately conservative person might use around 50 gallons of water indoors. Outdoors, the sisters plan to leave the landscape in a natural state, so they won’t be using much water outdoors. However, they have installed a pool/spa that holds 1,500 gallons of water. Once it’s filled, it will need to be replenished occasionally. And the sisters do anticipate occasional long-term house guests. Installing the bigger 30,000-gallon tank has given them peace of mind.

You might be asking about now, “But is it really feasible to supply an entire household with its potable water from a rainwater harvesting system?” Yes. Here’s what Chris Maxwell-Gaines of Innovative Water Solutions had to say in a report to the lender’s underwriter:

For more evidence of the ability of rainwater harvesting systems to supply an entire household with its water, my company conducted a survey of about 70 of our potable water system owners in 2012. We asked them to look back over 2011 which was one of the worst year of drought since the 1950s. In 2011, our region only received about 16” of rainfall. We found that only 30% of the homeowners had to get water delivered during the year and a majority of this 30% only had to get one water delivery. It is our best guess and experience that due to the conservation technology of the rainwater systems, property owners use a much smaller quantity of water since they can directly see the entire supply of water for their household. Contrast this with a home that is supplied by a well: The homeowners can’t determine how much water is left in their well as they can with a rainwater harvesting system. If the water level in their rainwater cistern is getting low, they can proactively change their water usage patterns in order to extend their water supply. The costs to top-off their systems, which is a rarity, should not average more than a few hundred dollars per year according to cost data received from local water delivery companies in our region.
Question: “You mean, I can buy water for my rain tank?” Sure, you can buy a little water if you need it, say a couple thousand gallons to tide you over ’til the next big rain. You can buy water and store it in a rain tank. You can’t buy and store water in a well that’s gone dry.

Overall, rainwater as the sole water source for a home is more sustainable, more durable, more secure, and less costly over time than a well. Plus, you know where your water comes from and . . . you know what? It sure does taste good.

Question: “What about financing?” It is possible to get financing for a rainwater harvesting system as the sole source of water for a residence, but it requires a lender who knows how to get it done. The financing for the sisters’ project was arranged by Green Energy Money, whose appraisal process quantifies the homeowner’s return on investment for energy efficiencies — and for rainwater harvesting. Security National Mortgage Company provided the permanent financing. Plus, the sisters’ home is in Hays County, which offers a property tax exemption for water conservation initiatives, including rainwater harvesting.

Want to know more? Drop us a line, or leave a comment, and I’ll ask Chris Maxwell-Gaines to weigh in and help answer any questions.
– Mary
See Solluna Builders, LLC Resources page for links to more information about rainwater harvesting.
Posted: May 15, 2013 0:00   Go to blog
Aqua Texas, Inc. Issued Boil Water Notices for Woodcreek ResidentsMay 13, 2013 17:58
Aqua Texas, Inc., issued the following Boil Water Notices to front doorsteps today:

City of Woodcreek residents living on Brookhollow & Doolittle that are West of Jack Miller need to BOIL WATER until further notice.  Residents living on Augusta Dr & Augusta Lane need to BOIL WATER until further notice.

To ensure destruction of all harmful bacteria and other microbes, water for drinking, cooking, and making ice should be boiled and cooled prior to use. The water should be brought to a vigorous, rolling boil and then boiled for two minutes...
Aqua Texas, Inc., issued the following Boil Water Notices to front doorsteps today:

City of Woodcreek residents living on Brookhollow & Doolittle that are West of Jack Miller need to BOIL WATER until further notice.  Residents living on Augusta Dr & Augusta Lane need to BOIL WATER until further notice.

To ensure destruction of all harmful bacteria and other microbes, water for drinking, cooking, and making ice should be boiled and cooled prior to use. The water should be brought to a vigorous, rolling boil and then boiled for two minutes. In lieu of boiling, you may purchase bottled water or obtain water from some other suitable source.

When it is no longer necessary to boil the water, the water system officials will notify you that the water is safe for consumption. Instructions to discontinue boiling will be issued in the same manner as this notice.

For further information contact Aqua America Customer Service at 1-877-987-2782.  If a customer wishes to contact the TCEQ, they may call 512-239-4691.

John Sone
City Manager
City of Woodcreek
O-512.847.9390
manager@cityofwoodcreek.com
Posted: May 13, 2013 17:58   Go to blog
Texas Groundwater Levels Suffer Sharp Drop, Study Finds May 13, 2013 10:38
by Kate Galbraith Texas Tribune  Groundwater levels in Texas’ major aquifers dropped considerably between 2010 and 2011, as the state's drought intensified, according to a report published recently by the Texas Water Development Board.
The report showed significant declines in the Ogallala Aquifer, which underlies much of the Panhandle. The water board monitors 26 wells in the Ogallala, and water levels dropped in all but one during the 2010-11 period. The average drop was 3.5 feet, with a median decline of 1.8 feet...
Groundwater levels in Texas’ major aquifers dropped considerably between 2010 and 2011, as the state's drought intensified, according to a report published recently by the Texas Water Development Board.
The report showed significant declines in the Ogallala Aquifer, which underlies much of the Panhandle. The water board monitors 26 wells in the Ogallala, and water levels dropped in all but one during the 2010-11 period. The average drop was 3.5 feet, with a median decline of 1.8 feet.

“This year of a drought — it has affected even the groundwater levels to a greater extent than I’ve ever seen,” said Janie Hopkins, who manages the water board's groundwater division.
The figures for 2011-12, which will probably be ready for publication around August, are also expected to be gloomy. There will probably be a “continuing downward [trend] in the majority of these wells, but just at a less rapid rate,” Hopkins said.

The situation is clearly serious in Texas, where 99 percent of the state is abnormally dry or worse, with 10 percent experiencing exceptional drought. Gov. Rick Perry and other top policymakers have pushed the Legislature to allocate $2 billion to a special fund for water-supply projects, but those efforts are in limbo after a key bill in the Texas House was shelved Monday.

According to the report, the greatest decline during 2010-11 occurred in the Trinity Aquifer of Central Texas, where 33 monitor wells showed a median drop of 16.7 feet, and an average drop of 19.7 feet.  (The water board also includes one well in the Edwards-Trinity Plateau in that calculation.)
In South Texas’ Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer, median water levels of the monitor wells dropped by 4.4 feet in 2010-11, with average declines of 17.1 feet.

In discussing the Carrizo-Wilcox, the water board noted: “Irrigation pumpage during the drought has increased substantially in the Wintergarden area of [south-central] Texas, particularly Zavala, Wilson, and Atascosa counties. Pumping of groundwater has also increased to support oil and gas exploration and production activities related to the Eagle Ford Shale.”

A Carrizo Aquifer well in nearby LaSalle County showed the greatest change for a single well since 2003, dropping some 136 feet.

Some aquifers rebound with good rain, Hopkins noted.
To understand what the drops really mean, it helps to look at an individual well’s overall depth and rate of change. In the Ogallala, for example, a well in Hansford County contained water at around 70-f00t depths in 1950. Now pumpers hit water at 150 feet, and the well's overall depth is 185 feet.

Some Ogallala wells show similar declines; others are holding relatively steady, reflecting that geologic and topographic conditions can differ considerably by well.

“You can have lots of variability within a short distance,” Hopkins said. She cited the “heterogeneity of the rocks, even with one formation.”

One Ogallala well used in the water board's research went dry about 18 months ago, she said.
To check the real-time levels of the water board's monitor wells, click here. Hopkins said that the agency, which has experienced budget-tightening like the rest of the state, has had no funding for equipment such as well recorders or transmitters for the past few years, though local groundwater conservation districts often provide such funds. More funding would also potentially allow the water board to publish groundwater reports in a more timely fashion, she said.
Posted: May 13, 2013 10:38   Go to blog
2013 Guadalupe River Basin Summary Report out for public review and commentMay 10, 2013 15:00


The draft 2013 Clean Rivers Program Guadalupe River and Lavaca-Guadalupe Coastal Basins Basin Summary Report is ready for public review and comment.  The link below will take you to the document that has been posted on the GBRA Clean Rivers Program web page.  It is a very large document so it has broken down into five parts. http://www.gbra.org/crp/default.aspx
The Basin Summary Report is designed to provide a comprehensive review of the water quality data collected in the Guadalupe River Basin.  It includes a detailed discussion of the findings of comprehensive data analyses...


The draft 2013 Clean Rivers Program Guadalupe River and Lavaca-Guadalupe Coastal Basins Basin Summary Report is ready for public review and comment.  The link below will take you to the document that has been posted on the GBRA Clean Rivers Program web page.  It is a very large document so it has broken down into five parts. 

The Basin Summary Report is designed to provide a comprehensive review of the water quality data collected in the Guadalupe River Basin.  It includes a detailed discussion of the findings of comprehensive data analyses.  The report serves to develop a greater understanding of basin water quality conditions, identify trends and changes, and aid in making decisions regarding water quality issues in the basin.  The report is completed every five years. 

The public review period will be closed on Monday, June 3, 2013.   After all comments and suggestions are incorporated into the report, the final Basin Summary Report will be posted on the GBRA Clean Rivers Program web page by June 15, 2013.
Posted: May 10, 2013 15:00   Go to blog
Groundwater to the Gulf trainingMay 10, 2013 14:00

There are a few remaining spaces left in this summer's Groundwater to the Gulf training.

Register now for Groundwater to the Gulf: A summer institute for Central Texas Educators! Every year, water experts from over 13 agencies in Central Texas combine forces to take 50 teachers to the aquatic hotspots in and around Austin. We go caving, canoeing, hiking, and splash in streams--all in the name of science. It is the most fun, free way to earn 22 continuing education credits.
Sign-up is limited to 50 teachers.....

There are a few remaining spaces left in this summer's Groundwater to the Gulf training.

Register now for Groundwater to the Gulf: A summer institute for Central Texas Educators! Every year, water experts from over 13 agencies in Central Texas combine forces to take 50 teachers to the aquatic hotspots in and around Austin. We go caving, canoeing, hiking, and splash in streams--all in the name of science. It is the most fun, free way to earn 22 continuing education credits.

Sign-up is limited to 50 teachers... and there are about 8 slots left.  It's free, but you have to mail in a $50 check--which we give back once you complete the training.  Join us!  More info below!
http://www.keepaustinbeautiful.org/GroundwatertoGulf


Groundwater to the Gulf Summer Teacher Institute http://www.keepaustinbeautiful.org/GroundwatertoGulf

Thanks!

Robin Havens Gary
Public Information and Education Coordinator
Barton Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation District
1124 Regal Row
Austin, TX 78748
512-282-8441 phone
512-282-7016 fax

Posted: May 10, 2013 14:00   Go to blog
Petitions opposing MUD sent to Sen. Donna Campbell and State Rep. Jason IsaacMay 09, 2013 14:48
Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD)
Today the offices of State Senator Donna Campbell and State Representative Jason Isaac received packets containing 372 petitions signed by citizens opposed to bills these legislators have introduced to create a 4,000+ acre Municipal Utility District (MUD) on the Needmore Ranch, just east of Wimberley...
Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD)

Today the offices of State Senator Donna Campbell and State Representative Jason Isaac received packets containing 372 petitions signed by citizens opposed to bills these legislators have introduced to create a 4,000+ acre Municipal Utility District (MUD) on the Needmore Ranch, just east of Wimberley. The two identical bills (SB 1868 and HB 3918) would create a district having the power to levy a property tax, to annex adjacent land, to take land by eminent domain, to sell tax exempt bonds, and to construct roads and utilities to serve an estimated population of almost 16,000 people at maximum density.

Citizens of Hays County, alarmed at the prospect of such a massive development, gathered in record numbers at a Town Hall meeting at the Wimberley Community Center on April 25th to listen to Representative Isaac and Senator Campbell’s representative explain their positions on the MUD proposal. At the conclusion of the meeting, citizens signed the petition forms and gave them to representatives of the Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD), the sponsor of the Town Hall meeting. The petitions were duplicated and transmitted to Senator Campbell and Representative Isaac for their review and consideration.

Read the letter to Sen. Campbell and Rep. Isaac transmitting the 372 citizen petitions opposing the Needmore Ranch Municipal Utility District #1.
The Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD) promotes sensible growth in the Wimberley Valley and western Hays County, an area known for its rugged natural beauty, scarce water and rural Hill Country character.
Posted: May 09, 2013 14:48   Go to blog
Neighbor to Neighbor News - Hill Country Alliance May 09, 2013 14:00

Neighbor to Neighbor News             
Bringing back the Milky Way, May 14 in Uvalde
HCA has been partnering with the McDonald Observatory and local Hill Country community organization’s creating an entire menu of programs aimed at reducing light pollution. The next workshop will take place May 14 at the Cactus Room of the Uvalde Convention Center...

Neighbor to Neighbor News             

Bringing back the Milky Way, May 14 in Uvalde
HCA has been partnering with the McDonald Observatory and local Hill Country community organization’s creating an entire menu of programs aimed at reducing light pollution. The next workshop will take place May 14 at the Cactus Room of the Uvalde Convention Center. Details

Texas Groundwater Levels Suffer Sharp Drop, Study Finds
According to the report, the greatest decline during 2010-11 occurred in the Trinity Aquifer of Central Texas, where 33 monitor wells showed a median drop of 16.7 feet, and an average drop of 19.7 feet. (The water board also includes one well in the Edwards-Trinity Plateau in that calculation.) More from the Texas Tribune.

Water for Cities vs. Ag - Is it theirs? Or ours?
Some more enlightened utilities and political leaders are beginning to realize that Texas must grow smart – not just fast. Texas county governments, long weak on any ability to properly manage and plan growth, are beginning to band together to get the attention of a largely urban Texas legislature. More from Mike Mecke in Ranch and Rural Living Magazine.

People conform to political boundaries. Water does not.
Ten years ago, recognizing the rapidly growing threat to the water quality of the Barton Springs segment of the Edwards Aquifer, 13 unconnected Texas Hill Country jurisdictions sat down together and talked. Acknowledging that water, especially groundwater, does not conform to human boundaries, they devised a bold plan to conform to water, by crossing those boundaries. With help from the HCA, 65 participants from those jurisdictions re-convened on April 26 in Buda for The Next Wave, a workshop to share how they are each implementing the plan now. Learn More

More Hill Country Headlines

Interpretive Guide Certification Class
Meet HCA’s first class of Certified Interpretive Guides-
Congratulations!


Upcoming Events
May
May 10 in Boerne - Grazing Practices to Mitigate Drought - Details

May 11 in San Marcos - Texas Rainwater Catchment Association Annual Conference - Details
May 14 in Uvalde - Night Skies over Uvalde - Learn how to save money, preserve our night skies and help bring back the Milky Way - Details
May 16 in San Antonio - Inspired by Nature: Artists on Mitchell Lake - An Evening with Ansen Seale - 6:00pm to 8:30 pm at the Mitchel Lake Audubon Center -  Details
May 18 in Blanco - The Bicycle Sports Shop Real Ale Ride - For all levels - Details

May 22 in San Antonio - Join GEAA at City Hall in San Antonio on May 22nd - GEAA invites you to engage the Mayor and City Council of San Antonio in a dialogue about development on the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone, and whether or not to expand SAWS service into Comal County - Details
May 22 in Fredericksburg - Texas Watershed Steward Workshop on water quality and availability issues related to the Pedernales River - Details

May 28 in San Antonio - Native Plant Society of Texas, San Antonio meeting - Topic: Gardening for butterflies using native and adapted plants - Free and open to the public - Details
May 28-30 in San Antonio - Southwest Stream Restoration Conference - Details
May 30 near Hunt - Range and Wildlife Management Field Day - For landowners, land managers and brush control contractors operating in possible endangered species habitats - Details

Pass it on:
Posted: May 09, 2013 14:00   Go to blog
Water, MUD and Beer: Recipe for an Explosive Hill Country Development FightMay 08, 2013 17:33


by Forrest Wilder Published on Friday, May 3, 2013, at 1:46 CST

aheatwole via Flickr.comGnarled cypress roots along Blanco River
In hindsight, perhaps Greg LaMantia, a scion of a South Texas family that made its fortune as a regional Budweiser distributor, shouldn’t have named his 5,000-acre spread near Wimberley “Needmore Ranch...


by Published on

Cypress roots along Blanco River
aheatwole via Flickr.com
Gnarled cypress roots along Blanco River

In hindsight, perhaps Greg LaMantia, a scion of a South Texas family that made its fortune as a regional Budweiser distributor, shouldn’t have named his 5,000-acre spread near Wimberley “Needmore Ranch.”
The name has spawned derision and mockery in Wimberley, where citizens and elected officials, including the Republican county commissioner and Republican county judge, are outraged at the possibility that LaMantia—who has considerable clout in high-flying political circles—could develop his beautiful Hill Country property into a small city with the Texas Legislature’s help.

Despite near-unanimous local opposition, state Rep. Jason Isaac (R-Dripping Springs) and Sen. Donna Campbell (R-New Braunfels) are carrying legislation that would create a municipal utility district (MUD) for LaMantia, gifting him the authority to marshal tax-free bond financing, impose taxes on future landowners to recoup the costs of development, and possibly seize land through state-granted eminent domain authority. The fight has spawned a fierce debate about private property rights.

Wimberley is located at the humming southwestern fringe of the Austin sprawl, a charming, artsy-fartsy town invariably described as “quaint.” Home to a weird brew of cedar-choppers, Austin musicians in exile and wealthy retirees, it is a place permanently at odds with its own growth.

While development battles have echoed in the Wimberley Valley for years, the persistence of drought over the past decade or so has increased tensions. A good portion of the Hill Country, including western Hays County, draws its water from the Trinity Aquifer. With ever-increasing pumping, levels in the Trinity have been dropping steadily. This aquifer mining, in turn, is sapping area streams and springs. The official regional groundwater plan anticipates aquifer declines of, on average, 30 feet over the next four decades—a drawdown that hydrogeologists and conservationists say will lead to a plague of dry wells and riverbeds.

Jacob’s Well, an iconic artesian spring that is the headwaters of Cypress Creek, a source of flow for Wimberley’s legendary Blue Hole and a critical feeder for the Blanco River, now periodically stops flowing—a first in recorded history. The Trinity Aquifer flushes an estimated 64,000 acre-feet annually into the Balcones Fault Zone portion of the Edwards Aquifer, the source of the San Marcos Springs.

Development of Needmore, then, is like a cannonball dive into a dry ditch.

“Am I the only one here who finds it ironic that you can’t have MUD without water?” mused one man at a recent community meeting.

Needmore Ranch is a stunning slice of the Hill Country, but it’s best known for a stretch of the Blanco River known as “Little Arkansas” or, as some old-timers call it, “Li’l Ark.”

Once accessible by a five-mile dirt road hugging the Blanco River, Little Arkansas was a treasured swimming spot and camping site for much of the last century. The Comanche used it as a watering hole before that. Because it’s been years since I’ve been there, my mind’s eye can’t quite focus on the spot to describe it. But here’s the entry in the book Springs of Texas: Volume 1: “The springs burst from the base of a high bluff where the Hidden Valley fault crosses Blanco River. … The large group of springs cascades about 20 meters down to the river through banks of maidenhair fern, water cress, and blue dayflowers. Travertine deposits form pools among the falls, shaded by cypress trees.”

The Fern Bank Salamander lives in Li’l Ark’s spring-fed pools and just a few other spots along the difficult-to-access Blanco.

Li’l Ark easily ranks with Wimberley’s Blue Hole and Jacob’s Well as a local natural wonder, but few people get to see Little Arkansas anymore.

LaMantia bought Needmore from the estate of flamboyant Houston trial lawyer John O’Quinn in 2011. O’Quinn had died in an automobile accident, setting off what Texas Monthly described as a “bitter, tawdry estate battle.” O’Quinn was not a popular man in Wimberley. Shortly after he’d purchased the ranch, he privatized Little Arkansas Road. Now, if you want to see Li’l Ark, you’ve got to put in upstream of Needmore and float the ultra-shallow river in a canoe or kayak—a rare opportunity in drought-stricken Central Texas.

While O’Quinn used Needmore as a private playground for his family and friends, locals worry that LaMantia is going to turn the property into a high-density development with thousands of homes drawing on the depleting Trinity Aquifer. With a centralized water and wastewater system—financed through MUD’s tax-free bonding authority—a developer could avoid Hays County’s stringent new lot-size requirements and put homes on tracts as small as a half-acre. The ranch, if fully built-out, could be home to some 16,000 residents.

You know it’s a big meeting at the Wimberley Community Center when the only place to park is at Brookshire Brothers, the grocery store next door. It’s a Thursday night in late April and more than 400 people, in a town of 2,626, are packed standing-room-only to discuss, debate, rant and rave. The meeting, one of the largest ever in Wimberley, has been called by Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development, a group of mostly white-haired rabble-rousers who’re keen to put this part of the Hill Country on a development path very different from that of Austin bedroom communities like Round Rock and Kyle.

“Nothing like a good development fight to get people out on an evening here in Wimberley,” says Patrick Cox, a longtime Wimberleyite and historian.

The Wimberley Valley and Hays County have seen plenty of development fights—one of the most recent involving a large residential development near Jacob’s Well—but this may be the first that’s drawn in the Texas Legislature. Folks in Wimberley accuse Isaac and Campbell of carrying water for LaMantia by “fast-tracking” the MUD legislation.

Rep. Isaac and Sen. Campbell’s communications director, Jon Oliver, are not greeted warmly by the audience, but the two are defiant.


In 2010, Isaac swept out longtime incumbent Democrat Patrick Rose in a wave of tea party fervor. Isaac has labeled opponents of the Needmore MUD “the anti-growth crowd,” and in a letter to constituents quotes Ronald Reagan’s warning that “Land Planning” is “the greatest threat in 200 years to our traditional right to own property.”

(In fact, Reagan was referring specifically to federal land use policies, including a congressional proposal to supersede city and county zoning powers.)

“If you’ve received a flyer in the last couple of weeks that says ‘O’Quinn Ranch slated for massive development,’ you’ve been hoodwinked,” Isaac tells the crowd. “They’re playing on your emotions that people want to pump the land dry.”

When members of the audience demand to know why he filed the MUD bill, Isaac offers a consistent refrain: “Because it’s his property! It’s his right.” Referring to complaints about frequent gunfire on the property, Isaac retorts, “So not only do you want to tell him what he can or can’t do with his land, you want to take away his guns, too?”

As the audience grows increasingly agitated, Isaac loses his cool a bit. “I’d much rather spend time with my boys. But if you want to learn something about this…”

Perhaps the tensest moment arrives when Larry Landaker, a member of the Pedernales Electric Cooperative and a Wimberley real estate agent, takes the mic.

“This room tonight makes me feel real good, because the people of Wimberley apparently haven’t been listened to by the senator’s office or Rep. Isaac’s office,” he says. “And the arrogance of that takes my breath away.” At that allegation, Isaac rises to speak.

“Rep. Isaac, sit down please, sit down, sit down—your offices are holding a snake. Two, three years ago we in this Wimberley Valley weren’t listened to by Rep. Patrick Rose and he’s gone.” The crowd hoots and hollers.

The next day, Isaac hardly seems chastened. He tells the Observer that “at least 80 percent of the crowd” is anti-growth. “When I ran, I made it very clear where my principles were—I stand for private property rights.”

It’s that line that drives some people in Wimberley crazy. A MUD, they argue, is a special privilege, a grant of governmental powers to a private interest. Andrew Weber, an attorney who served a two-year stint as Attorney General Greg Abbott’s right-hand man, skewered Isaac for his stance.

The MUD legislation, Weber said to Isaac at the meeting, “goes off the philosophical and conceptual rails. While the landowner has a right to seek a MUD, he has no right to obtain it. For that he needs you—our elected representatives—to carry his water.”
He continued: “Giving this owner this MUD is the antithesis of the traditional, rugged individualism and private property rights you—and Ronald Reagan—espouse.”
 
Typically, MUDs are used to finance water, sewage and other infrastructure in fast-growing areas on the margins of big cities. Think of The Woodlands, north of Houston. For developers,MUDs offer a convenient and risk-minimizing way to recoup costs.

“Overall [MUDs] have been a useful tool,” says Republican Hays County Commissioner Will Conley. “I’ve supported many special districts in my service in Hays County.” However, Conley says, “it is not an inherent property right, but is in fact a tool. That means, in my point of view, there has to be a greater community good accomplished if we are going to empower an entity or person with this tool.”
Isaac points out that LaMantia can develop his property with or without a MUD. “Right now, the owner could develop that land and put over 1,500 wells and 1,500 septic systems on there. He could do that right now.” A MUD, he says, will prevent future owners from subdividing the ranch and selling it off piece by piece.
But a MUD would make it much more possible for denser-type development,” says Conley. Even if LaMantia didn’t develop the MUD, it “would become a bull’s-eye for large private development companies.”
Notably, the LaMantias own a 5,034 acre trophy ranch near Steamboat Springs, Colorado that is on the market for $59 million. A little over a third of the ranch has a conservation easement limiting development. The other two-thirds—3,176 acres—has “no restrictions and would allow division into smaller parcels,” according to a website listing the ranch.
LaMantia has been tight-lipped about his plans for Needmore. He didn’t return phone calls from the Observer to his office. There is no publicly available development plan for the property—an unusual circumstance for MUDs in Texas.
Those who have spoken with LaMantia, Conley and Isaac included, say that he’s seeking the MUD based on advice from his tax attorneys. A MUD would increase the value of the land and provide a nice tax write-off. LaMantia reportedly told them that he’s interested in conservation easements to preserve parts of the ranch, but has refused to enter into a development agreement with the county. “Once the MUD is formed, then they want to talk about the future,” Conley says.
The legislation forming the MUD is speeding through the Legislature. Its passage is all but assured. Such bills are generally rubberstamped by lawmakers, who see little point in getting involved in another politician’s local turf wars.
And the political stroke of the LaMantia family certainly can’t hurt. Greg LaMantia and other members of his family have contributed almost $2.1 million to Texas politicians since 2009, putting them in the upper echelon of campaign funders. This session, Greg LaMantia hired lobbyist-attorney Ed McCarthy Jr., one of the top legal experts on water in the state.
Isaac has agreed to a few changes to the usual MUD structure. In the bill’s latest draft, the district’s eminent domain authority is limited; the Needmore MUD would be able to condemn land only for the “purpose of importing surface water into the district.”
Isaac has also promised to add provisions to the bill that would promote conservation, though the proposed changes were not available at press time.

Hays County is one of the fastest-growing counties in the nation. Between 1980 and 2012, the county’s population more than quadrupled, from 41,000 to 169,000. The mostly rural portion of the county west of I-35 could triple again by 2060, according to population estimates
Hand-wringing over growth is a local pastime. Disagreement over how to manage development, if at all, besets community politics. In the last decade, the philosophy of growth-über-alles has fallen out of favor, even among many Republican elected officials like Will Conley.
But Isaac and Campbell are a different breed. They represent not so much the good ol’ boy system once dominant in Hays County, but a new ideologically driven brand of tea party politics that binds reflexive distrust of government to unquestioning faith in unfettered markets.
No wonder Isaac’s answer to those who ask how Needmore can be saved is that they should buy the $20 million ranch themselves.
That strikes many in the Wimberley Valley as a shockingly glib answer given the apparently permanent problem of water scarcity in Needmore’s neighborhood.
A 2011 report on water and wastewater commissioned by Hays County states flatly: “The ambience and sustainable picture desired by many in western Hays County is likely only achievable if growth is somehow significantly limited or is channeled into certain development areas.”
In other words, limits on and patterns of development should be determined by water.
“Development should be driven by the availability of water, not the other way around,” said one Wimberley resident at a House committee hearing on Isaac’s bill. “That’s the way life is going to be in the Hill Country, and in Texas, from now on.”



Forrest Wilder, a native of Wimberley, Texas, joined the Observer as a staff writer in 2005. Forrest specializes in environmental reporting and runs the “Forrest for the Trees” blog. Forrest has appeared on Democracy Now!, The Rachel Maddow Show and numerous NPR stations. His work has been mentioned by The New York Times, the Washington Post, the New Yorker, Time magazine and many other state and national publications. Other than filing voluminous open records requests, Forrest enjoys fishing, kayaking, gardening and beer-league softball. He holds a bachelor's degree in anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin.
Posted: May 08, 2013 17:33   Go to blog
Commentary on Town Hall Meeting held Thursday, 4/25/2013 at Wimberley Community Center (Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development)April 27, 2013 13:43

To : Citizens of Wimberley Valley and Hays CountyFrom: CARD Steering CommitteeRe: Commentary on Town Hall Meeting held Thursday, 4/25/2013 at Wimberley Community Center
More than 400 concerned Hays County citizens gathered at the Wimberley Community Center Thursday evening, April 25, to speak their mind on legislation affecting the future of our area. Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD) hosted the meeting about plans to turn the 5,000 acre Needmore Ranch – the former O’Quinn Ranch – into a Municipal Utility District (MUD) adjacent to Wimberley...

To : Citizens of Wimberley Valley and Hays County
From: CARD Steering Committee
Re: Commentary on Town Hall Meeting held Thursday, 4/25/2013 at Wimberley Community Center

More than 400 concerned Hays County citizens gathered at the Wimberley Community Center Thursday evening, April 25, to speak their mind on legislation affecting the future of our area. Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD) hosted the meeting about plans to turn the 5,000 acre Needmore Ranch – the former O’Quinn Ranch – into a Municipal Utility District (MUD) adjacent to Wimberley. Attendees filled 300 chairs, fully lined back and side walls and over-flowed into the building’s lobby. Brookshire Brothers lot was filled; attendees parked as far away as The Leaning Pear restaurant.

Also invited and attending were State Rep. Jason Isaac (R-Dist. 45) and Hays County Commissioner Will Conley (R-Pct. 3), Wimberley Mayor Bob Flocke and several members of the city council. State Senator Donna Campbell (R-Dist. 25) was represented by her communications director John Oliver. All attendees were welcomed to speak; more than 25 signed up to do so.

Needmore Ranch is owned by McAllen businessman Greg LaMantia. At his request, Sen. Campbell and Rep. Isaac recently filed companion bills, SB 1868 and HB 3918, in the State Legislature to create the Needmore Ranch Municipal Utilities District #1, to include all of the ranch property except the estimated 980 acres within the city of Wimberley’s planning jurisdiction (ETJ).  A MUD gives owners rights far beyond standard property rights. Like a municipality it has power to levy taxes, effect eminent domain, get tax exempt bond financing, and other powers listed in the statute.  The bills are being routed through the” local and consent” state legislative process which almost assures their passage unless challenged by another legislator.  Currently the bills are pending near final action in the Senate and House.

Alarmed by the potential impact a 4,000+ acre MUD-empowered development could have on our area’s limited aquifer water supply, roads, schools, and the Blanco River,  CARD called the meeting to allow citizen input and ask the legislators to explain their actions and seek withdrawal of the bills.

Invited to speak first, Rep. Isaac framed the MUD as a simple property rights bill. Isaac contended that Mr. LaMantia has a private property right to obtain government approval of a MUD, which Isaac called a “traditional right”. Oliver, speaking for Sen. Campbell, criticized CARD for calling the meeting.  He also argued Mr. LaMantia’s basic private property right to get the added governmental powers. He claimed the bills were not fast-tracked, though they were filed April 3-4 without support of local government.

The MUD bills are opposed by Hays County and by a resolution from the city of Wimberley. Lila McCall read Com. Conley’s letter of opposition. CARD’s moderator, Jim McMeans read the City of Wimberley’s resolution of opposition. McMeans then began calling speakers from the audience to the podium.

Among the first was an attorney who quietly broke down the details of the MUD. He indicated Rep. Isaac’s representation was misleading, and pointed out that all of the protections for other local property owners that Isaac said were in the legislation were not actually in the bill, but were only oral agreements not valid in court. Isaac eventually conceded this was correct.

·         One speaker noted that Hays County regulations allow development to a variety of residential densities within the ranch – ranging from 1,500 lots with individual wells and septic, and up to 6,900 lots with full piped water and sewer utilities, for a population of up to 16,000 persons.  This development is possible with or without a MUD, but a MUD would give the developer very favorable financing for the project. Many others pointed out the tax breaks of a MUD.

·         Several challenged the premise that LaMantia has a basic property right to a MUD created by governmental action.  One explained that MUDs have been used in Texas to stimulate development where there is a direct benefit to an area and the area desires that development. He added, as did others, that every property owner has a basic property right to use and develop his/her property following established policies that are available to everyone.

·         Another speaker explained the use of MUDs within Texas and shared some of the problems that occur with them.   A speaker from a local home owners association spoke of his concern for traffic that might exit the large development into his subdivision and also problems he had encountered in working with LaMantia on an emergency access easement.

·         A speaker noted the importance of the spring flows from the Fern Bank Springs on the Blanco adjacent to the ranch and the presence of a federally endangered species at that site. She explained that flows along the Blanco River would be threatened by excessive Needmore pumping and noted that Blanco River flows contribute to the flows into Barton Springs during drought.

·         Several speakers questioned Isaac’s and Campbell’s motivation to seek a MUD for Mr. LaMantia.  One detailed the LaMantia family’s high political campaign contributions.  Other speakers expressed their concern for the environment and for the well flows of other property owners from over pumping of groundwater likely with the potential dense development of the ranch property.

After questions from the audience to Conley, Isaac, and Oliver, Rep. Isaac agreed that based on the concerns of the community, certain changes could be made in the bill.  He said he would work with Conley the following day (Friday) to make the bill more acceptable.  Conley stated that both bills would likely be approved by the House and Senate and the best option was to try to revise the bills to achieve a compromise.  Isaac said he will not withdraw the bills, but will work on a compromise.

An estimated 200 people stayed until meeting end at 9:30 p.m., after which many lingered past 10 p.m. to engage in discussions with Isaac, Conley, Oliver and CARD members.

CARD Chair Louis Parks expresses CARD’s gratitude to all the elected officials and citizens who participated. “We are immensely proud of our community for speaking out,” Parks says.

Respectfully, Louis Parks, CARD Chair, and Jim McMeans, Moderator/CARD member.








Posted: April 27, 2013 13:43   Go to blog
Urgent! - Town Hall Meeting - 7 pm Thursday, April 25th at Wimberley Community CenterApril 23, 2013 11:26
Sponsored by Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD) 
                                                  
O'QUINN RANCH SLATED FOR MASSIVE DEVELOPMENT
WIMBERLEY COMMUNITY CENTER  7:00 PM - THURSDAY, APRIL 25TH
The 5,000-acre Needmore Ranch (the former O'Quinn Ranch) adjacent to Wimberley could become a free-standing town thanks to MUD* legislation introduced and fast-tracked by State Senator Donna Campbell and State Representative Jason Isaac.Campbell and Isaac are intent on jeopardizing our scarce water supply and the treasured Blanco River to benefit one single property owner.Most MUD legislation seeks local official support. This one did not...

                                                  
O'QUINN RANCH SLATED FOR MASSIVE DEVELOPMENT

7:00 PM - THURSDAY, APRIL 25TH

  • The 5,000-acre Needmore Ranch (the former O'Quinn Ranch) adjacent to Wimberley could become a free-standing town thanks to MUD* legislation introduced and fast-tracked by State Senator Donna Campbell and State Representative Jason Isaac.
  • Campbell and Isaac are intent on jeopardizing our scarce water supply and the treasured Blanco River to benefit one single property owner.
  • Most MUD legislation seeks local official support. This one did not. The companion bills (SB 1868 and HB 3918) are strongly opposed by elected Hays County and City of Wimberley officials and by local property owners.
  • Hays County Commissioner Will Conley and County Judge Bert Cobb have written letters opposing the MUD, and the Wimberley City Council has unanimously passed a Resolution opposing the MUD.
    • The boundaries of this MUD were set to exclude the ETJ (planning area) of the City of Wimberley to avoid having to ask for the city's concurrence in creation of the MUD. Bill sponsors also bypassed Hays County Commissioners Court.

ATTEND THIS MEETING TO SHOW YOUR SUPPORT !

  • Hear from our State Officials who have introduced this special purpose legislation creating a MUD for one property owner, Mr. Greg LaMantia, from McAllen.
  • Your presence will help send a message to these State Officials.
*Municipal Utility Districts are created to facilitate development of property outside cities. They have the power to levy taxes, seize property by eminent domain, sell debt, and build subdivisions all under the direction of an appointed - not elected - board of directors. 
  



Needmore Ranch
Rep. Isaac is trying to push HB 3918  through the Special Districts Committee on Wed. April 24th before the Town Hall meeting April 25th Thursday night.  We need as many people as possible to contact the committee members prior to the hearing this Wed. April 24th. Please email and call all the members of the House Special Purpose Districts Committee and Senate Administration Committee and tell them you and your local elected officials oppose these bills! Ask them to bring these bills to the House and Senate floor for debate. Ask  Senator Campbell and Rep. Issac to debate the Needmore MUD companion bills (SB 1868 and HB 3918) in front of the legislature and the public.


State Representative Jason Isaac - jason.isaac@house.state.tx.us - 512-463-0647 


State Senator Donna Campbell - donna.campbell@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0125



HB 3918 by Isaac - Needmore Ranch Municipal Utility District #1 is set for public hearing on Wednesday, 4/24 at 8:00 am in Room E2.014 at the Capital in Austin.  It is one of several bills that will be heard by the committee that day.  To register to speak at the hearing, you enter the Capital and find a screen that will allow you to sign up for the hearing electronically.  They no longer use cards.  You must know the bill # - HB 3918 - to sign up to speak before the committee shown below. 

Rep. Dennis Bonnen is the Chairman.



We need lots of contacts from people to all members of this committee before the public hearing date stating opposition to HB 3918.   


HOUSE SPECIAL PURPOSE DISTRICTS COMMITTEE  - Clerk: Steven Schar   steven.schar_hc@house.state.tx.us   Phone: 512-463-0277   


SENATE ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEE

Sen. Kevin Eltife - kevin.eltife@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0101 - Chairman


Sen. Carlos Uresti - carlos.uresti@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0119
Sen. John Carona - john.carona@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0116
Sen. Kelly Hancock - kelly.hancock@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0109
Sen. John Whitmire - john.whitmire@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0115
Sen. Tommy Williams - tommy.williams@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0104
Sen. Judith Zaffirini - judith.zaffirini@senate.state.tx.us - 512-463-0121
___________________________________________________________________________________________


  
Chairman, Vice Chairman and Members House Special Purpose District and  Senate Administration Committees,

SB 1868 and HB 3918 which resides in your committees has the following points of opposition:

  1. Hays County Commissioner Will Conley opposes this bill which will create the Needmore Ranch MUD #1 in his district.
  1. Hays County Judge Bert Cobb opposes this bill because the Hays County Commissioners' Court has never been contacted by Senator Donna Campbell. 
  1. Mayor Bob Flocke and the Wimberley City Council oppose this bill. 
  1. Citizens of Wimberley and Hays County oppose the proposed MUD and have called an emergency Town Hall Meeting April 24th at 7pm at the Wimberley Community Center.  
SB 1868 also has the following additional problems
  • Support of local elected officials was never obtained.
  • Needmore Ranch does not need a MUD because a significant part of the ranchis within Wimberley's ETJ and is entirely within Hays County jurisdiction.  Both entities have very adequate subdivision regulations to guide any development project, if that should be the final decision of the owner.
  • Overdevelopment of the 5,000 acre Needmore Ranch could have significant impacts on water quality and quantity for local land owners, local springs such as Fern Bank Spring, and the Blanco River

    For immediate release: April 21, 2013

    Wimberley area citizen's group calls for emergency Town Hall Meeting.

    Wimberley - In response to the rushed legislation in the state legislature to grant a MUD (Municipal Utility District) on a 5,000 acre property just east of Wimberley, Citizens Alliance for Responsible Development (CARD) has called for an emergency 

    Wimberley Town Hall Meeting
    7 p.m. Thursday, April 25
    Wimberley Community Center
    14068 Ranch Road 12 in Wimberley

    The legislation was introduced and is being rushed through the current legislature by State Senator Donna Campbell and State Representative Jason Isaac, to the benefit of one person, McAllen businessman Greg LaMantia. This is over the vigorous objections of County Judge Bert Cobb, County Commissioner Will Conley, and all members of the Wimberley City Council. 

    Also objecting are many citizens of the Wimberley area, who could be adversely affected by this legislation. None of the local leaders were consulted on this legislation, as tradition, good sense and civic welfare dictate.

    Granting a MUD will allow virtual city stature to the park-like 5,000-acre Needmore ranch (formerly O'Quinn Ranch) located adjacent to Wimberley. The property is one of the most beautiful and environmentally sensitive holdings remaining in Hays County. MUD status would allow the owner the power to levy taxes, sell debt, and build subdivisions all under the direction of an appointed - not elected - board of directors. 

    CARD - a not-for-profit volunteer organization dedicated to maintaining the Wimberley Valley's character and property values FOR ALL - is sponsoring the meeting, and has invited Isaac and Campbell to explain how their legislation, Senate Bill 1868 and House Bill 3918, will benefit the people of Wimberley and Hays County, or anyone other than the owner of the property. Also invited are Cobb, Conley and all area citizens to present their views.

    Attached is a copy of a flier-email release being circulated by CARD and other concerned area organizations and individuals. Also attached is a letter from Commissioner Will Conley. 

    Media: for further information on the Town Hall Meeting:

    Louis Parks, CARD chair: 512-289-8666, Louis.parks@gmail.com
    Jim McMeans, CARD steering committee, 512-847-6578. jrmcmeans@msn.com
    including impact on the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone and scenic Little Arkansas.

Please do not pass SB 1868 when it comes before your Senate Administration Committee.  IT IS STRONGLY OPPOSED!

Thank you for your consideration,  
 FORWARD THIS EMAIL  

City of Wimberley Mud Resolution
Conley Lamantia...l ltr pg 2

Posted: April 23, 2013 11:26   Go to blog
Jacob's Well becomes Vortex for Development Fight April 13, 2013 21:03
American-Statesman 
By Asher Price 
The fate of Jacob’s Well, a shimmering spring that forms the headwaters of the creek that cuts through this quaint Hill Country town, is at the center of a skirmish involving developers, environmentalists and the local groundwater district.
         David Baker, right, Executive Director of the Jacob’s Well Natural
          Area and Malcolm Harris, left, Attorney & Counselor at Law for the
Fowler Law Firm poses at the iconic spring in Wimberley.
Photo by Ricardo B...
American-Statesman 
By Asher Price 

The fate of Jacob’s Well, a shimmering spring that forms the headwaters of the creek that cuts through this quaint Hill Country town, is at the center of a skirmish involving developers, environmentalists and the local groundwater district.
         David Baker, right, Executive Director of the Jacob’s Well Natural
          Area and Malcolm Harris, left, Attorney & Counselor at Law for the
Fowler Law Firm poses at the iconic spring in Wimberley.


The developer, Wimberley Springs Partners, which has owned property in the vicinity of the spring for about a decade, wants permission to pump more underground water from the Trinity aquifer, the same one that feeds Jacob’s Well, for a growing subdivision and a new golf course.

But an environmental group, the Wimberley Valley Watershed Association, says more pumping could dry up the spring, thus robbing Cypress Creek, a tributary of the Blanco River, of water.

“We believe that if you supplied water (to the subdivision), Jacob’s Well would stop flowing,” said David Baker, executive director of the watershed association.

Despite having survived the drought of the 1950s, the spring has gone dry several times over the past dozen years — Baker blames increased groundwater pumping as the region has grown.
Central Texas is riddled with underground aquifers, oddly shaped, vast, limestone-encased caverns recharged by rainfall. Across the region, whether it be the Trinity, the Edwards Aquifer, or others, the question has become whether these natural buckets can sustain the number of straws sucking out their water.

In the annals of Central Texas water struggles, this dispute distinguished itself after a judge last month contest the permit it had granted to the developers.


Jacob's Well, an iconic spring in Wimberley, on April 11, 2013.
excoriated the Hays Trinity Groundwater Conservation District, established to regulate pumping in the region, because it denied the watershed association and some Wimberley residents their request to

Having examined the district’s own rules, Judge Dwight Peschel, a senior judge of the state’s 25th Judicial District, decided the Hays Trinity board’s action was “arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion.”

The scolding wasn’t on the merits of whether further pumping would dry up Jacob’s Well, but about how the board handled a permit protest by the watershed association.

In February 2011, the board had decided in a 3-2 vote to allow Wimberley Springs Partners to pump as much as 160 million gallons as it set about building a long-platted golf course and prepared to build more houses on its subdivision just north of Wimberley. That’s enough water to satisfy the annual needs of about 1,500 average Austin homes.
Some Wimberley residents and the Wimberley Valley Watershed Association then sought a contested case hearing to block the permit. The case has hinged on whether advice from the district’s staff to association members that they could still file protests — even if that advice might be wrong — effectively extended the deadline to protest the permit.
A view of an area where a proposed golf course
may be developed near the Jacob's Well area.


The request was filed in a timely fashion and in accordance “with the board’s then-existing interpretation of its own rules,” according to a lawyer representing the Wimberley residents and the association. But the board balked. In April 2011, it denied the request for a contested case hearing on the grounds that it was filed too late.

The board’s president, a rancher named Jimmy Skipton, didn’t return a call and email for comment. His mission, according to a bio he wrote in 2012, is “to protect our groundwater and the rights of landowners in Hays County.”

In November 2012, the watershed association and some Wimberley residents sued the district in Hays district court.

In a joint filing with the developer, which voluntarily added itself as a defendant, a lawyer for the groundwater district wrote that because they missed a deadline, the “plaintiffs do not have standing in this court, and their attempts to argue the merits of the District’s decision to grant an operating permit to Wimberley Springs are improper and should be overruled.”

But the judge wrote that “Plaintiffs’ relying on what was told to them by (the groundwater district) was reasonable,” since one of the district’s rules doesn’t specify when the request must be filed.
Winton Porterfield, vice president of Wimberley Springs Partners, said the developers want to be good stewards of the land.

The groundwater is meant to irrigate the proposed golf course only until enough treated effluent can be collected from new homes to feed the course, he said. The permit grants far less water than is usually required by two golf courses — Wimberley Springs already operates another golf course in the area and the developers plan to use only drought-tolerant plants around the course, he added.

The subdivision currently has about 1,000 homes, though it could build as many as 1,800 more. The new course is essential to the subdivision’s identity, Porterfield said.

“Property values are dependent on that amenity to keep them up,” he said. “It’s a golf course community. We want to have something that encourages a healthy, active lifestyle.”

But Malcolm Harris, president of the watershed association, said that if Jacob’s Well dries up, it could have economic consequences for Wimberley, with its shops, chock-full of collectibles, vintage clothes and scented candles, and for its most famous swimming hole — Blue Hole — strung along Cypress Creek. Water from the creek, seeping back underground, has also been tracked to Austin’s Barton Springs.

A contested case hearing “would be an opportunity to present scientific evidence on the impact of granting a permit,” Harris said.

Russ Johnson, an attorney for Wimberley Spring Partners, said he plans to appeal the judge’s decision.



Jacob's Well, an iconic spring in Wimberley, on April 11, 2013

Posted: April 13, 2013 21:03   Go to blog
AgriLife Extension launches Water Education Network onlineApril 02, 2013 16:34

Writer: Kathleen Phillips, 979-845-2872, ka-phillips@tamu.eduContact:  Treye Rice, tgrice@ag.tamu.eduDr. Pete Gibbs, 979-862-3932, p-gbbs@tamu.eduCOLLEGE STATION — A Water Education Network to help people in Texas learn the  best ways to manage the precious resource has been launched by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service.
The site, http://water.tamu.edu,  provides a “front door” for all of AgriLife Extension’s information on water conservation, water management, irrigation and water quality, which makes it easier to navigate, according to the developers.
“With water being our agency’s No. 1 topic, it was crucial that we develop easy access to water materials,” said Dr...

COLLEGE STATION — A Water Education Network to help people in Texas learn the  best ways to manage the precious resource has been launched by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service.

The site, http://water.tamu.edu,  provides a “front door” for all of AgriLife Extension’s information on water conservation, water management, irrigation and water quality, which makes it easier to navigate, according to the developers.

“With water being our agency’s No. 1 topic, it was crucial that we develop easy access to water materials,” said Dr. Pete Gibbs, AgriLife Extension associate director. “AgriLife can be the go-to source for objective and reliable water information.”
Posted: April 02, 2013 16:34   Go to blog
Water Bill Includes Historic Increase in Funding for ConservationMarch 27, 2013 20:42
But House Rejects Amendment to Limit Environmental Damage from New Reservoirs

Today the Texas House of Representatives adopted HB 4, which establishes a new water infrastructure fund to provide state assistance to water providers seeking to build new reservoirs, pipelines, and other supply projects. The bill sets aside 20% of funding for conservation and re-use projects. If companion bill HB 11, which transfers $2 billion from the rainy day fund to the new water fund, also passes, at least $400 million will go toward conservation and re-use...
But House Rejects Amendment to Limit Environmental Damage from New Reservoirs

Today the Texas House of Representatives adopted HB 4, which establishes a new water infrastructure fund to provide state assistance to water providers seeking to build new reservoirs, pipelines, and other supply projects. The bill sets aside 20% of funding for conservation and re-use projects. If companion bill HB 11, which transfers $2 billion from the rainy day fund to the new water fund, also passes, at least $400 million will go toward conservation and re-use.  The fund is expected to grow over time, so ultimately billions could go toward conservation in the coming decades.

The House voted 104 – 41 against an amendment by Rep. Phil King to weaken the 20% set aside for conservation. 

Rep. Eddie Lucio III disappointingly led a successful effort to defeat an amendment by Rep. Donna Howard to require the water board to consider environmental impacts – among five others already in the bill – as a factor in choosing which projects to fund. 

Statement by Environment Texas Director Luke Metzger

In every sector of water use, new technologies and better management practices can enable us to get more out of a gallon of water. We can’t control when it rains, but we can control how we use water. State funding can help cut water waste, improve water conservation, and steer Texas toward a more sustainable water future.

We applaud the House for rejecting an effort to gut funding for water conservation. Thanks especially to Rep. Doug Miller, Jim Keffer and Lyle Larson for speaking out against the King amendment.
We are very disappointed that the House voted against directing the water board to consider environmental impacts in their funding decisions. New reservoirs, pipelines and desalination projects can cause major harm to our rivers, our forests and our bays and estuaries. It’s irresponsible not to consider these impacts when deciding which projects to back with state money. 

Environment Texas is a statewide, citizen-funded, non-profit advocate for clean air, clean water and open spaces.


Posted: March 27, 2013 20:42   Go to blog
George Cofer works to save open spacesMarch 26, 2013 15:47
George Cofer  -As head of the Hill Country Conservancy, advocate has changed the conversation about the environment in Central Texas  By Michael Barnes  American-Statesman Staff In 1961, when George Cofer and his friends from West Lake Hills entered the halls of what was then O. Henry Junior High on West 10th Street, they ran smack into an Austin version of culture shock.
...

George Cofer  -As head of the Hill Country Conservancy, advocate has changed the conversation about the environment in Central Texa

By Michael Barnes  American-Statesman Staff

In 1961, when George Cofer and his friends from West Lake Hills entered the halls of what was then O. Henry Junior High on West 10th Street, they ran smack into an Austin version of culture shock.
Photo by Laura Skelding

“West Lake primarily was known for bootleggers, stonemasons and cedar-choppers,” Cofer, 64, drawls with amusement about the rap on his hometown, then considered on the “wrong” side of the river.

“Those were not derogatory terms at the time to us. The Tarrytown girls labeled us hicks. They’d been to cotillions and coming-out parties. We’d been out hunting and fishing.”

Although Cofer became one of the most recognizable players on Austin’s environmental scene, the head of the Hill Country Conservancy never abandoned his elemental zeal for the out of doors. He stayed active in Scouting, swam competitively and water-skied with his wide circle of friends. He fought to save Barton Springs and camped out at Edenic spots, such as Storm Ranch in Hays County, open space that the Conservancy later helped to preserve.
Photo by Laura Skelding

“George found his ‘niche’ in the fight to protect Barton Springs,” says Mary Arnold, godmother to Austin’s green movement. “We and future generations will benefit from his dedication, his energy, his way of educating others to the value of conserving the land, and his determination to find resources to accomplish the conservancy’s goals.”

Cofer has led the charge to snap up conservation easements in the Hill Country, allowing some private projects, thereby securing legal protection for other open space in perpetuity.
Soon, his group will help break ground on Phase 2 of a grand project — the 30-mile Violet Crown Trail that will link the parks and greenbelts in Austin’s urban core toward a spine of Hill Country that arcs across the Barton Springs recharge zone.

“What open space the community is able to preserve in the next 25 years is probably the only land that will be forever in a natural or green state,” he says. “As we say at the conservancy, when it’s gone, it’s gone for good. When the conservancy preserves the land, it’s here forever.”

Texan through and through

Few Central Texans come to a love of this land — and an understanding of how power works — with family credentials as sterling as Cofer’s.“We don’t talk about it,” says the sixth-generation Texan. “But we are very glad we have those deep roots.”

On his father’s side, Cofer is descended from Texas lawyers, judges and elected officials. His father, Texas land commissioner among her relatives. A school nutritionist, Chapman also served as an executive assistant for a state legislator.
Photo by Laura Skelding
Hume Cofer, served as state district judge. His mother, Carolyn FitzGerald Chapman, counts ranchers, aldermen and at least one

Cofer’s parents divorced when he was 15 and both remarried. He remains close with siblings and step-siblings. One brother, Bill Cofer, runs the ancestral ranch on the Frio River.

“We were riding horses at the ranch since we were babies,” Cofer says. “My grandmother’s preference was that we stop in San Antonio at the Menger Hotel. When she grew up going to the ranch it was a two-day trip. She never got quite used to driving straight through.”

His step-dad, deceased banker Neal Dow Chapman, was quite the fisherman, friend of famed Central Texans Conrad Fath and Russell Lee, and he served as Cofer’s Explorer troop scoutmaster.

“Our vacations were really fun camping trips to places like Mexico or Port Aransas,” Cofer fondly recalls. “We used to camp for a week at Hamilton Pool — right by the pool!”

Cofer swam freestyle sprints for the Austin Aquatic Club and later the University of Texas. His Scouting career peaked with the 1960 National Jamboree in Colorado Springs, Colo., and an enviable trip to Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico.

Did he inherit this propensity for the natural world?

“I’ve always been interested in how much is social and how much hard-wired,” Cofer says. “I must have some genetic affinity for the great outdoors, but I think Scouting and ranching contributed to that life.”

Winding paths to maturity

In seventh and ninth grades, at least when the legislature was in session, Cofer didn’t go to school at all. He worked instead as a Senate page or a House clerk at the Capitol.
Later, he and his brother ran a Lake Austin beer joint called the Pier.

“I’d go to UT in the morning, the Capitol in the afternoon, the Pier at night,” he says. “We were lake rats, living in a shack on the lake.”

Throughout his youth, Cofer was social and something of a ne’er-do-well. Among his high school friends were future power broker Ed Wendler Jr., Salt Lick owner Scott Roberts and golf course designer Roy Bechtol. His “running, trouble-making buddies” were Roy Duckworth, Robert Furlow and Kristy Billy.

“Yes, Billy was his last name,” Cofer says. “His dad owned several beer joints — Pink Flamingo and Bamboo Hut — we had fun in those places as well.”

Somewhat tongue-in-cheek, Cofer says he chose University of California-Santa Barbara for his pre-UT semesters because Playboy rated the No. 1 party school in America. While studying aerospace engineering — he wanted to be an astronaut — he also got in plenty of surfing.

In an almost inevitable rite of passage for the 1960s, he followed his sister up to Haight-Ashbury in San Fransisco.

Back at UT in Austin, he discovered the best parties were in the Classics Department — “they drank wine” — then moved on to seek a bachelor of arts. He took his time.“That term ‘slacker’?” he says.

“We all had Ph.D.s in Slackerism. UT cost $200 a semester. You could be at the lake in 10 minutes. We had the best music in the world, all the good honky-tonks. It was easier, freer, more open then.”

He graduated in 1971. Following the logic of the time, the lover of fine woodworking and remodeling started Hill Country Haze Construction, which lasted until 1984. His first marriage in the 1970s produced one daughter, Chesleigh Lloyd. He’s been married to Mary Elizabeth Morgan since 1987. She had one daughter from a previous marriage, Hanna Robin Morgan, whom Cofer adopted Feb. 19. “Which I think sets the record for slowness,” Cofer jokes. “Twenty-six years it took.”

The early green years

The Rollingwood resident attended his first meeting for the Save Barton Creek Association — the precursor to Save Our Springs (SOS) — in 1990.

“I had not been paying attention to the debate about land use and development or whether development in the Barton Creek watershed would affect Barton Springs,” Cofer admits. “I asked: ‘What do you mean there’s a debate?” I’d witnessed significant changes to the creek going back to the construction of Barton Creek Mall.”

Green pioneers such as Jack and Jackie Goodman, Shudde Fath, Wayne Gronquist and Bert Cromack had manned the environmental barricades for at least 15 years at this point. It was Cofer’s turn.

“George was never seeking personal recognition, but always willing to be in the background and help with whatever needed to be done,” Mary Arnold says. “And he was willing to stay involved for the long haul. And a long haul it has been!”

Grassroots fundraising was his first goal.

“Bill Bunch and I were able to get Jim Hightower to agree to have Robert Redford to do a fundraiser for Barton Springs at the Umlaufs,” Cofer says. “It was 100 bucks a person. Sold out because of Mr. Redford. Couldn’t be a nicer guy.”

Cofer was drafted to serve as programs manager — unpaid at first — of the association. He did what he continues to do well — gave outdoor tours, organized clean-ups, worked with educational and governmental groups.

“It was definitely a labor of love,” he says. “What mattered was that I was doing something I thought was important. We were fighting the good fight.”

Educating folks on how the underground aquifer directly affected water quality was not easy at first.
Photo by Laura Skelding
Nevertheless, Austin passed a series of water protection ordinances collectively known as “SOS.” The Texas Legislature and some local politicians maneuvered to get around SOS.
Eventually, though, Cofer also changed his tactics.

Working on a retail project proposed for the MoPac Boulevard extension near the Barton Springs recharge zone in Southwest Austin, he broke with the all-or-nothing, line-in-the-sand strategies of some fellow activists.

“Instead of proposing to develop 15 percent of the land, it was more like 45 percent,” Cofer recalls of the developers’ daring plan. “In return, though, landowners gave up 300 acres and a very significant cave. And built a huge runoff pond. It made more sense.”

The Save Our Springs advocacy group — he served on the board at the time — vehemently opposed it. So Cofer resigned.

From that point on, Cofer, who remains friendly with SOS leaders such as Bill Bunch, became associated with alternative strategies for preserving open spaces. He embraced notions such as encouraging quality density in the urban core as an antidote to limitless sprawl.

“People can love or hate SOS,” Cofer says. “But I do credit it with starting a serious conversation about environmental protection and water quality. Now it has evolved into a discussion of water quantity as well.”

The conservancy model

“George is a leader,” says innovative developer Terry Mitchell. “He does not speak to be heard, but to accomplish his mission. George is respected by the environmental community, the real estate community and civic leaders throughout the Austin area.”

The legal notion of private entities buying up development rights and investing in physical improvements goes back at least 100 years. The enormous, nationwide Nature Conservancy was founded in 1951 and the Texas Land Conservancy got going in 1982.

The Hill Country Conservancy, which Cofer founded in 1999, focuses on land near recharge zones southwest of Austin’s core. The group also works to influence development codes and regional planning.
This land trust project grew out of peace talks between green leaders and the developers. Cofer introduced the idea of easements.

“I knew about conservation easements from the landowners side,” he says, referring to the family ranch on the Frio. “It made sense to me. In a document recorded at courthouse, the terms are perpetual and set out the rights that the family reserves and the rights that are extinguished.”

One rhetorical sidestep helped to win over landowners, some of whom had joined the land rights movement in the 1990s.

“The Hill Country Conservancy is not for or against growth,” he says. “But when families want to preserve their land for a ranch, or a nature preserve, or a bed and breakfast, or a vineyard, or a hunting lease, it’s incumbent on all land trusts to make sure in the agreement that the family reserves enough rights to be economically successful.”

Critics accuse the conservancy of preserving the views of owners already rich in land, but to Cofer, open space is open space.

One of the biggest “gets” was Storm Ranch between Drippings Springs and Wimberley. Cofer had grown up with the children of late oilman and rancher Lynn Storm, who treasured his 5,700-acre ranch.
At one point during a ranch tour, Cofer recalls, a documentary film crew member posed a question to the ranch owner.

“Mr. Storm, this is an extraordinarily beautiful place and obviously worth a lot of money, have you ever thought about selling it,” Cofer retells. “He said: ‘I would sooner go to hell.’ It got very quiet in the truck.”

The agreement allows the Storm descendants to continue traditional agriculture, hunting and horseback riding, but protects the water and land as a single ranch.

At the Dahlstrom Ranch, right outside Buda, the relatives of Gay Ruby Dahlstrom had held 2,300 acres for three generations. It now supports an exotic game ranch, operated by fun-loving Jack Dahlstrom, her son, and small gravel quarry. Yet the ranch hid another extraordinary value.

“Jack pointed out cave entrances,” Cofer recalls of his first visit. “Some were covered with dirt, looked like low spots in the pastures. We got together with cave and aquifer experts and cleaned them out. They are still finding caves on that place. When it rains, water pours directly into the aquifer. What goes in, comes out at Barton Springs.”

Protecting caves like these makes economic sense as well.

“The water that comes off our yards, streets and parking lots has to be cleaned up,” Cofer points out. “It is exponentially more cost-effective to keep the water clean at its source. That’s the key link between land conservation and the water.”

Luckily, Gay Ruby Dahlstrom understood, as Cofer learned during negotiations.

“She had not mentioned any partitioning or rights to build homes,” Cofers remembers. “I said ‘Mrs. Dahlstrom that’s a beautiful vision, but wouldn’t you like to reserve the right to partition a small piece of the ranch and sell part of it, or give it to your children?’ She stopped me and said: ‘Mr. Cofer, what part of this conversation do you not understand?’ ”

A vision of green networks

Cofer foresees the Violet Crown Trail becoming the “trunk line” of 200-mile system that links up with the Butler Trail around Lady Bird Lake as well as the northern and eastern trails, including those along Shoal and Waller creeks.

The section between Zilker Park and Sunset Valley, including four miles along the Barton Creek Greenbelt, is done. Phase 2, to cost $6 million, will take two years to construct and extend the network to the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center and the Circle C Veloway.

“Connectivity is the big goal in these neighborhoods,” Cofer says. “But the Violet Crown Trail will not go all the way to Onion Creek because we don’t want it trashed like Twin Falls and Sculpture Falls get trashed every weekend on Barton Creek.”

The trail also showcases land that the Conservancy has saved since the 1990s.

“This may well be a game changer in how Central Texans can experience the beautiful Texas Hill Country,” Mitchell says. “I am hopeful that George’s leadership will provide a road map for many of us to take steps to preserve our unique environment. A lot of people talk about helping the environment, but no one in this city has done as much as George to improve and preserve it.”

 Michael Barnes writes about Austin’s people, places, culture and history.
Posted: March 26, 2013 15:47   Go to blog
Judge rules in favor of WVWAMarch 19, 2013 13:11
Peschel agrees that HTGCD violated its rules  SEGUIN — Dwight Peschel, Senior Judge of the 25th Judicial District, has released a letter indicating he is ruling in favor of the Wimberley Valley Watershed Association (WVWA) in its lawsuit against the Hays-Trinity Groundwater Conservation District (HTGCD) and Wimberley Springs Partners (WSP). HTGCD and WSP had asked for a summary judgment, which was denied, but the judge indicated his ruling would go much further. ...

Peschel agrees that HTGCD violated its rules 

SEGUIN — Dwight Peschel, Senior Judge of the 25th Judicial District, has released a letter indicating he is ruling in favor of the Wimberley Valley Watershed Association (WVWA) in its lawsuit against the Hays-Trinity Groundwater Conservation District (HTGCD) and Wimberley Springs Partners (WSP).

HTGCD and WSP had asked for a summary judgment, which was denied, but the judge indicated his ruling would go much further. Jacob's Well from above

“I find that the board’s action [the HTGCD] in finding that Plantiffs’ requests for a contested hearing were untimely filed was arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion,” Peschel wrote.

It is exactly what the WVWA had alleged against the HTGCD and WSP after conservation district issued a permit on Feb. 21 of 2011 without publishing the district’s recommendations or deadlines. The permit would allow golf course and greenbelt irrigation, according to Malcolm Harris, who in addition to serving on the WVWA board, is also acting as an attorney in the case.

“His ruling went further than to just deny the ruling by saying it was arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion,” Harris said. “His declaration said that in denying us a contested hearing was telling. If that is included in the final judgment, and his letter indicates that it will be, it means we have prevailed across the board in the lawsuit at the district level.”

Harris said that if that is the case, neither of the defendants would be able to appeal the case.

The WSP permit would allow 163,000,000 gallons of water per year to be drawn from the aquifer. 

“Hydrologic data indicates that this additional amount of groundwater pumping above Jacob’s Well will cause aquifer levels to drop and cause the spring to stop flowing in the future,” the WVWA said in a press release. “It is difficult to assess the full impact of the additional draw down without performing an aquifer test on the wells being considered for use.”

The subdivision in question is located off FM 2325 on Valley Springs Road.

According to the WVWA, hydrologic data indicated the intense amount of groundwater that would be pumped above Jacob’s Well would cause aquifer levels to drop and cause the spring to stop flowing in the future.

The permit by HTGCD was granted on a split 3-2 vote.  WVWA said “Rule 11”  had been violated, which states “each applicant for a new well operating permit shall perform an aquifer test and submit a report as part of the operating permit application.”

Harris has said from the start the lawsuit could have been avoided had HTGCD allowed the citizens who protested the golf course and the permit conditions as written by the developer had been allowed to testify to the district before permitting.

“The HTGCD board had never acted on this,” Harris said. “Then suddenly they did. A large contingent of the public showed up, alarmed, seeking to protest the permit.”

Harris said no one expected the HTGCD to vote on the matter.

“It was the understanding over everyone there — including former HTGCD board members like Jack Hollon — that the deadline for the deadline for formally requesting a contested hearing where testimony was taken would be 10 days after,” Harris said.

The judge agreed, saying the HTGCD ruling “provides that a formal protest against the proposed action prior to the application hearing” should have been conducted.

“Plaintiffs were told by a representative of the HTGCD that filing a request for a contested case hearing within 10 days would be ‘timely’,” Peschel wrote. “There being no rule for when an individual under Rule 5.5 must file a request for a contested hearing, Plaintiffs’ relying on what was told them by HTGCD was reasonable.”

The ruling likely means that HTGCD will have to hold the contested hearing that was denied in 2011, which could potentially overturn the WSP permit.

Courtesy of Wimberley View 

wview.editor@gmail.com

Posted: March 19, 2013 13:11   Go to blog
WVWA and Landowners Win Favorable Ruling in Golf Course SuitMarch 13, 2013 11:41
WVWA and the individual Plaintiffs have won a favorable ruling from the Court in the case of Wimberley Valley Watershed Association, Johanna L. Smith, H.K. Acord, Janet Acord, James R. McMeans and David Glenn vs. Hays Trinity Groundwater Conservation District, Defendant and Wimberley Springs Partners (WSP) Intervenor. 
Plaintiffs filed suit seeking to require the District to grant us a contested case hearing on the application of WSP to pump 997 acre feet of water per year from five wells in the vicinity of Jacob’s Well for a golf course development...
WVWA and the individual Plaintiffs have won a favorable ruling from the Court in the case of Wimberley Valley Watershed Association, Johanna L. Smith, H.K. Acord, Janet Acord, James R. McMeans and David Glenn vs. Hays Trinity Groundwater Conservation District, Defendant and Wimberley Springs Partners (WSP) Intervenor. 

Plaintiffs filed suit seeking to require the District to grant us a contested case hearing on the application of WSP to pump 997 acre feet of water per year from five wells in the vicinity of Jacob’s Well for a golf course development. 

Both the District and WSP filed Motions for Summary Judgment seeking to have our suit thrown out.  The matter was heard by Senior District Judge Dwight E. Peschel on February 26, 2013.  The Court has ruled in our favor denying the motions.   

The Court further found that the HTGCD action in denying our requests for contested case hearing “…was arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion.”  We anticipate that the case will proceed to a final judgment consistent with the above.  There is no indication at this point as to whether or not the opposing parties will seek to further challenge or appeal the Court’s ruling. 

 
Posted: March 13, 2013 11:41   Go to blog

Contact Us

Wimberley Valley Watershed Association   
P. O. Box 2534
Wimberley, TX 78676
512 722-3390   mail@wimberleywatershed.org

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