Let Us Shine
This is a forward moving, party neutral, interfaith, gathering of ideas to improve our community so everyone's potential can shine.
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Gilpin position on HB3298 Texas Water Grid /Pipeline bill
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Former EAA Director Gilpin's position on HB3298 Texas Water Grid /Pipeline bill
Dear legislators,
Please oppose the HB 3298 water grid legislation on May 7 2015 in House debate. The marketing of Texas water and trading of water/groundwater permits and water transport (pipelines or other forms of
transport) that facilitate private and corporate profits needs restrictions!
Our state is experiencing a public and natural water resource water crisis. Balancing water supply and demand in a way that maximizes public water security must take priority over maximizing profits of marketing water by increasing the ease of transport!
HB 3298 is premature and will make our water crisis worse. It must come after mechanisms, controls, and incentives to keep our water supply safe.
Water/ground water marketing endangers our water supply. HB 3298 would allow over-allocated, under-regulated EAA groundwater marketers to market more water-for-profit--selling to the highest bidders during the worst water crisis in our history.
This would make the water shortage worse while maximizing private profits for a few.
I am a former EAA director from New Braunfels, I agree with the Sierra Club position on applying
priorities to the most efficient and proven strategies to create security for our natural water resources.
Their and my Number One Top Priority is to maximize water conservation.
I am concerned that currently Texans have no comprehensive accounting of water demand and supply.
Education is a top priority to accomplish this goal, but without enforceable regulations, neither the
Texas Legislature nor the voters can hold leaders on the EAA board accountable to correct this problem.
The larger EAA pumpers control the EAA board as directors and their supporters while they make money selling, leasing and trading OUR groundwater at the expense of the springs’ going dry and smaller pumpers’ going without water.
If this dangerous bill passes, large pumpers will be able to pipe water to places previously banned and
they will create EAA regional water supply demands that will require the draining of the rest of the state
while they maximize their pumping during the worst of our state's drought periods.
In addition to making conservation a priority, we must have mechanisms to keep private-pumping-
profit-makers from being the decision makers on boards that regulate pumping and not allow them to
make decisions about how to manipulate weather, rainfall extremes and water supply options to maximize their private profits at risk of leaving the public dangerously out of balance with respect to water security.
The legislature must not continue its designation of the EAA board as a special board that manages its own board elections.
It must stop allowing pumpers or the board to use pumping permit fees to lobby for
legislative changes to maximize their pumping and groundwater permit marketing profits.
Legislated EAA critical period implementation, regulation, and enforcement must be given to the
Texas Water Development Board.
The state legislature must create a state-ban on private and corporate marketing of
water/groundwater (or permits) during times of water crises.
This would facilitate statewide incentives to maintain an adequate supply to meet our state’s water demands.
The use of all water must be comprehensively accounted for. At this time there exist exemptions and policies of not disclosing to the public how much water is used by some of the biggest water using industries like oil and gas exploration, power plants and the quarry, aggregate and concrete industries. Also at the EAA board level EAA rules do not require critical period reductions in use of water by those with domestic and livestock wells exempt from permitting if they use less than 25,000 gallons of water per pay in spite of EAA act provisions allowing the EAA board to apply critical aquifer level period water use reductions to them. Senate Bill 3 of 2007 established critical period reduction levels that the EAA board refused to apply to pumping permit holders during the times of critical periods, EAA rules allow pumping permitees to pump and market during time of critically low aquifer levels most of their only slighlty reduced annual permits while they can make the most money while there is a water shortage. Why has this not been corrected and allowed for 8 years????? The EAA Board refusal to apply legislated pumping reductions during the time of critical period must be aligned with the mandates and intent of legislated critical period pumping reductions immediately.
All of this must happen before passing measures like HB3298. Without water security measures in
place, such measures will cause more problems. No doubt Texas is far behind on balancing water supply
and demand. Many types of strategies are needed to resolve this problem.
Our state legislators by passing HB 3298 and by allowing the EAA board to ignore past legislation passed to protect over-use of the aquifer is supporting dangerous strategies that would maximize private marketing of water while creating a worse water crisis for the public.
We must get our priorities straight. The top goal must be a more secure public water supply.
We must effectively time-and-sequence-water-supply-strategies to better sustain our natural water resources.
Our biggest spring-Comal Springs--the biggest west of the Mississippi River--has been dry most of the past 2 years. As a former EAA director from New Braunfels where none of our major Comal springs naturally flow, I urge you to refuse to pass this dangerous bill.
I support this statement of position of the Sierra Club:
"Please oppose HB 3298 on the House General State Calendar for May 7. HB 3298 is a bill to direct the
Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) to evaluate how to establish and operate "a water grid,
including an integrated network of pipelines, pumping stations, reservoirs, and other works for the
conveyance of water between river basins, water sources, and areas of water use in the state."
The water grid called for in HB 3298 is a California-style approach that is not right for Texas. It's too
costly; too damaging to our state's aquifers, rivers, and coastal bays and estuaries; too harmful to our
rural areas and agricultural production; and ultimately as you see now in California doomed to fail to
meet our state's water needs.
What we need most in Texas is to enhance our efforts to conserve water and use it more efficiently.
If Texas pursues a state water grid, as HB 3298 would do, that will only inflame the controversies over how to provide water to meet the real needs of Texans.
Instead let's focus on approaches that will allow Texans to protect and share our water resources, not penalize some areas of the state to take water to benefit other areas while doing little to balance the state's water supply and demand deficits. Please vote against HB 3298. "
https://secure.sierraclub.org/site/Advocacy…
Sincerely, Cheryl Gilpin, former EAA director from New Braunfels where all our major Comal springs no
longer naturally flow and our biggest spring the biggest west of the Mississippi River stays dry most of
the past 2 years.
Posted by Until Justice and Water Flow at 6:13 AM
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Issues Surrounding the Edwards Aquifer from the Edwards Aquifer website
by Gregg Eckhardt
from http://www.edwardsaquifer.net/issues.html
A Brief Retrospective and a Summary
I am always surprised at how little and how
slowly this page has to be changed. When I started this website in
1995, the primary issue that had to be resolved was how much users could
pump, and the Edwards Aquifer Authority had been handed the job of
allocating water rights. This question was not fully resolved until
2007, when the Edwards pumping cap was revised upwards to 572,000
acre-feet. Even so, there is still uncertainty regarding minimum
necessary springflows and the pumping levels that would ensure them.
As the issue of pumping volume moved slowly
toward resolution, a focus on Edwards water quality has emerged. It
seems likely that ensuring water quality will take much longer to
address than pumping did. After Senate Bill 1477 was passed in 1993, it
seemed clear that after addressing pumping, the Edwards Aquifer
Authority would eventually take on the role of developing regulations to
protect Edwards water quality. But today, the issue is largely
unresolved. There is disagreement whether this function should be the
responsibility of the TCEQ or the EAA. In a State where private
property rights are sacrosanct, regulators and lawmakers who would
protect our natural resources find their hands tied at every turn. And
the recent proliferation of groundwater conservation districts on the
Edwards catchment area is bound to complicate matters by adding layers
of competing jurisdiction. So the issue of regulating development and
land use to protect Edwards water quality promises to be a source of
controversy for decades.
In addition to an emerging focus on water
quality, another of the main shifts in thinking about the Edwards has
been toward viewing it as a living system instead of simply cold, wet
limestone. For decades, aquifer science has failed to incorporate the
living component, especially microbiology. This has led to
misperceptions and a lack of appreciation for the value of the
environmental services the Aquifer is providing. For example, officials
and journalists often incorrectly state the Edwards does not filter
water; in reality, the Edwards is a massive wastewater treatment plant
that filters and purifies recharge water to a quality that is drinkable
without further treatment. This occurs through physical and biological
processes that are similar to those used in a conventional man-made
plant, where the heart of the treatment system is a rich microbial
community of organisms that transform and stabilize waste materials.
Purification processes are occurring in the Edwards, but they have not
been described or studied and we know very little about them. In the
past, we viewed the Aquifer as simply a mechanistic flow system, and we
looked to hydrogeologists for answers. In the future, we will view the
Aquifer as a hard-working but fragile ecosystem, and we will tend to
look more to biologists and chemists and water treatment experts for
answers.
The Issues
In general, the framework in which we address issues surrounding the Edwards Aquifer involves the facts that:
- all the issues are complex and emotional;
- the timelines required to solve the
problems are very long;
- the investments required are huge;
- the future is uncertain.
Most of the time, decision makers who face an
uncertain future tend to make the timeline as short as possible and the
investment as small as possible. In other words, they look for a quick,
cheap fix. But water issues are not solved using this approach - they
require long term commitments and very large investments. Moreover, it
seems unlikely that we can use a traditional structural approach to
build ourselves steel-and-concrete solutions like surface water
reservoirs and recharge projects. We will have to THINK ourselves out
of this one.
In general, water management issues for the
Edwards Aquifer can be broadly classified as technical,
legal, economic, and
institutional. However, few concerns fit neatly into one category.
For example, reuse of water at first seems like a technical issue, but
on closer inspection it is clear this is mainly an institutional and
cultural issue revolving around overcoming negative attitudes toward
using recycled water.
Technical Issues
Since the Edwards has been one of the most studied
aquifers in the world, most of the technical issues have already been
tackled. Projects such as baseline predictions, quantification of
Edwards resources, and mapping of the various zones have mostly already
been performed and refined. But some things are still unclear, even
after considerable study, and some of the unanswered questions are very
basic.
- How many recharge features exist and where are they? Many are still unidentified, and access to private property is often difficult.
- How does the "bad water line" move in response to drought and pumping? Some experts maintain that once the bad water line moves, it will not return to its original position. Others disagree. The bottom line is we don't know what will happen if the Aquifer is drawn down below its historic low.
- Where are the hydrogeologic boundaries and how do they interact? In 2006 new research by Ron Green and others suggested there is a large area under Kinney county that deserves to be designated as a separate pool. Previously, it was thought to be part of the Uvalde pool. In the east, it has always been clear that San Marcos Springs does not react much to pumping in the San Antonio section, and many believe it deserves to be designated as a separate pool as well.
- How does the "Knippa Gap" affect flowpaths and well levels? We know the Gap is a natural barrier that affects the direction and volume of water flowing from the west into the San Antonio section of Aquifer, but not enough is known about how it works.
- How much water could be brought from the western Edwards pools to San Antonio without adversely affecting well levels and economies of San Antonio's neighbors?
- Will tracer analysis give us more detailed information on flowpaths and velocities? It seems likely, but research has been stalled by a lack of funds.
- What were "natural" flows to the bays and estuaries like and what are the in-stream flow needs today?
- What are the hydrogeologic connections to other aquifers like the Trinity? How much water is exchanged or recharged between them, and where does it occur?
- How do the natural treatment processes work that transform muddy brown recharge water into potable well water and sparkling springflows? Very little is known about the physical and biological processes occurring in the Edwards that result in potable water.
- Will a structural approach involving building more surface water reservoirs and recharge dams help address water quantity shortages? If so, where will the money come from? How do the economics of reuse and conservation compare with the structural approach?
- Will a cap on pumping to protect springflows and endangered species actually work? Many experts maintain the springs will periodically go dry even if no one pumps a single drop.
- Are the pumping limits and springflow requirements that have been established scientifically defensible? In the 1990s the Fish and Wildlife Service was charged with determining what springflow levels would result in "take" or "jeopardy" of endangered species, but subsequent research has suggested that flow rates much lower than previously thought would still be protective of endangered species habitats. We're still not really sure what flow rates are necessary, or how much pumping the Aquifer could actually sustain.
To really get a grasp on the complicated legal issues involved, you need to check out the legislative history in the Laws and Regs section! Some of the major legal issues for the aquifer are:
- How can we finally institute conjunctive management of surface waters and groundwaters? Today, the EAA regulates groundwater in the Edwards region, while the TCEQ regulates surface water. It's all the same water. Since surface water and groundwater are interconnected and inseparable, isn't conjunctive management the only logical approach?
- To what extent can we limit development or regulate land use in order to protect Edwards water quality? Will compensation be required, and who will pay?
- What agency has the legal authority and responsibility to develop water quality regulations? How do we deal with competing jurisdictions and agency boundaries that are set up along political, not hydrogeologic lines?
- Where can we get lawmakers with the gumption and foresight to tackle these issues without succumbing to pressure from powerful special interests?
- How can we mitigate the political costs of effective action? How can we convince people their lawmakers are doing what is best for everyone in the long run?
Any technical, legal, or institutional changes we
make will have profound economic impacts. Some of the economic
questions and issues are:
- What is the value of value of water? Some say it is priceless, yet it has traditionally been so cheap that people always felt free to use whenever they wanted at any time. What price should be put on water?
- Who should pay for new or extra water brought into the region? Should it be the new users or everyone who benefits?
- What is the value of instream uses such as recreation and flows that exist simply to sustain aquatic ecosystems?
- What is the economic value of environmental services the Edwards is providing for free? How much are we willing to pay to protect the ability of the Edwards to provide treatment?
- Do we want an unrestricted water market where rights are bought and sold? If so, what kind of market will be efficient, fair, and effective? Currently, half of a person's water rights must remain with the land in perpetuity, and the other half can be sold. But what if the land use changes from agriculture to something like upscale retail, where the water rights are no longer needed or used? Should water rights holders then be permitted to sell those rights?
- When we limit pumping to protect springflows, who pays and who benefits? Doesn't this benefit certain people at the expense of others?
- If we limit development or regulate land use in recharge or catchment areas to protect water quality, will it be necessary to compensate landowners for lowered land values? Do we have to pay people not to pollute common resources? If so, who will pay, and how much?
- What costs have we already incurred or encouraged because of lawmaker's failure to act and our own failure to demand appropriate changes and Aquifer protections?
Perhaps the most difficult and the most important
issues to deal with are institutional ones. These include the
institution of culture which is very hard to change. We also have to
deal with the fact that currently there are hundreds of management
institutions involved, many of which care about an area only as large as
their borders. Some of the issues are:
- How can we overcome the notion that use of groundwater is a God-given right and that every landowner has a "right" to free water?
- How can we overcome regional parochialisms and get everyone to see that we are all in this together? The agricultural, urban, and recreational users are often pitted one against the other, yet we really have only one common resource.
- How can we change negative cultural attitudes regarding the reuse of water? Tertiary treated wastewater effluent is of much higher quality than stormwater, and it could easily be made potable and used again, either directly or as Aquifer recharge. How do we convince people that water can be recycled and is just as good?
- What are society's priorities when water is scarce?
- What kind of management institution can we design that people will trust and accept?
- Don't we need the boundaries of management institutions to be defined along hydrogeologic lines instead of political ones? How does the recent proliferation of politically-drawn groundwater conservation districts complicate matters?
- How sort of institution do we need to implement conjunctive management of surface water and ground water? Will it be the EAA, the TCEQ, or some hybrid?
- If the primary responsibility of the EAA was to allocate groundwater rights, and if that task is essentially complete, and if responsibility for protecting water quality does not belong to the EAA, do we still need the EAA? Should it be disbanded or absorbed into the TCEQ?
- How can we build flexibility into institutions so they can adapt to new scientific understandings of Aquifer structures and functions?
Texas State Legislative Agendas regarding Water: Concerns and suggestions from Cheryl Gilpin, former EAA director elected from New Braunfels, Texas
see Herald Zietung Guest Editorial with list of leaders and their contacts:
read more of this editorial online at
http://herald-zeitung.com/opinion/article_cf3a9c3e-874e-11e4-9f2f-e76ec5d7de24.html
Gilpin: When it comes to water issues, we’re all in it together
Posted: Friday, December 19, 2014 1:14 am
When it comes to
water, local, regional and state level laws and rules and mechanisms
for avoiding financial conflicts of interest and avoiding fuzzy math
(especially with separated bookkeeping, like Enron) are big deal’s to
taxpaying voters.
When it comes to avoiding water crisis and sustaining water for the public water security?read more of this editorial online at
http://herald-zeitung.com/opinion/article_cf3a9c3e-874e-11e4-9f2f-e76ec5d7de24.html
Friday, May 2, 2014
Is the Edwards Aquifer Habtiat Conservation Plan a misleading name?
Top-Main Comal Spring
April 22, 2014 image by Cheryl Gilpin; bottom- typical flows before HCP
approved, image from video on Edwards Aquifer
HCP website .
Notice that Main Comal Spring was documented not
flowing on April 22 when USGS gage level was 141 cfs cubic feet per second and stopped flowing for days
the week before., Prior to that it would only flow intermittently during 24
hour periods earlier in April. Strangely on April 24 the spring was flowing
slightly and flowing pretty well at the sidewalk corner spring on the same
spring run, with a USFWS plankton net and lots of fountain darters around two
days before no fountain darters were any where near these spring openings. On April 29, once again the Main Comal Spring
was not flowing at all for 24 hour periods and the area in front of the main
spring was mostly dry. It is apparent
that parts of these flows can be adjusted at will, but at whose will? On May 1 the USGS streamflow gage way downstream was at 135 cfs.
At average flows for previous extreme drought periods in April water level would be up above their waste lines. New Braunfels Citizens are serious about keeping our taxes low and making our city minimize risks and expenses to NB citizens. However, our town can't accomplish that if we set a priority on minimizing regulation and monitoring of regional pumping of the Edwards Aquifer and on our springruns.
The Edwards Aquifer Habitat Conservation Plan is actually a
misleading name. It should have been
called a Plan to put more money into the pockets of over-allocated pumping
permitees and extend periods of critically low aquifer levels at the expense of citizens of New Braunfels
in order to make the regions pumping permits worth more money for longer
periods and not have any conservation
limitations on those users who will pay their highest rate. Why don't we figure out why this is not
working and go back to the drawing board instead of going along with plans that
are based upon false assumptions that the EAA directors actually reduce pumping
permits during times of critical period
when actually they do not and they offer the groundwater profiteers incentive
and mechanisms to keep us in critical period levels instead of actually having effective rules that work by
minimizing critical period. Those EAA
critical period rules have been on the book since 2008 they never did reduce
pumping as the legislature mandated and with the HCP assuming that they work as
legislated, the HCP strategies and extra
legal agreements actually work to give further incentive and profit to the
pumpers to keep our aquifer at critical period levels.
Why is that
the case? It is because the pumping permitees were the first in Texas to be
established as private groundwater marketers when the Edwards Aquifer act first
started the Edwards Aquifer Authority in 1994.
But the groundwater marketing was intended in that legislation to be a
privilege and an incentive for cooperation of large pumpers to go along with
and support the EAA Act. The EAA Act
included language to keep that privilege tightly regulated but that has not
come to be the case. The EAA Act has
language that states that the Edwards Aquifer pumping permits would not be
considered as property rights owing buy down but the EAA directors have been
doing there best to make that not the case either. Some of their permitting and critical period
rules actually violate state legislature mandates to avoid regulating the
groundwater marketing as much as possible and to maximize their profits and
treat their permits in way that will turn them permanently and irreversibly
into property rights owing buy down with public money, the HCP strategy to pay
back volunteers to reduce pumping is going to help make that the case and Steve
Ramsey the New Braunfels representative on the HCP steering committee is now
begging to start the Voluntary irrigation suspension because he is misled to
think that there are not other options and does not realize it will
irreversibly impact all future plans to reduce any of the aquifer permits
because buy back will always then be required to honor all the EAA permits as
owed pay back once pay back for reduction actually starts for the few
volunteers pumpers now in its program once the program is triggered to start
the reductions and puts pay back money in their pockets to reduce their pumping
permit then it set a legal precedent that will irreversible change on how we
treat all the EAA permits from then all pumping permit reduction will legally require
pay back with our public dollars no matter how over allocated or poorly
regulated or how poorly suited they are regarding wise water use. That will mean pumpers will have even more
incentive to keep our aquifer and springlfows dangerously low and managing to
avoid that will become less likely to accomplish.
Is the strategy with a title that includes "voluntary irrigation suspension" also a misleading name ?
Actually the
Voluntary irrigation suspension program is not really done as these pumpers
were volunteering to give up something because we will be paying them back and
forever turning all the overallocated
pumping permits into property rights that will require pay back with our
public money whenever reduced whether voluntarily or required and whenever they
can not not market their permit amounts or withdraw their permitted
amounts due to draining of their wells
under their land.
Really there
are things we can do to keep our aquifer levels from being so low that they
trigger this voluntary program. However, once it is first triggered, there will
be no turning back and that will be less likely because we will give much more
profit and incentive to the pumpers to keep our springflows and aquifer very
very low without considering the risks and harms that causes, they are only considering
how to maximize their profits. They can tweek our springflows to make us beg
for whatever they want us to do because of the lack of proper regulation on
their pumping and groundwater marketing and because of HCP strategies
agreements with our city of New Braunfels leaders that are now helping them accomplish this.
Our city leaders are going along with the HCP without considering how to reduce
expense and risk to our Comal Springflows and to citizens and it is not the
pumpers best intrest to figure that out because they profit by imposing crisis
and extending critical periods. City
leaders only listening to NBU should realize that risks and expenses to our
citizens are not their best intrest to consider our leaders need to protect us
citizens and do the home work themselves to minimize harms to our Comal Springs
and our citizens.
When HCP
strategies and modeling ignore how our EAA director made rules are actually
working to make the regions pumping permits worth more money for longer periods
and not have any conservation limitations on those users who will pay
their highest rate they present great harms and risks for our spring flows and
expense for citizens of New Braunfels. However, the Edwards Aquifer HCP
stakeholders are not trying very hard to honestly present the harms and risks
to us and actually knowingly avoid modeling and reporting harms to our
springruns and citizens here in New Braunfnels. Since it is obvious now that
the HCP stakeholders were giving our town information based upon their modeling
with false assumtions, why don't we
figure out why this is not working and insist the regions HCP steering
committee right now hold emergency meeting to better prepare and minimize up
coming critical periods for this summer.
They should go back to the drawing board instead of going along with
plans that are based upon false assumptions that the EAA directors actually
reduce pumping permits during times of critical period when actually they
do not and they offer the groundwater profiteers incentive and mechanisms to
keep us in critical period levels instead of actually having effective
rules that work by minimizing critical period. Those EAA critical period
rules have been on the book since 2008 they never did reduce pumping as the
legislature mandated and with the HCP assuming that they work as
legislated, the HCP strategies and extra legal agreements actually work
to give further incentive and profit to the pumpers to keep our aquifer at
critical period levels.
A false map is put into the HCP 2013 report after the pubic comment period:
The HCP 2013 report even
included false information about the HCP impacts
on the Comal river which were not part of the report seen for public
comment but added in just before the steering committee voted to approve
that and finalize the report and while refusing to hear public comment
about the addition before they voted at the meeting held here in New
Braunfels last March 2014. Our own New Braunfels steering committee
member did not even request the committee hear the comments about that
my husband the assistant director of the Edwards Aquifer Research and
Data Center and I former EAA director from New braunfels brought to give
before the vote was made. We had observed the mapped section of the
comparison in late summer 2013 when the map was dated and also the
morning of the meeting and the river there had much mor impact than the
map indicated there back in July and still the day of the meeting. but
that incorrect mpa showing less than 10% reduction in habitat is still
in the HCP report and was never seen for public comment.
HCP Drought Contigency Planning is it happening through HCP adaptive management to minimize drought impacts this summer? How is that working?
At the Edwards Aquifer Habitat Conservation Plan
HCP implementation steering committee meeting in March 2014 held in New
Braunfels the steering committee approved a recommendation to set up the HCP
drought contingency planning team with no hydrology or water resource experts
only educators and communications experts and to set up the drought contingency
scope to be to conduct outreach and public relations to keep the public
positive about the HCP. Andrew Samson
from Texas State on the HCP implementation committee suggested and it was approved
for the planning team not to be called a drought contingency planning team
since in reality that would not be its scope.
However, there has been no planning for drought as is required of this HCP. Preparing to minimize impact of drought does
not seem to be on their radar. I agree
with Andrew Sansom about not misleading people with a title that is not what
they are doing.
Can we change the direction of the Edwards Aquifer Authority and the HCP now? YES!!!
But that won't happen unless New BRaufnels quickly backs out of the agreement they made based upon HCP false assumtions and quickly makes the HCP stakeholders develop a strategy that actually is serious about enough water conservation and pumping restriction to minimize the length and severity of aquifer critical periods.
Perhaps if groundwater marketing were considered only a
priveledge and reward for not being at critically low aquifer levels and not
allowed during critically low aquifer levels and if those marketing groundwater
were not allowed to serve on the EAA board or the EA HCP steering committee,
then our public dollars and decisions would be more about properly managing
water supply to minimize risks to people and the ecosystems. The EAA Act was established first and
foremost for protection of endangered species and for protection of the aquifer water quality and quantity it was
not set up to establish the Edwards Aquifer Authority as a groundwater
marketing agency which is now what most of the EAA directors consider as their
primary role. Citizens need to insist
their leaders do our their homework for our town about our water resources and
insist our leaders urge and aggressively insist that regional , stakeholder and
state and federal laws and rule making and strategies minimize harm to our
springflows and our economy and wildlife and human health and insist the EAA
directors and the EAA stakeholder process follow legal mandates protective of
springflows and springrun water quality and
get back on the right track to make us more resilient for upcoming
drought conditions.
Preserving the Comal Springflows and minimizing damage to Landa Park as Native American Sacred Site preservation:
These springflows
are important for endangered species and for the cultural preservation of the
Comal River as a sacred paleo and native American site. I went to a Catholic
high school but I take great great pride and do not hesitate to embrace my
native American cultural background and wish more of my neighbors would do the
same because that is where we can learn from thousands of years of wisdom about
how to live and manage our work and homes while conserving and sustaining our
water resources and springflows for our future and for our children and
children’s children, For the past few generations many of our elderly have
started dying young we have lost their wisdom we need to learn the lessons to
be found in the artifacts of the Landa Lake area now under going much
destruction, where are our artifacts what can we learn from them? Maybe if we figure that out we will see how
unwise current leadership has been and support setting better priorities.
Sincerely, Cheryl Gilpin, former Edwards Aquifer Authority
director elected from New Braunfels
Thursday, October 3, 2013
On Tuesday October 1, The bottom of the Comal Springs' Main Spring run was covered with an inch of flowing water all over except still the big opening in the cliff had no flow. Also, immediately prior to Oct 1 the aquifer rose high enough (over 635msl at J17 index well) not to trigger (for this next year) the VISPO payout of public money to private groundwater permitees who "volunteer" for themselves to be paid public money to agree not to pump part of their permit even though they could still be draining the aquifer with their other permits anyway. What many citizens dont realize is whether the aquifer recovers or continues to drop can be manipulated to which ever will give the groundwater permitees the most profit, maybe they were afraid of setting precedent with the pay out to themselves with public money at too low a dollar amount so they decided to stop leaving the aquifer so low for this year so they could set a higher payout amount to occur upon the trigger date next year. Don't expect the aquifer level to all of the sudden rise high enough to avoid VISPO next year if these current aquifer directors stay in control for their own benefit. They will make management of the aquifer pumping work so that the aquifer stays in crisis as much as possible and so they can make the most money from that. Most of these EAA directors and the largest pumping permit holders have been making or influencing decisions that are counter to keeping our large Comal Springs flowing.
On Thursday Oct 3, The small depth of water covering the bottom of Spring run1 stopped flowing as the seeping from below stopped upwelling. Now the water is still and drying up again.Late last week. I wonder which wells quit pumping. We may never know. The Golf course near the main Comal spring and around some of the other Comal springs at Landa Park has been closed by the city of New Braunfels and it will remain closed through the year of 2014 prior to Jan. 1, 2014 preparations are being made to start an Edwards Aquifer Habitat Conservation Project that may destroy what still remains of a great deal of Paleo Indian and Native American cultural heritage.(due to being covered by the golf Course) After installing a new under-turf structure to control nutrients, a new turf will be installed, it will take over a year. Some archeological exploration independent of and not controlled by the City of New Braunfels needs to occur that has a reputation of hiding artifacts and not making Paleo/Native american discoveries known. However, there has been no existing Native American group take an intrest is overseeing and protecting these artifacts.
On Thursday Oct 3, The small depth of water covering the bottom of Spring run1 stopped flowing as the seeping from below stopped upwelling. Now the water is still and drying up again.Late last week. I wonder which wells quit pumping. We may never know. The Golf course near the main Comal spring and around some of the other Comal springs at Landa Park has been closed by the city of New Braunfels and it will remain closed through the year of 2014 prior to Jan. 1, 2014 preparations are being made to start an Edwards Aquifer Habitat Conservation Project that may destroy what still remains of a great deal of Paleo Indian and Native American cultural heritage.(due to being covered by the golf Course) After installing a new under-turf structure to control nutrients, a new turf will be installed, it will take over a year. Some archeological exploration independent of and not controlled by the City of New Braunfels needs to occur that has a reputation of hiding artifacts and not making Paleo/Native american discoveries known. However, there has been no existing Native American group take an intrest is overseeing and protecting these artifacts.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Protect Texas Water.
Tell Texas Leaders from state to local levels we demand access, openness and accountablity to hold them responsible to remedy existing and prevent future over allocation (beyond sustainable yield) and contamination of Texas waters and groundwater and that public dollars should not be used to compensate or pay back water or groundwater permitees to reduce their already over allocated permit amounts. Most surface waters ( outside of flood events) in Texas depend upon our aquifers. Texas water is for all our people who live in Texas communities (including Native and Mexican Americans) and ecosystems. Texas Water and groundwater is not for commercial or private profit. Tell our State leaders and agency directors we do not want them giving companies the right to control access to water that should be available and of high quality to all life in Texas. Also we do want our taxes and public funds to be used and not held back for protection and clean up of water and groundwater quality especially in areas known to currently be associated with declines in human health. Also we DO WANT our public funds used to develop and implement more water conservation, reuse and non aquifer storage and supply technologies especially for storing and using rainwater on large and small scales first instead of or prior to making any plans and programs of blending treated but still contaminated salt or fresh water or groundwater into our public drinking water supply. We do not want our bodies used to filter contaminated waters nor our ecosystems contaminated with brine or toxic waste products.
Please sign the petition Stop Texas Water Hogs, it includes actions protect water quality for All Texans too.
http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/stop-texas-water-hogs.fb31?source=s.fb&r_by=5449175
Tell Texas Leaders from state to local levels we demand access, openness and accountablity to hold them responsible to remedy existing and prevent future over allocation (beyond sustainable yield) and contamination of Texas waters and groundwater and that public dollars should not be used to compensate or pay back water or groundwater permitees to reduce their already over allocated permit amounts. Most surface waters ( outside of flood events) in Texas depend upon our aquifers. Texas water is for all our people who live in Texas communities (including Native and Mexican Americans) and ecosystems. Texas Water and groundwater is not for commercial or private profit. Tell our State leaders and agency directors we do not want them giving companies the right to control access to water that should be available and of high quality to all life in Texas. Also we do want our taxes and public funds to be used and not held back for protection and clean up of water and groundwater quality especially in areas known to currently be associated with declines in human health. Also we DO WANT our public funds used to develop and implement more water conservation, reuse and non aquifer storage and supply technologies especially for storing and using rainwater on large and small scales first instead of or prior to making any plans and programs of blending treated but still contaminated salt or fresh water or groundwater into our public drinking water supply. We do not want our bodies used to filter contaminated waters nor our ecosystems contaminated with brine or toxic waste products.
Please sign the petition Stop Texas Water Hogs, it includes actions protect water quality for All Texans too.
http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/stop-texas-water-hogs.fb31?source=s.fb&r_by=5449175
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Speak up for the water security of all Texans.
Make sure water conservation is a highest priority at all levels of public water management. Your health and well being, economic security and childrens’ future will be better if you do.
Make sure water conservation is a highest priority at all levels of public water management. Your health and well being, economic security and childrens’ future will be better if you do.
Tell our State leaders and agency directors we do not want them giving companies the right to control access to water that should be available to all Texans.
Please sign this" Help Stop Texas Water Hogs!" petition and spread the word.
Look who just signed my petition:! JC Dufresne, State Democratic Executive Committeeman SD25, President Dem's Café,
Recipient of the 2012 Buck Massey Legacy of Leadership Award!!
http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/stop-texas-water-hogs
Petition Background
Stop Texas Water Hogs. Existing and proposed water strategies adopted by our state and regional water boards and districts give companies the right to control access to water that should be available to all Texans. Water hogs already cause water insecurity and threaten harm to our State, its people, economies, public health and to ecosystems we depend upon. Our state, regional and district level water/groundwater plans and rules and proposed plans only assess risks to Water Hogs and their profits and are not protecting the public and not helping Texans sustain our water supply for the benefit of the people and are not helping to minimize risks and costs to the public.
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