Friday, November 20, 2015

City Council votes unanimously for water, sewer rate increases - San Antonio Express-News

City Council votes unanimously for water, sewer rate increases - San Antonio Express-News

The City Council voted unanimously this afternoon in favor of rate increases for water and sewer service, with a portion of the money eventually going to fund the controversial Vista Ridge pipeline.
Council members spent hours listening to residents and questioning SAWS President and CEO Robert Puente about plans to ensure low-income residents can sign up for the utility’s affordability program and efforts to continue water conservation in the future.
Adding to the heated debate over the higher rates was the pipeline, which will carry water to San Antonio from 142 miles away, farther than any other water project in the city’s history. The pipeline is expected to deliver 16.3 billions gallons of water a year from an aquifer below Burleson County.
District 1 Councilman Roberto Trevino secured a commitment from Puente to meet with council members every six months to monitor the effects of rate increases and the affordability program.
District 8 Councilman Ron Nirenberg proposed requiring SAWS and pipeline builder Abengoa to set up a fund to help Burleson County residents pay for repairs if the project harms their water wells.
The only council member who didn’t vote was Ray Lopez of District 6, who was absent on a trade trip to Japan.
Vista Ridge has weathered a wave of opposition that grew more vocal ahead of the SAWS board of trustees vote on Oct. 27 to endorse the rate restructuring, sending it to City Council for final approval.
The rate hikes would also pay for a plant now under construction in South Bexar County to treat salty groundwater — another new source of supply — and sewer improvements required by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as well as other projects.
SAWS’ rates have climbed nearly every year for residential and large-scale users since 2006, utility records show.
The new rates will take effect Jan. 1, and SAWS has forecasted that bills will continue to rise so that the average residential user will see a 50 percent higher monthly water and sewer bill by 2020.
Check out ExpressNews.com later today to see how much your bill will go up and read more about the council’s vote.
Read in-depth coverage of the pipeline at ExpressNews.com.
bgibbons@express-news.net
Twitter: @bgibbs

Texas pipeline to drain rural county, soak city ratepayers - Watchdog.org

Texas pipeline to drain rural county, soak city ratepayers - Watchdog.org

Under federal orders to fix its leaky sewer system, San Antonio is doubling down with a $3.4 billion pipeline that will pump up water bills by 50 percent over five years. The EPA has no problem with that.
The City Council green-lighted the Vista Ridge pipeline to draw water from Burleson County 140 miles to the east. The controversial project — the largest in the history of the city water system — is branded a boondoggle by critics. An independent study warned it was “high risk.”
“People in Burleson County are outraged,” said Linda Curtis, director of Independent Texans and resident of nearby Bastrop.
Bob Martin, president of the Homeowner-Taxpayer Association of Bexar County, said San Antonio Water System customers are getting soaked. “We don’t know what’s coming after the five-year rate increase,” he said.
Over the next 10-12 years, SAWS is under a federal consent order to spend $492 million more to repair or replace lines that have been prone to sewer overflows.
SAWS critics say the system’s crumbling infrastructure reflects shoddy maintenance and fails to inspire confidence in management. Anger over the rate increases boiled over at a five-hour public hearing Thursday.
The business community gave political cover to the City Council, endorsing the Vista Ridge project and higher water charges.
Henry Cisneros, a former mayor and secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development under Bill Clinton, told Watchdog.org he supports the SAWS package as board chairman of the Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce.
“It threads the needle,” he said of the plan.
SAWS’ new rate schedule will reduce costs for residential users consuming fewer than 5,000 gallons monthly. Businesses and residents exceeding that low threshold will get sharply higher bills.
Overall, SAWS says, San Antonio’s average monthly water bill of $58.60 is lower than those in Fort Worth, Dallas, Houston and Austin.
While pushing water conservation with its more steeply tiered rates, San Antonio figures to get more pricey as costs kick in for EPA compliance and the new Vista Ridge pipeline.
SAWS states that Vista Ridge will ensure a reliable water supply for a metro area that regularly struggles with drought conditions. Opponents respond that San Antonio’s giant Edwards Aquifer has an estimated 200 to 300 years of life remaining – though the federal government has restricted expansion amid concerns about endangered lizards.
Despite fears about groundwater losses in agricultural-dependent Burleson and Milam counties — recalling the death spiral experienced by California’s Owens Valley when its water was appropriated by Los Angeles — the EPA has registered no objections over Vista Ridge, yet.
Ultimately, Martin says San Antonio’s aggressive annexation agenda endangers residents.
“Look at the cost of runaway growth as the city considers future business tax abatements and other benefits. This growth has caused city taxes and utility rates to skyrocket,” he said.
Kenric Ward writes for the Texas Bureau of Watchdog.org. Contact him atkward@watchdog.org.

San Antonio water and sewer rates going up Jan. 1 - San Antonio Express-News

San Antonio water and sewer rates going up Jan. 1 - San Antonio Express-News



City Council approved San Antonio Water System’s requested rate increases Thursday but directed the utility to improve access to discounts, help residents who receive inexplicably high monthly bills and continue conserving water.

Council members grilled SAWS President and CEO Robert Puente ahead of their unanimous vote on the new rates that will fund several water and sewer projects, including the controversial Vista Ridge pipeline that would deliver up to 16.3 billion gallons a year from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer below Burleson County, 142 miles away.

The added revenue will also fund a plant now under construction to desalinate salty groundwater below South Bexar County, sewer improvements required by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and smaller pipelines to provide water to the city’s military bases.

The vote means SAWS customers will see an increase in sewer and water delivery fees startingJan. 1, but the approval also set in place yearly increases to the water supply fee that could add up to nearly 21 percent by 2020.

As a result, SAWS estimates the average residential customer’s monthly water and sewer billcould rise 50 percent by 2020 from $54.34 to $81.73, based on 7,092 gallons of water used.

District 1 Councilman Roberto Treviño said council should continue monitoring the effect of the rates on customers who can least afford the increases. He secured a commitment from Puente to hold update meetings every six months, the first in June.

District 4 Councilman Rey Saldaña spent half an hour asking Puente questions about water conservation, the availability of groundwater in Burleson County and what SAWS is doing for residents who have been seeing high bills because of leaks or meter errors.

Puente told him SAWS’ conservation measures have reduced demand so as to eliminate the need for at least three Vista Ridge projects since the 1980s, even as the city has grown.

Though Puente said SAWS considers conservation not a “tree-hugging measure” but an actual water supply, Saldana credited groups like the Esperanza Peace & Justice Center, Fuerza Unida, the Southwest Workers Union and Alamo Sierra Club for pushing conservation over the years in their opposition to various water supply projects.

“Those are all things that don’t come without the other end of the table applying pressure,” he said.

Puente also told him that SAWS is using computer programs to track extraordinarily high bills so the staff can notify customers.

On conservation, District 8 Councilman Ron Nirenberg suggested amending city ordinances to make Stage 1 drought restrictions permanent. He also pushed for an updated water plan from SAWS.

He and Puente agreed that SAWS needs to make sure video and supporting documents for all SAWS board meetings are posted online.

Nirenberg also suggested meeting with SAWS and Abengoa, the Spanish company that would build the pipeline, to consider creating a fund to assist residents near the project’s well field who fear pumping so much water for the pipeline will mean they have to lower their well pumps at their own expense.

For District 3 Councilwoman Rebecca Viagran, the vote was about funding much-needed repairs, like a sewer line in her home neighborhood on the South Side. She also stressed the need to pay for water projects today before they become more expensive in the future.

“I cannot ignore my responsibility to my constituents and to the children of our community who will be left holding the bill if we kick this issue down the road,” she said.

District 5 Councilwoman Shirley Gonzales asked several questions about affordability and bill errors. She spoke about a family in her district who recently received a monthly bill of $450.

SAWS CFO Doug Evanson explained that the software used to track errors flags those bills that reach 600 percent of average use.

“I’m afraid that benchmark is too high,” Gonzales said.

The vote followed four hours of comments by city and SAWS staff and residents.

Several members of the Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce, the North San Antonio Chamber of Commerce and the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce spoke in favor of the rate increases and the pipeline.

Hispanic Chamber president Ramiro Cavazos said his group’s members had visited the Spain headquarters of Abengoa three times. They are convinced the project is a sound one, he said.

“It makes good sense to bring water from water-rich East Texas to water-poor south-central Texas,” he said.

Social justice and environmental groups have packed public hearings in the weeks leading up to the vote to protest the pipeline and rate increases, which they say place an unfair burden on poor ratepayers.

“They wonder why our community doesn’t vote and this is a perfectly good reason,” said Graciela Sanchez, Esperanza’s director. “We’re the ones talking to the community. We’re the ones representing them …because they can’t be here. But we don’t have to go to council because nobody pays attention to us anyway.”

SAWS’ rates have climbed nearly every year for residential and large-scale users since 2006, utility records show.

Before the vote, District 10 Councilman Mike Gallagher said the city “can’t wait for a crisis to make a decision. Think about what those costs would be to each and every one of us.”

District 6 Councilman Ray Lopez, away on a trade trip to Japan, was the only one not present for the vote.

bgibbons@express-news.net

Twitter: @bgibbs

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Support Grows for Huge Water Plan as Council Vote Looms | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Support Grows for Huge Water Plan as Council Vote Looms | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Support for that very controversial 'Vista Ridge' water supply deal is
snowballing ahead of tomorrow's critical vote at City Hall on a scheme
to jack up water rates by 16% over the coming to years to, in part, pay
for the $3.4 billion agreement, News Radio 1200 WOAI reports.
 
All of the local Chambers of Commerce, in a joint statement, urged City
Council to approve the rate arrangement, saying unless Vista Ridge is
approved, the Pentagon may begin pulling up stakes as the three big
military bases in the area when the next round of base closings takes
place in 2017.

"One of the primary reasons we support the SAWS
rate adjustment and infrastructure investments is because it allows us
to commit to our military installations that they would no longer be
mandated to operate under Stage 4 water restrictions, and allows them to
have a consistent, dependable source of water in the event of miltary
emergencies," said Richard Perez, President of the San Antonio Chamber
of Commerce.

The Chambers say a lack of dependable water is the
number one concern of the Pentagon as it considers whether to invest
more money into San Antonio facilities, and it has made clear that it
will not continue to support a major military infrastructure in the city
if it can't be assured of a supply of water.

The Defense Department has invested more than $2 billion at Ft. Sam Houston after
the BRAC made the decision in 2005 to consolidate military medical
operations and training at San Antonio Military Medical Center.

The Chambers say nobody likes to may higher rates, but they point out
the 'fundamental importance of water resources' which is needed to
attract businesses, create new jobs, and support existing businesses
looking to expand.

State Rep. Lyle Larson (R-San Antonio) has
said that when companies in the Rust Belt indicate a desire to relocate
to Texas, the first thing they're shown by economic development officers
in Michigan or Ohio are pictures of the 2011 Texas drought, where, in
many cases, water had to be trucked in to keep business operations
running.

“Without reliable water, sites like were we are
standing today would have a difficult time encouraging new businesses,”
Stephen Shadrock of the South San Antonio Chamber of Commerce said.

North side Council Member Joe Krier echoed those concerns as he announced plans to vote for the project.
 
Conservation isn't enough,” Krier said, citing a demand by Vista Ridge opponents to
focus more on water conservation and adopting a ‘slow growth’ strategy. 
“Hardly anyone who is familiar with our existing water supplies and
growth projections believes that conservation alone will yield the water
we'll need to accommodate our city's growth.  We need new supplies for
our residents and the companies that either want to add jobs in San
Antonio or bring in new ones. Without water security, businesses would
eventually look elsewhere to expand or relocate. That result would hurt
all of us.”

Opponents, who have gotten far more vocal in the
past week, say Vista Ridge is simply a payoff to wealthy, powerful
developers who want to continue adding neighborhoods over the Aquifer
Recharge Zone and force working class ratepayers to foot the bill.

Monday, November 16, 2015

Controversial Vista Ridge Project Up for Council Vote This Week | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Controversial Vista Ridge Project Up for Council Vote This Week | News Radio 1200 WOAI


Just days before a contentious vote on a new San Antonio Water System rate structure to fund the Vista Ridge pipeline project, the president of SAWS is firing back at protesters who claim the infrastructure project is a bad deal for the city.

Objections to the $3.4 billion water plan start with the cost and concerns that it will hike fees for the poorest residents.  SAWS Robert Puente says that's not true.

"If our city council votes on this rate increase, 26-percent of our users will see their rates go down," he explains.

Rate hikes start out at 16% and go up to 50% by 2020, but thanks to a new rate structure, it will be those who use the most who pay the most.  There are more categories that homeowners will fall into, and those in the lower brackets will see their bills go down.  SAWS also says it will easier for homeowners to jump from a higher bracket to a lower one if they don’t like their bill.

Puente says they have also been block-walking in disadvantaged neighborhoods, helping homeowners sign up for affordability programs.  The city-owned utility has doubled the amount of money that is in the program.

Environmental groups also oppose the Vista Ridge plan because they believe it encourages urban sprawl by making it easier for developers to expand in areas that, so far, have been father away from infrastructure.

Puente says they already have a defined service area.

"Our service area is not growing because of this project. It will not affect urban sprawl," he tells Newsradio 1200 WOAI.

The last time the city had the right to vote on a water plan was the two Applewhite Reservoir votes back in the mid-1990s, and they were both rejected.

Read more: http://www.woai.com/articles/woai-local-news-sponsored-by-five-119078/controversial-vista-ridge-project-up-for-14126015/#ixzz3rgOO7uFa

Commuter Rail Line Proposed Between San Antonio and Monterrey Mexico | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Commuter Rail Line Proposed Between San Antonio and Monterrey Mexico | News Radio 1200 WOAI

While a lot of attention has been paid to the plans in the works for a commuter rail line from south of San Antnoio to north of Austin through the Lone Star Rail District, U.S. Rep Henry Cuellar (D-Laredo) is working with officials in the U.S. and Mexico on another rail proposal...a passenger line from San Antonio through Laredo to Monterrey, News Radio 1200 WOAI has learned.

  Cuellar told News Radio 1200 WOAI's Michael Board that he is confident that the project 'will happen.'

  "I've talked to some folks here in San Antonio like Sea World and Fiesta Texas and they love the idea," Cuellar said.  "That would mean there there would be millions of new customers who could get here in just a couple of hours."

  New attention is being placed on long distance rail transportation in Texas with the growth in population and concerns about the clean air impact of building new highways to accommodate millions more vehicles.

  In addition to the Lone Star Rail District, a Chinese group is working to raise money for a high speed rail link between Dallas and Houston.

  "Move people. move them fast, and move them in a secure way," Cuellar said.  "This would also encourage people in Texas to go to Mexico."

  He points out that in Monterrey, travelers could connect to a super modern multi lane highway to the Pacific Coast, as well as fast and modern rail services through Mexico into Central and South America.

  Cuellar says the main reason why Texans don't travel to Mexico is they don't want to have to drive through the border area which is largely controlled by drug cartels.  He points out that when you get past the border area, violent crime rates are comparable to, and in many cases lower than crime rates in Texas, and far lower than tropical destinations like Jamaica which many Texans have adopted as an alternative to Mexico.

  Cuellar has had talks with U.S., Texas, and Mexico transportation planners.  There is no word yet on a potential timetable, cost, or how the funding to build the rail link would be paid for.
  With rising incomes in Mexico, individual tourist travel has reached record highs, and travel to the U.S., where many Mexican citizens have relatives, would be a huge boost for the U.S. economy.


Read more: http://www.woai.com/articles/woai-local-news-sponsored-by-five-119078/commuter-rail-line-proposed-between-san-14126010/#ixzz3rgNFuurk

Friday, November 13, 2015

Water pipeline opponents speak out at council sessions - San Antonio Express-News

Water pipeline opponents speak out at council sessions - San Antonio Express-News

About 25 people blasted the Vista Ridge pipeline and proposed water
rate increases at City Council meetings Thursday in a rare opportunity
to comment on the project before all 10 members.


Though the sessions were originally billed as a chance to give
feedback on a water policy report, the pipeline and the rate hikes
became the focus. To start its 9 a.m. meeting, council heard a briefing
on the water study by Texas A&M University Institute for Renewable
Natural Resources director Roel Lopez, who oversaw the final version. Council held a second comment period Thursday evening.


Protesters rallied outside before that meeting, chanting, marching in
the street and holding signs that read: “Local water solutions only”
and “50% water bill increase is unsustainable.”


Council members will vote next Thursday on rate increases to pay for
Vista Ridge, a desalination plant to treat salty groundwater in South
Bexar County, sewer upgrades required by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency and other projects.

Last week, five council members said they supported the Vista Ridge project. Mayor Ivy Taylor, as a member of the San Antonio Water System board of trustees, voted for the rate hikes earlier this month.


“I know it is going to pass, and I know there is not going to be one
vote against Vista Ridge and the rate increases,” former councilwoman
Maria Berriozábal told council members. “It is one of these David and
Goliath issues, and we are David.”


Most of the speakers Thursday night used their allotted three minutes
to criticize the rate increases and the pipeline, which would deliver
water from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer 142 miles away in Burleson County.


When asked by District 1 Councilman Roberto Treviño about his
greatest concern regarding Vista Ridge, Lopez said a five-member review
panel he picked had listed the availability of groundwater from the
aquifer as an issue that needs further consideration.


The Post Oak Savannah Groundwater Conservation District in Burleson
and Milam counties regulates groundwater in that area and can cut back
on pumping if it determines the full 16.3 billion gallons per year for
Vista Ridge is not available.


“I hope the ratepayers know we can turn off the hose to San Antone,”
said Kenneth “Gabbo” Goetsch, a Burleson County landowner who made a
second trip to San Antonio this week to protest the project. “It may
take a long time, but the way the rules are written at the Post Oak
Savannah district are so we can turn it off.”

Residents organized by Esperanza Peace & Justice Center,
Southwest Workers Union, Alamo Sierra Club and other groups called the
pipeline unsustainable, the process undemocratic and the rate increases
unfair to low-income people, who they argue will bear the cost of a
project that will only benefit irrigators and developers.


“You aren’t listening to us,” Esperanza activist Gianna Rendón said,
calling out council members for checking their phones during public
comment and District 9 Councilman Joe Krier by name for speaking with
City Manager Sheryl Sculley while Rendón was talking.


Krier said he has been listening to constituents on this topic for
years. SAWS officials have also answered transparency questions by
pointing to a series of community meetings and public negotiations with
Spanish conglomerate Abengoa, which will build the pipeline.


“Listening is not the same as, ‘Do what I want, period,’” Krier said.
“Transparency is an open process for public input, transparency is not,
‘Do what I want.’”


District 10 Councilman Mike Gallagher also told the crowd he has
taken residents’ complaints seriously, but worries about the city’s
economic and social future without the project.


“How could we afford to run out of water?” he said. “It would be disasterous.”


Retired Trinity University professor Meredith McGuire told council
she attended several rate study meetings and thought the rates were
biased in favor of large business-class users. These rates do not
encourage conservation because the per-gallon rate for large-scale users
starts at 100 percent of the previous year’s use, rather than a lower
volume. The cost for this level of use will only increase slightly from
this year’s rate.


Rate increases drew more outrage from speakers than any other issue.


“I’m very scared to know that because I cannot afford my water, I
cannot afford my health,” Southwest Workers Union activist Arturo Trejo
said. “I can barely afford rent.”


“If (SAWS CEO) Robert Puente was here, I would call him a coward, straight to his face,” he continued.


Puente, sitting behind Trejo, waved. Trejo looked back and said, “Oh hey, what’s up, coward,” then left the lectern.


SAWS spokeswoman Anne Hayden referred people to a rate calculator on SAWS’ website,
where people can input their water use and get an estimate of their
monthly bill under the higher rates. “I have a feeling that there a lot
of people here, if they actually put their numbers into that rate
calculator, it would actually be much smaller than they might think,”
she said.


Esperanza director Graciela Sanchez stressed how difficult it is for
people without Internet access to inform themselves about the Vista
Ridge project and participate in the public process.


Taylor later asked deputy city manager Peter Zanoni to make the water
report available in print in public libraries and have it translated in
Spanish.



bgibbons@express-news.net



On Twitter: @bgibbs


Council Savaged Over Vista Ridge | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Council Savaged Over Vista Ridge | News Radio 1200 WOAI

 Citizens showed San Antonio City Council no mercy today, spending more
than two hours berating Council members over their backing of the
proposed Vista Ridge Water Supply project, News Radio 1200 WOAI reports.

 "Why
should I go to City Council meetings," one young woman said as she
pointed her finger at individual council members, calling them out for
talking on the phone or chatting with staffers during the Citizens to be
Heard portion of the meeting.  "Why should I call them, why should I
tweet them, why should I vote?  They don't listen to us!  They don't
care about us!  They don't care about us!"

  Objections to the
$3.4 billion water plan ran the gamut, from complaints that the plan
will eliminate conservation and other water supply plans, to a common
fear voices by veteran activist Graciela Sanchez that Council has been
pressured by wealthy special interests to approve this plan.  She said
the last time the city had the right to vote on a water plan was the two
Applewhite Reservoir votes back in the mid 1990s, and they were both
rejected.

  "And then what happened is that people realized,
don't let the community vote, because if we let them vote, they're going
to vote against the development we want over our Aquifer."

 
Sanchez and other spoke out about the negative impact that rate hikes
starting out at 16% and adding up to 50% by 2020 will have on the poor
and the working class.

  Two Bears, a prominent Native American activist, suggested that if the plan is approved, he will appeal to the 'World Court.'

  Another opponent complained that the water billing structure has been adopted to discourage conservation.

  "So it's starting out with a very unfair structure, of giving the cheapest water to businesses that are guzzling the most."


Others asked why people who live in San Antonio today, when there is
ample water, should have to pay extra to insure that people who won't
even move here until the 2030s will have plenty of water when they
arrive.

  City Council will vote on the new rate structure next week.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

City Council to take up controversial water study - San Antonio Express-News

City Council to take up controversial water study - San Antonio Express-News



The San Antonio City Council will get a briefing this morning about a
controversial study of the city’s future water supply as the council
prepares to vote next week on raising water and sewer rates.


A scientist who completed the study will present it to the council. The public can weigh in later today.


Roel Lopez, director of the Texas A&M Institute for Renewable Natural Resources, took over the study, which ranked 12 water supply projects and graded the San Antonio Water System on 24 water policy issues.

A draft of the report was leaked to the San Antonio Express-News
in September and its preliminary findings, particularly about a
142-mile water pipeline, came under heavy criticism from city officials
and SAWS.


That draft rated the Vista Ridge pipeline — a $844 million construction project that the City Council unanimously approved in October 2014 — as high risk.


Lopez agreed that the draft could be seen as skewed and subjective and took over the study in October.


The city originally contracted with Calvin Finch, a former director
of water conservation for SAWS who retired from the Texas A&M Water
Resources Institute, an IRNR affiliate, in May. Lopez issued his final version Nov. 5.

The study reviewed, among other projects, the controversial pipeline,
which would deliver 16.3 billion gallons per year from the
Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer below Burleson County. The draft version calls
the project high risk, while the final report lowered it to medium risk.


The City Council is set to vote Nov. 19 on water rate increases that would in part fund the project, which will be built by a global infrastructure corporation based in Spain.


The city commissioned the report at the request of District 8 Councilman Ron Nirenberg, who asked for it in February 2014.


The final report included extensive reviews by five anonymous water
experts Lopez chose to critique Finch’s work. Without the leak of Finch’s July draft to the Express-News, the public might never have seen the earlier version, Lopez said.


Typically, researchers use comments made by their peers to improve on
their drafts before submitting a final version, but the council’s
upcoming vote on water rates led Lopez, a wildlife biologist, to submit
the draft and final versions together.


“For full transparency, we just wanted to get everything out there,”
Lopez said. “We didn’t want to run into the situation of, ‘Oh, you
started changing things.’”


In Lopez’s view, Finch’s method of grading various water projects on
multiple categories — using “-” for low risk, “0” for neutral risk and
“+” for high risk — then adding up each category for a final score, was
“a very unusual scale to use.”

Zeroes contributed less to the final score than pluses or minuses, he
said. Finch assigned two pluses — “++”— for distance to water supply
but not other categories, giving these it more weight than others, Lopez
said.


Another problem was the way each final score was labeled. Projects
that scored “-1” were deemed low risk, and projects scoring “+1” were
deemed “medium risk,” though both are the same distance from zero, he
said.


“That’s just a real problem with methodology,” Lopez said.


The five experts scattered across Texas picked up on these issues and
created their own scale, ranking projects from 0 to 1 uniformly on
eight criteria. They added the scores, then divided by eight to achieve a
single risk score.


“The panel made it mathematically correct,” Lopez said.


The five also questioned the relevance of some categories, such as
need for water treatment or distance to water supply, among other
issues, he said.


Though much of the study’s data and discussions were unchanged
between versions, the new rating system led to drastically different
conclusions. For example, Finch’s draft ranked the city’s continued
reliance on the Edwards Aquifer as “low.” In the final report, that
aquifer earned a higher numerical risk score than Vista Ridge, though
both fell within the medium-risk category.


After reading the final report, Finch said he wished he could have
had a chance to discuss the five-member panel’s issues in person and
address their critiques before the final version was published, as is
more common in scientific research.


“Usually, a peer-review process is done for the benefit of the
authors,” Finch said. “If you’re going to publish something, all of the
folks that commented should be listed.”


He also disagreed with some of the panel’s conclusions, especially
rating Vista Ridge and continued reliance on the Edwards Aquifer, which
lies below Bexar County, as both medium risk. Distance to a water supply
does make a difference, he said.


“You could have a heck of a panel discussion comparing Edwards Aquifer to Vista Ridge in terms of risk,” Finch said.


Though controversy over the report has often focused on him, Finch was not alone in his authorship of the original version.


While Vista Ridge has dominated the political flap over the report,
it was supposed to be a comprehensive look at a variety of issues and
projects based on available data, he said.


In the end, the draft’s early release made the process worse for him, the city and SAWS, Finch said.


“I do think it would have been better without the leak,” he said.


bgibbons@express-news.net

Twitter: @bgibbs










Wednesday, November 11, 2015

More than 70 protest Vista Ridge water pipeline at San Antonio City Hall - San Antonio Express-News

More than 70 protest Vista Ridge water pipeline at San Antonio City Hall - San Antonio Express-News



SAN ANTONIO — Rural Texas ranchers and urban San Antonians might not have much in common, but opposition to the Vista Ridge pipeline project brought some of them together Tuesday.
On the steps of City Hall, speeches and chants against the proposed 142-mile pipeline project rang out from Burleson County landowners and San Antonio environmental and social justice groups opposing the pipeline.
Chanting "My water, my life, my right to fight," about 30 people then tried to enter the city manager's office, then council chambers to deliver 6,800 signatures from rural landowners asking the city council to vote no on water rate hikes on Nov. 19. The increases would in part fund the project.
"We just want to let City Council know that, I don't know what (Abengoa) Vista Ridge has told them...but opposition in Burleson County is gaining strength," landowner Gabbo Goetsch said.
Some city staff arrived to speak to the protesters but no council members were present around 1 p.m. District 8 councilman Ron Nirenberg eventually arrived and spoke with some of the protesters.
SAN ANTONIO — Rural Texas ranchers and urban San Antonians might not have much in common, but opposition to the Vista Ridge pipeline project brought some of them together Tuesday.
On the steps of City Hall, speeches and chants against the proposed 142-mile pipeline project rang out from Burleson County landowners and San Antonio environmental and social justice groups opposing the pipeline.
Chanting "My water, my life, my right to fight," about 30 people then tried to enter the city manager's office, then council chambers to deliver 6,800 signatures from rural landowners asking the city council to vote no on water rate hikes on Nov. 19. The increases would in part fund the project.
"We just want to let City Council know that, I don't know what (Abengoa) Vista Ridge has told them...but opposition in Burleson County is gaining strength," landowner Gabbo Goetsch said.
Some city staff arrived to speak to the protesters but no council members were present around 1 p.m. District 8 councilman Ron Nirenberg eventually arrived and spoke with some of the protesters.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Vote set on water pipeline’sfuture - San Antonio Express-News

Vote set on water pipeline’sfuture - San Antonio Express-News

Faced with a crucial vote later this month, half the City Council
remains steadfast in support of a 142-mile pipeline that would be San
Antonio’s most far-reaching water project yet.


A yes vote Nov. 19 means San Antonio Water System customers will see
substantial rate increases, starting Jan. 1, to fund the $844 million
pipeline to Burleson County, in addition to other water and sewer
projects.


For a typical residential customer, that means a 50 percent higher
total bill for water and sewer service by 2020, which is as far as SAWS
will project for now.


A no vote would sink the pipeline and likely leave ratepayers on the
hook for tens of millions of dollars and no water to show for it.


The money would repay a subsidiary of Abengoa, a Spain-based global
infrastructure construction corporation, for the work already done in
advance of actual construction.


Those preparations started after a unanimous City Council vote a
year ago cleared the way for the pipeline deal, which is expected to
deliver up to 16.3 billion gallons per year from the Carrizo and
Simsboro aquifer formations in Central Texas. An Austin firm, Blue Water
Systems, is supplying the water, having leased it from landowners in
Burleson County. The Vista Ridge pipeline, as it’s known, will boost
SAWS’ total supply by up to 20 percent.


Opponents’ efforts to organize against the pipeline seem to have done
little to change its momentum with the council. Still, a group of
Burleson County landowners will join with San Antonio environmental and
social justice groups to protest the project at noon Tuesday on the
steps of City Hall.


“Take any county road in this county and knock on 10 doors, and I
would be very surprised if you had more than two out of 10 people that
you talk to that are for this project,” said Burleson County resident
Andy Hovorak, who plans to make the trip.


As of Oct. 31, Abengoa had spent nearly $27 million on engineering
and aquifer studies, test wells, acquiring rights of way for the
pipeline route and other expenses, a financial update provided by SAWS shows.


If the City Council were to back out or not approve rate increases to
finance Vista Ridge, the contract’s terms dictate SAWS could end up
having to reimburse Abengoa for those costs.


If Abengoa were to reverse course or fail to get the project
financed, then the contract provides for a $2 million payout to SAWS.
The proviso is one of many risk-averting measures SAWS required of
companies that responded to its 2011 request for proposals to get a new water source.


Council views


Despite SAWS’ attempts to diversify its water sources, about 90 percent still comes from 92 wells that tap the Edwards Aquifer
below Bexar County, though that amount can vary. Restrictions on the
aquifer during droughts usually require SAWS to cut pumping, so SAWS
began looking for new supplies decades ago.


One attempt took them two counties away to Gonzales County in the early 2000s,
where efforts to secure a water supply met with resistance from the
local groundwater district, President and CEO Robert Puente said. In the
end, SAWS ended up with 3.8 billion gallons per year, much less than
expected.


“We didn’t want to have to go through that again,” he said. “So when
we negotiated the (Vista Ridge) contract, we told the respondents that
all those kinds of risks, we wanted them to take. And initially they
didn’t, but we negotiated that back to on their side.”


Efforts spent on negotiations and promoting the contract to the City
Council and the public seem to have paid off. Five council members
expressed support last week; two would not declare a position yet, and
three could not be reached. Mayor Ivy Taylor is an ardent supporter.


“We need to secure our water future and this gives us a time to do
it,” District 4 Councilman Rey Saldaña said. “We’ve debated the
logistics, the financial position of the company, our off-ramps for
risk, and I feel very comfortable going into it.”


District 6 Councilman Ray Lopez said he appreciates having a year to
discuss the project and question SAWS about it. He’s satisfied that the
utility will protect low-income ratepayers from massive increases in
monthly bills by keeping basic rates low and offering financial
assistance to customers as needed.


“The bottom line hasn’t changed,” he said. “I’m am an incredible supporter of it.”


District 9 Councilman Joe Krier said he thinks his constituents
understand rate increases are necessary to pay for the pipeline and are
willing to do so.


“It was and is a thoughtful project, and I’m confident it will be built,” he said.


Krier said his efforts to understand the project included speaking to
Abengoa executives and reading a report rating the risk of 12 potential
water projects.


Until recently, the study was led by former SAWS conservation
director and Texas A&M Water Resources Institute director Calvin
Finch. In a draft version, the Vista Ridge project was rated high risk.


That report had serious problems with its methods, said Roel Lopez,
director of the affiliated Institute for Renewable Natural Resources,
who took over control of the study. He appointed a peer-review panel of
five experts that came up with its own risk-rating system, which lowered
Vista Ridge to medium risk.


“The panel made it mathematically correct,” Lopez said.


After reading the revised report,
Finch said Friday he would have wanted to speak with the reviewers
directly and be given a chance to discuss their methodology.


“Usually the peer-review process is done for the benefit of the authors,” he said.


District 5 Councilwoman Shirley Gonzales said the final draft of the
report convinced her the project is necessary for long-term growth.


“The greatest concern for my constituents is always the rate
increases,” she said. “I do think SAWS did a really good job of
explaining the rate increases and creating that lifeline rate, and also
making it flexible for low-income people and low-water users.”


The military is watching the project closely as part of an upcoming Base Realignment and Closure process to make sure bases here have
enough water, District 10 Councilman Mike Gallagher said. He supports
the pipeline so that future San Antonians don’t have severe water
shortages during droughts.


A spokesman for District 2 Councilman Alan Warrick II, who was
elected after the council voted for the project, wouldn’t comment on
whether Warrick supports it. Warrick was in Nashville for a National
League of Cities conference last week, Akeem Brown said.


“A previous council committed to it,” Brown said. Warrick’s “concern
is making sure residents of his district have affordable rates and clean
drinking water.”


District 3 Councilwoman Rebecca Viagran was in Peru last week and
unavailable for comment, staff members said. Efforts to reach District 1
Councilman Roberto Treviño and District 7 Councilman Cris Medina were
unsuccessful.


District 8 Councilman Ron Nirenberg, who voted for the project a year
ago, did not say whether he would vote for the rate increases. He
reiterated his four criteria the project must meet to gain his support:
regional responsibility, commitment to conservation, fiscal
responsibility and transparency.


“We’ve seen stumbling on all four measures,” he said.


Commitments to conservation “have been stalled” and “have lacked support and clarity from the water system,” Nirenberg said.


Vista Ridge’s opponents also have questioned the effectiveness of
SAWS’ water conservation policies while the utility simultaneously adds
another water source.


“I don’t see SAWS working with the city to make sure new projects
have conservation built in,” said Annalisa Peace, director of the
Greater Edwards Aquifer Alliance at an Oct. 21 symposium at the
University of Texas at San Antonio.


“We have and we do,” SAWS CEO Puente responded, offering an example
of SAWS working with the city to pass an ordinance requiring developers
to add topsoil before laying sod in an effort to conserve irrigation
water.


SAWS also gives away water-saving indoor plumbing devices and offers
various rebates to encourage customers to cut water consumption. Its use
of recycled water is the largest such program in the U.S., the utility
says.


“If we hadn’t conserved the way we did, we would have had three
different Vista Ridge projects to be where we are today,” Puente said
when pressed again about conservation at an Oct. 26 water forum.


Higher costs for water


Opponents also have questioned the project based on Abengoa’s financial stability.

Abengoa created a fully owned subsidiary, Abengoa Vista Ridge LLC, to
build the pipeline. Abengoa, the parent company, has come under
scrutiny for poor credit ratings while its stock has fallen from about $19 a share a year ago to $5.33, though its third-quarter profits, released Friday, met analysts’ forecasts, the Associated Press reported.


SAWS officials point to the strength of the water transfer and
purchase agreement, which put the risks of acquiring water leases,
securing pumping and transport permits and building the pipeline on Blue
Water Systems and the Abengoa subsidiary, not SAWS.


With long-term financing figured in, the pipeline is projected to
cost $3.4 billion. Once water delivery begins in 2020, SAWS would pay
about $6.75 for every 1,000 gallons. In 2050, it will own the pipeline.


The contract with SAWS allows Abengoa Vista Ridge to sell 49 percent
of its share of the project, said project engineer Gene Dawson of
Pape-Dawson Engineers Inc.


Abengoa’s recent financial update about Vista Ridge states there is
“strong appetite for this project in financial markets.” The company is
exploring other bank financing as back-up, the report states.


The answers on Abengoa and the subsidiary seem to have satisfied Nirenberg.


“I think those have been answered quite well in terms of the design
of the contract and the capitalization of the subsidiary,” he said.


Yet, he raised questions on how much groundwater will be available.


“Ultimately, it’s the reliability of this water that becomes the tipping point,” Nirenberg said.


A May report by the South Central Texas Regional Water Planning Group said the project would exceed modeled available groundwater for the aquifers in the region in every decade through 2070.


Seven groups opposed to the pipeline point to a groundwater modeling study by independent hydrologist George Rice
stating the project would cause drawdowns of water levels in the Post
Oak Savannah Groundwater Conservation District and a neighboring area
below desired future conditions by 2060.


James Bené, a hydrologist for the firm R.W. Harden hired by Abengoa,
said the amount of water stored in those regional aquifers is so great
that pumping 5.5 million acre-feet over 60 years only will cause a 1.6
percent decline in total storage in the region.


Even if pumping that volume caused unsustainable depletion, Post Oak
Savannah has rules in place that would reduce pumping as necessary for
some or all permit holders, district manager Gary Westbrook said last
week. He and staff member Bobby Bazan regularly measure water levels in
wells throughout the district to keep track of groundwater levels.


“If the water’s there, good. If the water’s not there, you don’t get to pump that much,” Westbrook said.


SAWS’ contract has a provision for pumping cutbacks, too. The utility would have to pay only for water delivered.


bgibbons@express-news.net

Twitter: @bgibbs

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Senate Vote Seen as Boost for San Antonio 'Sanctuary City' Law | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Senate Vote Seen as Boost for San Antonio 'Sanctuary City' Law | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Supporters of a measure to declare San Antonio to be a 'Sanctuary City'
say a vote this week in the U.S. Senate not to strip funding from
'Sanctuary Cities' is a step in the right direction, News Radio 1200
WOAI reports.

  "This vote represents a positive future for
undocumented immigrants, non criminals," said Jaime Martinez of the
Cesar Chavez Legacy Foundation, who is pushing for the Sanctuary law.


San Antonio is the only one of the major cities in Texas that is not
formally declared to be a 'Sanctuary City.'  That declaration would
involve policies that prevent local police from inquiring about a
person's immigration status, and would prohibit officials from directly
cooperating with federal immigration officials when it comes to
notifying them if people who are held in the Bexar County Jail are here
illegally.

  "This will certainly give us a door open here in San Antonio for our lobbying efforts," he said.


Martinez says while the measure to declare San Antonio to be a
'Sanctuary City' is not ready to be introduced in the City Council,
Council is set to hear from Police officials next week on what their
policy is regarding immigration law enforcement.

  Local Police,under Chief William McManus and interim Chief Anthony Trevino have
generally focused on enforcing local and state criminal law.  McManus
has said that if police start inquiring about the immigration status of
individuals who call for police assistance, that will make victims less
likely to call police, and create a class of victims who criminals can
victimize with impunity.

  The concept of the 'Sanctuary City' has been under fire recently following the murder of a woman in San Francisco by an illegal immigrant who had been deported five times, but was not turned over to immigration officials due to that city's 'Sanctuary City' policies.  Opponents of Sanctuary City law say were it not for that policy, the shooting suspect would have been in federal custody, and not free to shoot innocent women.

 But supporters of Sanctuary Cities say illegal immigrants pay millions of dollars each
year in Taxes, support local businesses with their purchases, generally are honestly employed, and should not have to face the constant threat of arrest and deportation.

 There are an estimated 1.1 million illegal immigrants in Texas today.

San Antonio annexation pledge: Higher taxes and diluted service for all - Watchdog.org

San Antonio annexation pledge: Higher taxes and diluted service for all - Watchdog.org



Bexar County residents targeted for annexation by San Antonio can expect a 20-plus percent increase in property taxes.

A home valued at $113,800 would be taxed $2,860 versus $2,342
currently, according to a city analysis. The estimate could be
conservative, as sharply higher assessments drive up San Antonio
property tax bills.

So, would the city pull itself out of debt with annexation, or dig
deeper? Would new residents get the services they’re promised? Skeptics
abound.

State lawmakers representing some of the targeted areas scoff at the city’s bid to corral nearly 200,000 more county taxpayers.

Sen. Donna Campbell, R-New Braunfels, and Rep. Lyle Larson, R-San
Antonio, oppose expansion and vow to renew their opposition next
session.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, this month, ordered the Senate Inter-Governmental Relations Committee to revisit the state’s liberal annexation laws.

The Senate passed a bill last session to limit cities’ annexation powers, but the measure was derailed by the House.

House Speaker Joe Straus, R-Alamo Heights, did not respond to Watchdog’s request for comment.

Terri Hall, president of Texans Uniting for Reform and Freedom, doubts the House will act.

“The speaker is cozy with the Democrats who are cozy with the Texas
Municipal League, which pushes forced annexation,” Hall said. “The
governor is going to need to lead.”

RELATED: Win or lose, San Antonio ‘Spurs’ annexation

Under current state law, “home rule cities” like San Antonio can
unilaterally absorb outlying areas without the consent of affected
property owners. Critics call such action an undemocratic hostile
takeover.

James Quintero, director of the Center for Local Governance at the
Texas Public Policy Foundation, said San Antonio’s annexation agenda
“could end up putting people in harm’s way.”

“Adding large chunks of land and people requires a lot more public safety resources,” he said.

The San Antonio Police Officers Association, currently in deadlocked
contract negotiations with the city, calls annexation “a horrible idea.”

“We’re barely covering what we’ve got right now,” police union president Mike Helle told the Express-News.

Helle figures 165 additional officers would be needed to serve the
annexed areas — at a time when the city is lugging a $17 billion
municipal debt amassed over the course of previous annexations.

San Antonio planners project the latest acquisition, applying higher
property taxes to 66 coveted square miles, will be a net financial gain
for the city by 2020.

City Councilman Joe Krier, whose northside district would expand
under annexation, isn’t convinced a bigger San Antonio would be a better
San Antonio.

“Let’s make sure that we are making thoughtful decisions that are in
the best interests not just of the people who would be annexed, but are
in the best interest of the people who are already in the city,” Krier
told WOAI news.

Mayor Ivy Taylor also has suggested slowing things down. City staff on Wednesday recommended the council delay action on annexation until next spring.

Meantime, Campbell and Larson continue to question San Antonio’s annexation model.

“It is clear that a dilution of services will occur in the inner city
because demand for services would greatly increase in the newly annexed
areas,” the lawmakers wrote to Taylor this month.

“Encouraging competition for services between inner city areas and
areas far north and west is counter to the work by city leadership over
the last decade to encourage inner-city revitalization.”

Despite those concerns — and because of them — annexation advocates
want to press ahead to preempt any possible intervention from Austin.
With the Legislature not scheduled to convene until 2017, San Antonio’s
expansionists have time to maneuver.

Kenric Ward writes for the Texas Bureau of Watchdog.org. Contact him at . @Kenricward

Police Substations Designated 'Safe Zones' for E-Commerce | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Police Substations Designated 'Safe Zones' for E-Commerce | News Radio 1200 WOAI

 San Antonio City Council today approved an innovative plan to allow
people who buy or sell items on on-line marketplaces like E-Bay or
Craigs List to meet the other party for the transaction in the safety of
the six police substations across the city, News Radio 1200 WOAI
reports.

  Police Chief Bill McManus says there has been many
cases where people find out too late that the on line transaction was
simply a set up.

  "There have been some pretty heinous crimes
committed against people who think they are about to make a business
deal, whether its Craigs List or some other exchange, and they end up
being robbed, or worse," Police Chief Bill McManus said.

  McManus says the buyers and sellers can meet inside the police substation, all of which are staffed around the clock.


"It gives them a safe haven, it gives them the security of having the
police right there," he said.  "I think its a great idea."

 
McManus says the parties can meet in the lobby, or, if they want to stay
in their cars, they can meet in the parking lots.  All police
substation parking lots have surveillance cameras and are well lighted.


"We'll have signed that will be in the parking lot to designate the
spot where they should do it if they will be in the parking lot," he
said.

The proposal was the brainchild of northeast side Councilman Mike Gallagher.


"Providing the community with an option to safely conduct business like
this is long overdue," Gallagher said.  "Not only will our residents be
afforded an opportuity to safely conduct e-commerce exchanges with
neighbors, they will also have the opportunity to meet their
neighborhood patrol officers."

City staff backs plan for SAWS rate increases - San Antonio Express-News

City staff backs plan for SAWS rate increases - San Antonio Express-News


City staff recommended Wednesday that the City Council adopt a 7.5
percent water rate increase for 2016 and approve a plan for future
increases from 2017 to 2020.


Council members said they will continue discussions about improving
billing procedures at the San Antonio Water System, while reaching out
to families eligible for affordability programs.

SAWS CEO Robert Puente said the utility’s trustees view the increases
projected for 2017 and beyond as the maximum amounts the utility will
pursue to provide water and sewer service for 1.7 million people.


“They understand these are caps, and they want us to come under those caps,” Puente said.

The council is set to vote Nov. 19 on the rate increase, as well as
on a plan to raise the overall water rate to 7.9 percent in 2017 and to
increase the SAWS water supply fee from 2018 to 2020.


The increases would support the Vista Ridge pipeline, federally
mandated sewer upgrades, brackish water desalination, and replacement of
hundreds of miles of the city’s aging sewer and water lines.


The city’s chief financial officer, Ben Gorzell, recommended that the
council approve the rate plan and an updated rate structure to take
effect Jan. 1, expanding the number of residential billing rate blocks
from four to eight.


He also recommended “additional assistance” to low-income customers
whose monthly use exceeds 6,000 gallons; improvements in billing
procedures; and continued efforts to prevent “water loss.” SAWS
estimates that 16 percent of its water is lost through leaks, flushing
of lines and other factors or is not registered by outdated water
meters.


Some of the 42 positions being added by SAWS in 2016 will be focused
on customer service, leak repair, sewer upgrades and technology
upgrades. Gorzell noted the recent rash of high bills SAWS sent out, stirring complaints from customers at a time when rate increases are planned over several years.

The council has wrestled with the proposals, and delayed action by
three weeks, as the matter also has become clouded with opposition to
the Central Texas pipeline and delays in the final release of what was
intended to be a comprehensive city water policy report.


Although the council unanimously approved a contract last year
between SAWS and a private consortium to fund and build the Vista Ridge
pipeline, to carry up to 16.3 billion gallons annually to San Antonio as
early as 2020, Councilman Ron Nirenberg has asked pointed questions about it.


The project will initially force SAWS to raise rates to help finance
the 142-mile pipeline from Burleson County and will provide some of the
state’s most expensive water, at more than $2,000 per acre-foot,
according to SAWS. Officials have said the project will secure a
long-term supply for the city’s growth, with costs certain to fall by
the time SAWS retains ownership of the pipeline in 2050.


The council asked Wednesday about the financial stability of the
consortium, led by an affiliate of Abengoa, an international utility and
energy conglomerate. The subsidiary, Abengoa Vista Ridge, is “shielded”
from financial default by the parent company, SAWS Chief Financial
Officer Doug Evanson told the council.


Wednesday’s work session was less contentious than one a week
earlier, when Nirenberg told Puente he would keep asking questions so
the public can fully understand the complex pipeline deal “in the
context of what we’re trying to do in the next 30 to 60 years.”


Nirenberg has said the council should review the Texas A&M
University water policy report before voting on a SAWS rate increase.
 
The study is scheduled for presentation to the council Nov. 12 and
public comment later that day, and at a Nov. 18 council work session. A
July draft version
leaked to the San Antonio Express-News in September and later posted by
Mayor Ivy Taylor called Vista Ridge a “high-risk” project, but one that
could be needed to help the city avoid a future water deficit.



shuddleston


@express-news.net


Friday, October 23, 2015

City's Annexation Plan Pushed Back to Spring of 2016 | News Radio 1200 WOAI

City's Annexation Plan Pushed Back to Spring of 2016 | News Radio 1200 WOAI

 The city today announced a temporary halt to its aggressive plan to
annex five fast growing neighborhoods in north and northwest Bexar
County, News Radio 1200 WOAI reports.

 The City Staff will 'reschedule' the annexation for next year.


The city's plan to annex some 133,000 residents in neighborhoods along
I-10 and US 281, as well as Alamo Ranch near Loop 1604 and Highway 151
has sparked nearly universal opposition and condemnation.  The San
Antonio Police Officers Association has warned that the city will be
unable to provide basic police services to the newly annexed areas,
placing the entire city at risk because public safety will have to be
stretched too thin.


 Many have pointed out that less than a year
ago, City Council voted to cut nearly $10 million from the general fund
budget that had been earmarked for street maintenance and repairs
inside the current city limits, indicating that the city can't properly
provide basic services to areas which is already controls.

The Texas Public Policy Foundation had blasted the proposed annexation plan
as a 'disaster waiting to happen,' saying city government has shown no
inclination of being willing to hire hundreds more police and
firefighters needed to patrol the protect the additional territory.

The city says the public hearings already held will be maintained for next year's process.


The city will also appoint an 'external working group' which will
independently review the financial implications of annexation, and will
analyze the proposal in terms of home values, tax collections, and
proposed single family and multi family development.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Study: San Antonio Annexation Plan a 'Recipe for Disaster' | News Radio 1200 WOAI

Study: San Antonio Annexation Plan a 'Recipe for Disaster' | News Radio 1200 WOAI





A Texas based think tank that studies local government has investigated
San Antonio's plan to aggressively annex five fast growing neighborhoods
containing some 133,000 people and has concluded it is a 'recipe for
disaster,' News Radio 1200 WOAI reports.

  James Quintero,
director of the Center for Local Governance, a unit of the Texas Public
Policy Foundation, says the city is ill equipped to handle the
population and area it has now, and adding that much more territory
would lead to disaster for existing and new residents.

  "When
you add that much area for police officers to patrol without significant
increases in public safety spending, that is a recipe for disaster,"
Quintero told News Radio 1200 WOAI.

  Indeed, these very concerns
are crippling support for the annexation effort at City Hall.  Council
members Joe Krier and Ron Nirenberg, whose districts would have to
absorb many of the new residents coming into San Antonio, have both
called for the proposal to at least be delayed.  Mayor Ivy Taylor says
the city should back off, and consider annexing commercial but not
residential property.

  Quintero also said he balks at claims by
city staffers that people who live outside the city are 'freeloaders'
who use city services without paying for them in property taxes.

 
"When they come into the city they spend money which is collected in
the form of sales tax revenue which helps the city grow substantially,"
he said.  "These people are far from freeloaders, but they are
contributing to the size and scope of government."

  Quintero and
other analysts have also pointed out that just 10 months ago, in
December of 2014, City Council was forced to cut some $10 million from
the city budget for basic street repair and maintenance, because the
city couldn't afford to provide basic services to its existing
residents.  It is disingenuous, they say, for the city now to say it can
suddenly afford to pay for services for 133,000 more people.

 
The city's aggressive annexation efforts are also making other urban
areas in Texas nervous.  Several members of the Legislature say San
Antonio is the 'poster child' for irresponsible annexation policy, and
predict the city's aggressive plan will held secure enough votes in the
2017 session for a bill which narrowly failed earlier this year, which
would ban annexation without the consent of the people to be annexed.

 
Quintero says the basic problem with San Antonio's annexation plan is
it runs contrary to protection of property rights, which all governments
are bound to respect.

  "Where annexation fails is that it fundamentally violates people's private property rights," he said.