Conservation method of choice for 19 Lone Star GRPs
Posted: Thursday, June 16, 2011 12:00 am
Conservation method of choice for 19 Lone Star GRPs
By Howard Roden Houston Community Newspapers
Of the 19 plans approved by the Lone Star Groundwater Conservation District Tuesday, a dozen groups chose conservation as their primary strategy for attaining the mandated 30 percent reduction in groundwater usage.
While the majority of those Groundwater Reduction Plans were presented either by golf courses or homeowners associations, LSGCD board members were pleased the GRP sponsors embraced any method to reach the district’s Jan. 1, 2016, deadline.
He admitted being “pleasantly surprised” at the number of GRP sponsors relying on conservation.
“It showed a number of permittees were committed to what worked best for them,” Tramm said.
But there were other GRPs and Joint GRPs that followed a different route to acceptance.
Most notably is the San Jacinto River Authority’s Joint GRP that includes 141 large-volume groundwater users. The SJRA’s plan features development of a surface-water treatment plant on Lake Conroe and a pipeline system that will distribute that water to the city of Conroe, The Woodlands and high-growth areas along the Interstate 45 corridor.
A number of water systems in Montgomery County have pursued alternative water services. Municipal Utility Districts 8 and 9 entered into a two-faceted Joint GRP in which their contract allows them to draw surface water from Lake Conroe through a contract with the city of Huntsville.
A bed and banks permit from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality is pending.
The MUDs’ other proposed water source is that from the Catahoula formation. Roy McCoy Jr., president of MUD 8, announced after the LSGCD board meeting that the two Walden MUDs will drill a test well in the Catahoula in the “very near future.”
“We think we will prevail on the bed and banks permit, and we’re going to do both,” he said. “We’re not worried about it. We can prevail on one or the other, but we think we’ll be successful with both.”
McCoy said all wells drilled so far in “our particular area” have contained less than the total dissolved solids required by the state. The temperature of test wells are around 105 degrees.
“Most likely, the temperature will have to be treated in some manner,” he said.
Commenting that the Catahoula aquifer is an “unproven source” of groundwater, SJRA General Manager Reed Eichelberger — an LSGCD board member — questioned whether the conservation district was “comfortable” enough to yield the necessary power to those whose alternative projects do not prevail.
LSGCD attorney Jason Hill said the GRP resolutions approved Tuesday become regulatory documents.
“Certification became the goal,” he told the board.
Eichelberger said the LSGCD viewed the SJRA as the “safe harbor” GRP, and its duty is to accept other entities that struggled.
“We’re willing to do that if they pay the pumpage fees and other financial responsibilities,” he said.