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The
health of Barton Springs salamander is in serious decline and the
federal agencies most responsible for doing something about it are
once again being accused of knuckling under to political pressure,
instead of relying upon scientific evidence to identify causes and
cures. The point man for the US Fish and Wildlife Service who was
leading the charge to protect the salamander has been transferred
out of Austin. His former regional director has been reassigned.
And a watered down biological opinion has been issued, killing the
proposed federal protective measures that were to be applied for
development projects outside the reach of Austin's Save Our Springs
Ordinance.
But it's
not just the salamander's survival that's at stake. The salamander's
habitat is the water that gushes out of four hydrologically connected
springs in Zilker Park, collectively known as Barton Springs, including
the ancient swimming hole that some environmental groups call the
Soul of the City. The water flows from the Barton Springs segment
of the Edwards Aquifer. The Barton Springs segment is about twenty
miles long, with a recharge zone that covers an area of about ninety
square miles. The upstream contributing zone, which contains streams
that flow onto and discharge into the aquifer, covers more than
two hundred sixty square miles. If the water quality in the Barton
Springs segment is harmful to the aquatic creatures that have lived
in the springs for perhaps millions of years, then it is inching
toward being unsafe for humans as well. So the stakes are a lot
higher than whether the old swimming hole is dirty, or whether the
slimy little salamander that most people will never see, except
in a photograph, is comfy and cozy. Those things are indeed important,
but what's more important is that the salamander is an early warning
indicator of the health of the aquifer which, according to the Barton
Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation District, is the sole source
of drinking water for an estimated 50,000 people.
Politics
trump protection
If politics
are undermining protection for the salamander and the aquifer, it
wouldn't be the first time that politics has called the shots. The
salamander is listed as endangered as a direct result of two federal
lawsuits filed by the Save Our Springs Alliance against Bruce Babbitt,
then secretary of the interior. Babbitt had resisted the listing
and did not do so until ordered by Senior US District Judge Lucius
D. Bunton III on March 25, 1997. Bunton ruled that "strong
political pressure" had played a part in Babbitt's actions.
Part of that
political pressure was a letter from then Texas Governor George
W. Bush. The letter was referred to in Bunton's decision: "The
court finds that the Governor of Texas letter dated February 14,
1995, in which he expressed 'deep concerns because the proposed
action by the federal government may have the potential to impact
the use of private property' is not an appropriate justification
."
(Bush was elected governor in November 1994 and took office January
17, 1995.)
Bunton found
that Babbitt had acted "arbitrarily and capriciously"
when he had considered political factors in making the decision
not to list the salamander. Bunton's ruling concluded that the Endangered
Species Act requires the secretary to disregard politics and to
make listing decisions based solely on the best scientific and commercial
data available.
As a result
of Bunton's ruling, the Barton Springs Salamander was listed April
30, 1997, entitling it to federal protection under the Endangered
Species Act.
Now, more
than five years after the listing, there is new cause for concern.
Between January 28 and May 14, 2002, eighteen Barton Springs salamanders
have been found with external bubbles under their skin. A dozen
of these were either found dead or died shortly after they were
found. Tests revealed that the water was supersaturated with dissolved
gases, mainly nitrogen and oxygen, which are the principle components
of air. Gas bubble disease is a noninfectous and is similar to human
decompression sickness, which is caused by rapid ascent from a higher
atmospheric pressure to a lower pressure. City biologists studying
the situation have developed temporary skin rashes on two occasions
from exposure to the waters of Upper Barton Springs, where all but
two of the diseased salamanders were found. Still, despite exhaustive
efforts by the City of Austin and other agencies, the cause of the
gas bubble disease remains unsolved. The only good news is that
health authorities who reviewed available data in early March found
no evidence of any public health risk in Barton Springs Pool or
Upper Barton Springs.
Still, it's
not necessarily safe to swim in Barton Springs Pool at certain times.
The pool routinely closes for cleaning once a week and is also shuttered
in the event of a flash flood warning or an actual flood event,
says Tom Nelson, the city's aquatics supervisor. Scientists who
study water quality in the pool are finding evidence that toxic
chemicals linger in the pool for considerable periods after a rainfall
even when there isn't enough rain to cause a flood.
Barbara Mahler
is a research hydrologist with the US Geological Survey [which,
like the Fish and Wildlife Service, (FWS), is a branch of the Interior
Department]. Her specialty is studying water quality in karst aquifers
such as the Edwards. In 1992, Mahler, along with Dr. Mark Kirkpatrick,
a biology professor at the University of Texas at Austin, petitioned
the FWS to list the Barton Springs salamander as endangered. Two
years ago, Mahler collected samples in Barton Springs after rain
storms. "What we're seeing is pulses of pesticides moving through
after rainstorms," Mahler says of that effort. Mahler's research
during and after a two-day rainfall detected five pesticides, some
of which were still in the springs more than a week later. Mahler's
report states that none of the pesticide concentrations exceeded
maximum contaminant levels, health advisories, or Texas aquatic
life standards, but their presence in the springs soon after a rainfall
does indicate the vulnerability of the springs to contaminant infiltration
from the surface.
What's crystal
clear to anyone studying water quality or the salamander is that
conditions have gotten worse over time, and will continue to worsen
as more development occurs within the vast watershed that recharges
the aquifer.
Nancy McClintock,
manager of the Environmental Resources Management Division for the
City of Austin, says the latest data indicates deterioration of
the water quality in Barton Springs consistent with what happens
when watersheds begin to urbanize. This is exactly the reason that
the Barton Springs salamander was listed as an endangered species
deserving federal protection. The rule published in the Federal
Register April 30, 1997, noted, "The primary threats to this
species are degradation of the quality and quantity of water that
feeds Barton Springs due to urban expansion over the Barton Springs
watershed."
Development
of raw land creates more impervious cover from roads, driveways,
sidewalks and rooftops. This increases the volume and velocity of
storm water runoff, which triggers more erosion and sedimentation.
The sediments, oil and gasoline residues from the operation of motor
vehicles and lawn mowers, as well as pesticides and herbicides common
in developed areas, are transported by storm water runoff, entering
creeks and tributaries that recharge the aquifer. The recharge
that affects Barton Springs and the salamander is contributed by
five major creeks in southern Travis and northern Hays counties.
In the absence of a catastrophic spill of hazardous material-which
could contaminate the aquifer irreparably, possibly forever-water
quality in the aquifer slowly degrades as more and more urbanization
adds insult upon insult to the environment.
Feds playing
politics
The latest
assault on the salamander was political. It happened in early May,
when the FWS, the agency responsible for enforcement of the federal
Endangered Species Act, turned a blind eye to the plight of the
salamander.
David Frederick,
who since February 1998 had been the Austin field supervisor for
the FWS, was suddenly yanked off the front lines in the battle to
save the salamander and transferred to the regional headquarters
in Albuquerque. His regional director, Nancy Kaufman, had already
been reassigned to Washington, DC, last December.
Frederick
(profiled in The Good Life in November 2000) had been leading the
charge in an interagency battle with the US Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) over the EPA's lax enforcement of permits that allow
development projects to proceed without close scrutiny. To settle
federal lawsuits filed by the Save Our Springs Alliance and Texas
Capitol Area Builders Association, Frederick was required to draft
a biological opinion regarding the EPA's permitting system. Frederick's
draft biological opinion of July 19, 2001, concluded the permitting
system "is likely to jeopardize the continued existence of
the salamander."
At stake
in the interagency squabble was how the EPA was to enforce the Construction
General Permit. Federal law prohibits discharges of pollutants in
storm water from construction activities without a National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Permit. Operators of construction
sites where five or more acres are disturbed, or smaller sites that
are part of larger common plan of development or sale where there
is cumulative disturbance of at least five acres, must submit a
Notice of Intent to obtain coverage under the NPDES Storm Water
General Construction Permit. The permit allows construction activities
to go forward by filing a Notice of Intent to discharge storm water.
The developer certifies that either there are no listed endangered
or threatened species or critical habitat in the project area, or,
if there is, that measures will be taken to protect them. As long
as the developer postmarks the Notice of Intent (NOI) at least forty-eight
hours before construction begins, he can start turning dirt. As
the FWS' final biological opinion states, "If the NOI is complete
and the operator has certified they meet the permit eligibility
conditions, construction may begin without EPA independently verifying
the accuracy of the operator's certified claim of eligibility with
regard to endangered species protection." When a profit-minded
developer can take a chance on cutting corners on environmental
protection, then it's a system ripe for abuse.
This self-certification
process was at the heart of earlier litigation filed by the Save
Our Springs Alliance. The lawsuit alleged the EPA had failed to
follow the Endangered Species Act by not consulting with the FWS
regarding the Construction General Permit's impact on endangered
species. Long before the lawsuit, Frederick had sought consultation
with the EPA and had, in fact, notified the EPA of the requirement
for consultation in letters of October 21, 1998, and June 29, 1999,
to no avail. On the other side of the same litigation was the Texas
Capitol Area Builders Association, which challenged the FWS' requests
for consultation.
Despite EPA
resistance, Frederick wouldn't back off his position that the EPA's
lax enforcement of the Construction General Permit posed a threat
to the continued existence of the Barton Springs salamander. Frederick's
draft opinion with a finding of jeopardy-if approved and signed
by the regional director-would have required stiffer oversight of
new construction projects under its General Construction Permit
and new protective measures to ensure no harm to the endangered
Barton Springs salamander. Further, it would have forced the EPA
to go back and scrutinize construction projects already approved,
a project of considerable magnitude that would no doubt have triggered
howls of protest from the development community.
If Fredrick's
draft opinion were approved and signed by the FWS regional director,
the storm water discharges for construction projects covered by
the EPA's General Construction Permit within the Barton Springs
watershed and its contributing zone-which includes Bear, Little
Bear, Williamson, Slaughter and Onion creeks-would have had to comply
with either the FWS Recommendations for Protection of Water Quality
of the Edwards Aquifer or the City of Austin's Save Our Springs
and Comprehensive Watershed Ordinances. Those who want to try to
prevent further degradation of the water quality would say this
makes perfect sense. Critics have said this would have amounted
to federalizing the SOS Ordinance.
Negotiating
in Washington
After months
of interagency wrangling between the FWS and EPA, on September 5,
2001, representatives of FWS regional office in Albuquerque, the
EPA regional office in Dallas, and Frederick met with headquarters
staff from both agencies in Washington, DC. The meeting was called
to discuss the draft biological opinion and alternatives. The official
version of what happened in that meeting, according to the final
biological opinion of May 6, 2002, is that the FWS and EPA "jointly
agreed that the draft biological opinion would benefit from further
review."
The
unofficial story of what happened in that meeting in Washington
is much different. According to a federal lawsuit filed May 17 by
the Save Our Springs Alliance (SOSA), political appointees in the
Bush administration intervened in the September 5 meeting and stopped
the FWS and EPA from reaching a negotiated settlement. If SOSA can
prove this allegation in court, it could lead to the same judicial
finding of "arbitrary and capricious" conduct that forced
then-Interior Secretary Babbitt to list the salamander as endangered.
It could also nullify the final biological opinion that concluded
the EPA's permitting system "is not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of the Barton Springs salamander."
Short of
a full-blown trial, the case for political interference is circumstantial.
In trying to explore the validity of the SOSA lawsuit's claims,
The Good Life found that the litigation chilled the willingness
of federal officials to provide information. The FWS declined to
provide records requested, as documents are being gathered under
a court order. Neither Frederick nor Kaufman would consent to interviews.
Nor would FWS Acting Regional Director H. Dale Hall or EPA Regional
Director Gregg Cooke.
Still, there
is evidence. Harry Savio is executive vice president of the Texas
Capitol Area Builders Association (TxCABA), an organization that
has sued numerous times to stave off FWS actions viewed as overreaching
federal authority. TxCABA was doing all it could to appeal to higher
authority about Frederick's proposed biological opinion that the
salamander was in jeopardy, including lobbying Interior Secretary
Gale Norton. "Through the National Association of Homebuilders'
Washington offices we sought intervention directly to Secretary
Norton," Savio says.
The case
for political interference also points to the fact that the final
biological opinion, which declares that the EPA's continued operation
of the Construction General Permit in the Barton Springs watershed
"is not likely to jeopardize the existence of the Barton Springs
salamander," is contradicted by the scientific information
within the sixty-six-page opinion. For example, the report documents
the drastic decline in the numbers of salamanders in recent years.
It notes the salamanders' affliction with gas bubble disease, including
the fact that, "Prior to this incident, there has been no evidence
of gas bubble trauma at this site." It expresses concern for
contaminants found in the water, including herbicides, polyaromatic
hydrocarbons, solvents and elevated levels of nitrate. It acknowledges
that areas of high-quality salamander habitat have decreased in
recent years due to the deposition of silt and sediment. An accumulation
of sediment covers all available habitat at Eliza Spring, and much
of the other three springs are also affected. "This is a major
change from historic accounts of these springs that had crystal
clear conditions with little silt or sediment," the opinion
states. Heavy metals attached to sediment may have toxic effects
on prey species and the salamander itself.
Federal
court intervenes
One reason
for the contradiction between the science and the biological opinion's
conclusion is the fact that the final draft was a rush job. Although
the draft opinion had been floated in various versions since July
2001, the FWS and EPA were under a court mandate, brought about
to settle litigation brought by the Save Our Springs Alliance (SOSA).
The settlement set target dates for action by the EPA and FWS, and
required FWS to issue a final biological opinion by September 4,
2001. When that didn't happen, SOSA filed another lawsuit, alleging
breach of the settlement agreement and violation of the Endangered
Species Act. US District Judge Sam Sparks did not take kindly to
the federal agencies' disregard for the settlement agreement, which
he personally had approved April 27, 2001, in dismissing earlier
lawsuits. Instead of complying with the terms of the settlement,
the defendants contended they had entered a Memorandum of Understanding
to complete consultation by July 25, 2002. The disregard for the
settlement agreement Sparks had okayed raised his hackles.
Sparks grabbed
the federal agencies by their legal lapels with a scathing decision
filed March 26, 2002. "The court cannot fathom why an entity
as resourceful and mammoth as the federal government needs fifteen
months, the gestation period of a black rhinoceros, to complete
a consultation concerning the effects of construction on a three-inch
creature," Sparks wrote. "The court especially cannot
see any legitimate, apolitical reason the defendants need over a
year-the gestation period of an ass-to finalize a draft biological
opinion." Sparks ordered the EPA and FWS to complete their
consultation within forty days-or to appear for a hearing in forty
days and explain why.
In noting
that there was no "apolitical reason" for the delay, Sparks-who
is well known for his personal disdain for the Endangered Species
Act-was clearly criticizing the same sort of political interference
in due process that had caused Interior Secretary Babbitt to be
found guilty of "arbitrary and capricious" conduct.
The forty
days Sparks allowed ran out May 6, 2002, which is the date the final
biological opinion was signed by Albuquerque-based H. Dale Hall,
acting regional director for the FWS. The final opinion completely
reversed the strong recommendations made in the draft biological
opinion rendered by the scientists monitoring the salamander's fate
in Austin, and advocated by their field supervisor, David Frederick.
Even Harry
Savio of TxCABA-who adamantly opposed a biological opinion finding
of jeopardy for the salamander, and filed lawsuits and lobbied to
prevent it-concedes there are serious flaws in the final biological
opinion. "The final biological opinion was really rushed as
a result of needing to meet court deadlines in Austin, so some of
the underlying work to amend the basic draft was never done,"
Savio says. "The only thing that really changed was the conclusion."
The slender
thread held out to support the final biological opinion is that
the EPA's General Construction Permit will expire in July 2003 and
that, considering the range of estimates for land to be disturbed
during construction before then (600 to 3100 acres, depending on
which of three estimates you believe), "any potential impact
to the salamander is anticipated to be relatively small."
The biological
opinion concludes, in part, "
the best available information
indicates that the incremental contribution of pollutants from projects
covered by the permit during the next fourteen months is expected
to be small, provided the permit and applicable local ordinances
are followed. To ensure compliance with its permit, EPA has committed
to enhanced oversight, monitoring and enforcement, in coordination
with FWS Texas, and local authorities." Case closed.
Of
course this logic-that the incremental contributions of pollutants
is acceptable-ignores the fact that it's the cumulative effect of
thousands and thousands of acres of development that has already
occurred that has degraded water quality in the Barton Springs segment
of the Edwards Aquifer. The biological opinion, in effect, says
what harm is a little more pollution going to do? Which is exactly
the problem we face, not just for the Barton Springs salamander
but for the environment we all must live in. It is the problem that
Garrett Hardin wrote about in "The Tragedy of the Commons"
in 1968: "The rational man finds that his share of the cost
of the wastes he discharges into the commons is less than the cost
of purifying his wastes before releasing them. Since this is true
for everyone, we are locked into a system of 'fouling our own nest,'
so long as we behave only as independent, rational, free enterprisers."
Fearing
the worst
Knowledgeable
scientists are far less sanguine than the FWS about the fate of
the salamander.
Lisa
O'Donnell formerly worked for the FWS in Austin and she wrote the
rule, published in the Federal Register, under which the Barton
Springs salamander was listed as an endangered species. Now O'Donnell
is an environmental scientist who works for the City of Austin's
Watershed Protection Department, as is Dee Ann Chamberlain. They
are directly involved with the salamander and oversee the captive
breeding program that has enjoyed limited success in producing offspring.
"I think the species is highly imperiled," says O'Donnell.
"I agree," Chamberlain says.
Nancy McClintock,
who manages the City of Austin's Environmental Resources Management
Division, says, "I think the survival of the salamander is
highly questionable unless additional protections are required."
Environmentalists
are bracing for the worst. Asked if the Barton Springs salamander
will survive, Jon Beall, president of the Save Barton Creek Association,
says, "Its survival is hanging in the balance. It's too early
to tell. It's survival is going to be a combination of our community's
ability to prevent additional pollution and clean up the existing
pollution." And Barton Springs itself? "Barton Springs'
future is in lockstep with the survival of the salamander,"
Beall says.
Is it good-bye
Barton Springs, R.I.P. salamander? "If this community doesn't
wake up, that's about all it will be," says Bill Bunch, SOSA's
executive director and the lawyer who crafted most of the numerous
lawsuits over the salamander. "The writing is clear, all over
the wall."
Mike Blizzard
of Grassroots Solutions is a political consultant who works for
environmental causes. He was campaign manager for passage of the
City of Austin's bond proposition in which voters approved $65 million
in May 1998 to purchase some 15,000 acres of land and conservation
easements over the aquifer for the express purpose of protecting
water quality. That helped, but did not stem the degradation. "Anyone
who regularly swims in the springs can notice a drastic downturn
in water quality," Blizzard says. "You have chunks of
algae in there on a daily basis that could choke a human being,
and I speak from experience. It destroys the essence of the pool
Think
of people swimming in that pool and 50,000 people drinking from
the aquifer, and I wonder how long we can sustain that."
Even respected
attorneys whose livelihood depends on maneuvering development projects
through the rocks and shoals of governmental red tape are divided
on whether the final biological opinion is adequate to protect the
Barton Springs salamander. Alan Glen of Smith Robertson Elliott
& Glen says, "I think the basic conclusion of the opinion
is
that the state and local regulations, if implemented and
complied with, are adequate to protect the Barton Springs salamander."
David Armbrust of Armbrust Brown & Davis is less certain. "I
had concerns about the (draft biological opinion) because I didn't
really think the science was totally supportive of the jeopardy
call, but then to just flip-flop and go this other way, I don't
know if what's out there is adequate to protect the salamander,"
Armbrust says.
As it stands
now, in another year, the enforcement of the Construction General
Permit will be turned over to the Texas Natural Resource Conservation
Commission (which on September 1 will be renamed the Texas Commission
on Environmental Quality). TNRCC spokeswoman Adria Dawidczik said
no decision had been made regarding whether the enhanced oversight,
monitoring and enforcement agreed to by the EPA will be adhered
to by the state agency. Thus, even the minimalist additional oversight
which the final biological opinion required of the EPA may be forfeited.
Bush-whacked
administration
Lending further
credence to SOSA's claim of political interference over the salamander
is that the current administration-led by two former oil executives,
President George W. Bush and Vice President Richard B. Cheney-is
doing everything in its power to give industry a higher priority
than environmental protection. The Bush administration, for example,
wants to open up vast federal lands for energy production, ranging
from the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to pristine federal lands
in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. The stated purpose is
to increase domestic energy production and reduce dependence on
foreign sources, but drilling on public land also puts a lot of
gold in the federal coffers. On January 23, 2002, Interior Secretary
Gale Norton bragged that "the department collected $11.3 billion
in receipts during fiscal year 2001." The largest source of
Interior receipts: oil and gas royalties, totaling $9.3 billion.
Much of these funds go to pay for conservation initiatives.
But make
no mistake, the Bush administration is no friend of the environment.
On June 13, the New York Times reported the Bush administration
proposed changing air pollution rules to give utilities more leeway
in modernizing power plants without also being required to improve
their pollution-control equipment. The Bush administration only
last month acknowledged the existence of global warming. Meanwhile,
Interior Secretary Gale Norton has been making speeches all over
the nation about the "New Environmentalism." On Earth
Day, April 22, 2002, Secretary Norton and thirteen other top Interior
officials fanned out across the country to preach the gospel of
the New Environmentalism, but to environmentalists, the New Environmentalism
is little more than political rhetoric that varnishes the truth
about what's being done.
Rhetoric
aside, it's indisputable that in 1995, as Texas governor, Bush resisted
listing the salamander as an endangered species; as president, his
administration is not doing all it could to protect the salamander.
Which leaves
Central Texas with a crazy-quilt patchwork of regulations that are
clearly failing to do the job. The City of Austin's SOS Ordinance
covers only twenty-nine percent of the watershed that recharges
the Barton Springs segment of the Edwards Aquifer. The rest of the
Barton Springs segment, located in southern Travis and northern
Hays counties, falls under numerous political jurisdictions, including
the Village of Bee Caves; ?the City of Dripping Springs, whose extraterritorial
jurisdiction covers most of northern Hays County; the State of Texas
Edwards Aquifer Rules administered by the Texas Natural Resource
Conservation Commission; Hays County subdivision rules; and, for
any new development served by the Lower Colorado River Authority's
pipeline to Dripping Springs, FWS rules agreed to in a Memorandum
of Understanding. Thus, the Barton Springs salamander faces increasingly
stiff odds for survival as development proceeds under whatever rules
apply for the jurisdiction in which its built.
Caution:
pollution ahead
Central Texas
is in the midst of a drought. Unless the area gets significant rainfall
to make up the growing deficit, the aquifer levels will continue
to drop, as will the flows in Barton Springs. David Johns, a hydrogeologist
with the City of Austin's Watershed Protection Department, says
water quality in Barton Springs begins to degrade when aquifer levels
are lower, as in a drought. "You see most dissolved constituents
increase in concentration as the discharge from the springs decreases,"
Johns says. He also notes that in times of drought, Upper Barton
Springs tends to go dry, giving the salamanders one less place to
live.
Meanwhile,
massive land developments currently seeking approvals would place
even heavier loads on the overburdened aquifer. As this edition
went to press, the City of Austin was considering a $15 million
incentive package for Stratus Properties' 1253-acre development
within Circle C Ranch, which the developer claims is grandfathered
under rules in effect when the Circle C development was first planned
in the mid nineteen-eighties. In addition, the Village of Bee Cave
just approved a $25 million to $30 million sales tax rebate for
the Hill County Galleria, a proposed mall with about 1.3 million
square feet of space, at the intersections of US Highway 71, Ranch
Road 620 and Bee Caves Road.
Another potential
threat to the salamander and Barton Springs is the Longhorn Pipeline,
which this month is scheduled to begin pumping gasoline over the
recharge zone of the aquifer. Although David Frederick signed off
on the pipeline project after the operators took extensive-and expensive-steps
to prevent a massive spill, environmentalists nevertheless fear
the worst, a spill that will contaminate the water in the aquifer
forevermore.
Massive new
highway projects are slated over the aquifer recharge zone. Michael
Aulick, executive director of the Capital Area Metropolitan Planning
Organization that funnels state and federal funds to local highway
projects, says three major highway projects are on the local horizon:
MoPac Expressway-The
main lanes of Loop 1 will be extended from where they now end, south
of US Highway 290, to cross William Cannon Drive, a distance of
about 1.3 miles. This project will cost an estimated $10 million
and should start construction about March 2003 and take two years
to complete, according to Ed Collins, advanced transportation planning
director for the Austin District, Texas Department of Transportation
(TxDOT).
SH-45 South-State
Highway 45 is slated to start Phase 1 construction, consisting of
two lanes of a four-lane parkway, in August 2003. This project will
extend eastward from the south end of Loop 1 and connect to FM 1626
near Marbridge. This is a $12.3 million project that will take about
three years to complete, Collins says.
Oak Hill
Interchange-A freeway interchange is slated for the Y in Oak Hill,
where US Highway 71 branches away from US Highway 290, Collins says.
This is a multi-phase project that will eventually produce a flyover,
so that drivers can go from Ben White Boulevard to the lakes without
a stop in Oak Hill. The frontage roads are slated to begin construction
in July 2004 at a cost of $20 million. The main lanes would come
later at a cost of $54 million. The flyover would cost another $13.6
million and wouldn't start construction till 2013.
These roadway
projects over the aquifer cause three concerns for the environment:
road construction can add contaminants from sediment; road use can
produce toxic runoff, including the possibility of spills; and bigger
roads ease commuting and thus open up sensitive land on the periphery
for more development.
Don Nyland,
area engineer for TxDOT, says traps will be designed for these roadways
to catch spills of up to 10,000 gallons. Grass-lined ditches and
grassy swales will be incorporated to capture and filter the runoff.
In addition, detention ponds may be installed in some areas, depending
on the needs identified as the highway designs evolve. During construction,
filter fences and rock berms are the standard erosion controls,
he says.
It's an open
question whether the measures Nyland outlined will be adequate to
protect the aquifer and salamander, however. Nancy McClintock, manager
of the city's Environmental Resources Management Division, says,
"They've never built a road out there to nondegradation standards,
so we don't know what the future holds for us in terms of state-built
roads, or how the FWS might influence how those roads are built."
A massive
new water supply is also opening up in the Hill County. In mid-June,
the LCRA's $20 million water pipeline project-formally known as
the Northern Hays and Southwestern Williamson County Water Supply
System-began delivering treated surface water to several hundred
residences in Sunset Canyon, a subdivision east of Dripping Springs
on US Highway 290. This month, the Dripping Springs Water Supply
Corporation (DSWSC) will take delivery of the LCRA water as its
primary supply to serve almost a thousand taps, says Joel Wilkinson
of Neptune-Wilkinson Associates Inc., engineer for DSWSC. To accommodate
the new service, DSWSC customers' minimum water bills will rise
forty percent, from twenty dollars a month for 3,000 gallons, to
twenty-eight dollars a month, he says. Wilkinson says the DSWSC's
initial cost to hook up to the LCRA line was approximately $50,000.
He says he does not anticipate a large increase in demand for water,
although negotiations are ongoing to possibly supply water to a
development south of Dripping Springs, near the intersection of
Ranch Roads 12 and 150, that would have approximately three hundred
fifty lots.
Brent Covert,
utility development coordinator for the LCRA, says the new water
supply system has the capacity to serve 7,630 taps.
Environmentalists
fought the LCRA pipeline from the beginning, fearing that a high-capacity
surface water supply would promote increased density in northern
Hays County. And it will do just that, in the areas that are subject
to Hays County's rules for minimum lot sizes. Under those rules,
a home within the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone equipped with a
septic system and a private well requires a minimum lot size of
five acres. With surface water, the same home with a septic system
can be put on two acres. The saving grace is that under the LCRA's
Memorandum of Understanding with FWS, any new development served
from the water line is supposed to comply with Water Quality Protection
Measures, including buffer zones along streams, nondegradation standards
for storm water runoff, and limits on impervious cover. Densities
may be increased, however, if off-site land is provided and maintained
in an undeveloped condition in perpetuity.
Engineer
Karen Bondy, manager of Water and Wastewater Operations for the
LCRA and project manager for the water supply pipeline, offers assurance
that the LCRA will abide by the terms of the Memorandum of Understanding.
"Any new development has to bring a letter of approval from
the FWS before we will even talk to them about a water service agreement,"
she says.
Undercutting
the environmental community's faith in the LCRA's compliance with
the Memorandum of Understanding is the perception that the Environmental
Impact Study (EIS) for the water supply system, produced by Utah
consultants Bio-West Inc. at a cost of $400,000, is fatally flawed.
And it's not only environmentalists who are concerned. Four of the
scientists who were on the Water Resources Technical Advisory Group
for the Bio-West study wrote a scorching nine-page critique of the
EIS in January. The critique's final paragraph says, in part, "As
a technical document, the Bio-West EIS report has numerous serious
deficiencies
We feel that the current version of this report
is a disservice to the technical community of Central Texas, who
must live with the consequences of this document
Unless the
report is thoroughly revised, we suggest that it not be released."
The critique
was signed by US Geological Survey scientists Barbara Mahler, research
hydrogeologist, and Raymond Slade, Texas District surface water
specialist; hydrogeologist Rebecca Morris of the Barton Springs/Edwards
Aquifer Conservation District; and hydrogeologist David Johns of
the City of Austin.
Bondy is
attempting to address the concerns of scientists and environmentalists
over the study. Last month she wrote a letter to the Save Our Springs
Alliance, for example, to address each of the organization's criticisms.
The LCRA also has hired Brigid Shea, former City Council member
and former executive director of the Alliance, to help. "I've
asked her to help us identify who in the public still would have
issues and make sure we understand what those issues are, and we'll
continue to work to see if we can address those issues," Bondy
says. In addition, the LCRA has hired the Low Impact Development
Center Inc., a nonprofit organization based in Beltsville, Maryland,
to provide a detailed review of the Water Quality Protection Measures
specified in the Memorandum of Understanding with the FWS.
So there
you have it, the watered down biological opinion that allows the
EPA to continue lax enforcement of the Construction General Permit;
the patchwork of water quality controls over the Barton Springs
segment of the aquifer; and a spate of new development, including
land development, roadway projects and massive new water supplies
for the hinterlands, with each project doing its share to further
degrade water quality. Add it all up and next month's celebration
of the tenth anniversary of the passage of the SOS Ordinance may
be dampened.
Grandfathering
challenged
One cause
for possible celebration by environmentalists, however, is the new
litigation, filed June 24 by SOSA in state district court just as
this edition was going to press. The defendants are Stratus Properties,
its subsidiary Circle C Land Corp., and the City of Austin. Joining
SOSA as plaintiff was the Circle C Neighborhood Association.
If successful,
this lawsuit could strike down the state law that allows grandfathered
development projects to go forward within Austin's jurisdiction
with less environmental protection than the Save Our Springs Ordinance
requires. The lawsuit seeks injunctive relief and a declaratory
judgment that would-if granted by the court-in one fell swoop nullify
the grandfathering claims that Stratus Properties is asserting to
wangle $15 million in incentives from the City of Austin.
"The
Stratus deal on the table is a main target, but we're looking at
all the other grandfathered development projects in the watershed,
not just in Austin's jurisdiction," says Bill Bunch, SOSA executive
director. Bunch is being assisted in this lawsuit by attorneys Amy
Johnson, a longtime environmental attorney, and David B. Brooks,
who literally wrote the book on local government law in Texas.
The lawsuit
argues that Texas Government Code Chapter 245 (grandfathering) rules
exempt "regulations to prevent imminent destruction of property."
It asserts that groundwater, surface water and wildlife are forms
of property threatened by pollution, and argues that the Save Our
Springs Ordinance was enacted to protect the quality of groundwater,
and thus the ordinance is exempt from grandfathering rules.
While this
legal argument at first may seem farfetched and awfully late in
coming, especially in view of the deal that the city struck in settling
its long-running battles with developer Gary Bradley, there is a
legal precedent. In 1997, developer Ken Slider sued the City of
Sunset Valley seeking the right to build out two lots with more
impervious cover than permitted by Sunset Valley's Land Development
Code and water quality regulations. Slider claimed that because
the two lots were subdivided in 1983 and Sunset Valley's Land Development
Code and water quality regulations were enacted at a later date,
his project was exempt. The City of Sunset Valley litigated this
issue and won a summary judgment in December 1997. Senior District
Judge Jerry Dellana ruled that the City of Sunset Valley's Land
Development Code, limiting development in watersheds and establishing
variance standards and procedures for development in watersheds,
is a "regulation to prevent imminent destruction of property
and injury to persons" according to Texas Government Code,
and thus exempt.
If
SOSA's lawsuit is able to overturn the grandfathering rules that
have allowed so many thousands of acres to escape the environmental
controls required by the SOS Ordinance-and that's a big if, as this
is being written-it would be a capstone to Bill Bunch's decade of
trench warfare on behalf of the aquifer and the salamander. He will
be leaving in September to spend a year in Prague, Czechoslovakia,
where he met his wife. "I will still be working part-time for
SOS, telecommuting," he says, "but the main reason is
to finish the book I started, and learn to speak Czech and drink
some Czech beer. It's good and it's cheap."
Can we
all just plan?
But what
does the future hold for the Barton Springs segment of the Edwards
Aquifer and the Barton Springs salamander? With respect to the FWS,
only time will tell whether David Frederick's successor as Austin
field supervisor will be as aggressive about protecting the salamander
and as willing to work with developers for solutions. Renne Lohoefener
started work around June 1, not to replace Frederick but to oversee
the entire state. Lohoefener transferred from Washington, DC, where
for about two years he was chief of endangered species for the FWS.
"I will be hiring Dave Frederick's replacement," he says.
Lohoefener will oversee the field supervisors in four major FWS
locations: Austin, Arlington, Clear Lake and Corpus Christi. He
says he hopes to fill the Austin field supervisor's position by
around September 1. Meanwhile, Bill Seawell will continue as acting
field supervisor in Austin.
As to the
future direction the FWS will take, Lohoefener says, "I think
we'll keep doing what we've been doing. We have laws and regulations
to implement and we are going to be looking to do it in a partnership
with anybody that wants to work with us and we are certainly going
to be looking for new ways to implement the Endangered Species Act,
flexibly. We'll be as creative as we can with our partners to get
the job done, but get the job done in a way that people think they
can live with it."
One thing
that Frederick constantly preached as Austin field supervisor was
the need for regional planning. In fact, the Memorandum of Understanding
between the FWS and the LCRA for the Dripping Springs waterline
specifically called for it: "Local governments are encouraged
to initiate an effort to develop a regional solution for water quality
protection in the Barton Springs watershed that will assure new
development will be in compliance with the Endangered Species Act
with respect to the Barton Springs salamander."
Lohoefener
says Frederick's emphasis on regional planning was warranted. "I
think Dave was exactly right," he says.
It seems
FWS officials now recognize what local environmentalists have been
saying for more than a generation. The Save Barton Creek Association
was founded in 1979. At its twentieth anniversary party in November
1999, attorney Wayne Gronquist said regional planning was one of
the founding principles of the organization. "We advocated
a century plan, a preservation plan specific to the Barton Springs
watershed for a hundred years."
No such plan
has been devised. Instead, the fate of the watershed rests in the
hands of a host of governmental entities that don't often work in
unison, each left to its own devices to react to the flood of development
projects fueled by a never-ending growth in population.
While the
initial efforts to begin regional planning for northern Hays County
was aborted in September 1999, there is a glimmer of hope on the
horizon. Two separate initiatives are underway to develop regional
plans.
One is a
grass-roots effort sponsored by the Friendship Alliance of North
Hays County. A few months ago, Rob Baxter, president of the Friendship
Alliance, along with David Baker, executive director of the Wimberley
Valley Watershed Association, sponsored a meeting of elected officials
from Hays County, Hays County municipalities, the Barton Springs/Edwards
Aquifer Conservation District, and the Hays-Trinity Groundwater
Conservation District. The upshot of the meeting, Baxter says, was
the elected officials agreed that regional planning was needed,
and they asked Baxter and Baker to draft a resolution calling for
the appointment of a Blue Ribbon Committee to work on a regional
plan for north Hays County. The draft resolution would require a
unanimous vote by the Hays County Commissioners Court, Baxter says.
Hays County
Judge Jim Powers attended the meeting hosted by Baxter and Baker.
"I feel like we desperately need to move the process forward,"
Powers says. "I think regional planning for water quality is
an important issue that we need to really focus on, so we can find
new ways and better ways of not only protecting the environment,
but also providing good clean water to the citizens of Hays County."
It's unclear when the resolution to appoint a Blue Ribbon Committee
might be ready for the Hays County Commissioners Court to consider,
Powers says, as the county budget is absorbing their attention at
present.
More promising
is the work being done by the Central Texas Regional Visioning Project.
A board comprised of nearly seventy members was announced in February,
under the leadership of Chairman Neal Kocurek. The board has representation
from all five counties in the metropolitan area and a broad range
of constituencies, including business, elected officials, equity,
environment, neighborhoods, and strategic partners.
One member
of the board is Jon Beall, president of the Save Barton Creek Association.
He says the Visioning Project will help protect water quality. The
larger question the Project is going to try to address, Beall says,
is "Where are we going to put the next 500,000 people? If we
decide we don't want to put them over the aquifer, it's going to
have benefits for the entire region." Beall says the Visioning
Project has already been funded to the tune more than a million
dollars and is professionally managed by Fregonese Calthorpe Associates,
regional and urban planning consultants based in Portland, Oregon,
and Executive Director Beverly Silas. "All my conservative
friends get a little nervous when they hear I'm involved" in
the Visioning Project, Beall says, "and there's a little nervousness
from my progressive friends when they hear Neal Kocurek is involved.
So everybody who's not involved is nervous that it's going to be
controlled by the progressives or by the conservatives, but it's
really a very good process."
Beall believes
the Visioning Project will eventually need to ask the Texas Legislature
for enabling legislation to implement regional planning. "First
we want to come up with a plan. Then it will be up to the region
and its elected officials to implement," he says. At this stage,
he says, it's not clear what the Legislature will be asked to do,
but one thing is clear: the state will not be asked for more money.
"It will require some kind of regional body authorized by the
Legislature where our sixty different political subdivisions (including
counties, municipalities, school districts, water districts, and
others) are brought together under some kind of regional authority."
It's everybody's
problem
Whatever
kind of plan surfaces, if it brings allies to the City of Austin's
long-running efforts to protect the environment, that would be a
welcome change, says City Council Member Daryl Slusher. "The
City of Austin over the last five years spent $65 million on the
purchase of land (to prevent growth over the aquifer)," Slusher
says. "There hasn't been any help from the state, no help from
the federal government and no help from any surrounding jurisdiction.
All that land over the aquifer has been purchased by the City of
Austin. So we need more players participating, not just in the planning,
but in implementing the plan.
"The
plan is simple: buy some land, have strong water quality protection
ordinances, steer development off the aquifer like the City of Austin's
been doing, and clean up your existing pollution sources,"
Slusher says.
Cleaning
up existing pollution is the goal behind the Austin City Council's
recent resolution asking city staff to identify the top ten sources
of pollution for Barton Springs. Environmental Resources Manager
Nancy McClintock says the staff is still grappling with how to accomplish
that task, but hopes to present the council with a proposed approach
later this summer. Retrofitting projects are both expensive and
difficult, McClintock notes. A 1995 study estimated a cost of $11
million for about twenty-six projects that collectively would make
only a small improvement in water quality in Barton Springs, she
said.
McClintock
says some retrofitting projects will be done but emphasis will be
put on educational programs such as the Grow Green Program that
encourages the use of plants that reduce the need for pesticides,
fertilizers and watering, and provides less toxic solutions to landscaping
problems.
Educating
and gaining cooperation of the large population that resides over
the recharge and contributing zones of the Barton Springs segment
of the Edwards Aquifer will be a monumental task. But in the long
run, we can only undo the tragedy of the commons, and clean up the
fouling of our nest, if we all do our parts. If not, the salamander's
fate appears to be sealed, and perhaps with it the water supply
upon which 50,000 people depend for daily sustenance.
And what
of Barton Springs? The three-acre pool is the crown jewel of Zilker
Park, named for Andrew Jackson Zilker, who bought the land in 1901.
The place that Native Americans called the Sacred Springs and visited
to heal their wounds has offered nourishment and respite for hundreds
of years. The place we call the Soul of the City may in time become
little more than a silt-filled and contaminated relic of the past.
And what are we, if we lose our soul?
Ken Martin,
editor of The
Good Life,
recalls the words of Roman emporer and philosopher Marcus Aurelius:
"That which is not good for the beehive cannot be good for
the bees."
A Century
of Barton Springs History
Barton Springs
is the fourth largest spring in Texas, exceeded only by Comal, San
Marcos and San Felipe. There are four spring outlets at Barton Springs:
Pathenia (the main spring, in Barton Springs Pool); Eliza (also
known as Elks, adjacent to the concession stand); Sunken Garden
(also known as Old Mill or Walsh, located on the south side of the
pool); and Upper Barton Spring, located in Barton Creek immediately
upstream from Barton Springs Pool. Today, only Upper Barton Springs
is not impounded in concrete.
1901:
Andrew Jackson Zilker purchases the land which includes what Native
Americans had called Sacred Springs, a place they visited to heal
their wounds. At the site of one of the springs, Zilker soon builds
a small concrete pool and amphitheatre for members of his Elks Club
organization.
1917:
The property becomes a city park.
1929:
The area around the main spring outlet is impounded to create Barton
Springs Pool, a thousand feet long, enclosed by a concrete lower
dam and sidewalks on both sides.
1932:
The city adds an upper dam.
1946:
The Barton Springs salamander is first collected from Barton Springs
Pool by Bryce Brown and Alvin Flury.
1978:
Dr. Samuel Sweet of the University of California at Santa Barbara
is the first to recognize the Barton Springs salamander as distinct
from other Central Texas Eurycea salamanders based on its restricted
distribution and unique morphological and skeletal characteristics
(such as its reduced eyes, elongate limbs, dorsal coloration, and
reduced number of presacral vertebrae).
1979:
1. Construction begins on Barton Creek Square Mall. Dorothy Richter,
who swims daily at Barton Springs Pool, says, "The first time
I noticed the springs running muddy was when they dynamited the
hill to build Barton Creek Square Mall." The mall is built
on Loop 360 above Barton Creek with more than 1 million square feet
of retail space and enough parking for a major airport. In response,
Richter and others form the Zilker Park Posse, a coalition of groups.
In September 1979, attorney Wayne Gronquist files the paperwork
to incorporate the Posse and form a political action committee.
2. The Save Barton Creek Association is formed.
1981:
The Barton Creek Watershed Ordinance is enacted. Bond proposals
that would have extended water and wastewater service into this
sensitive watershed are defeated.
1982:
The US Department of Interior on December 30 recognizes that the
Barton Springs Salamander might be endangered or threatened, and
listed the species as a "Category 2" candidate.
1990:
The Austin City Council holds an all-night hearing at which 800
people sign up to speak, most in opposition to Freeport-McMoRan
Inc.'s proposal to build a 4,000-acre development on Barton Creek.
The council votes unanimously to reject the development proposal.
1991:
The Save Our Springs Coalition forms to gather signatures needed
to put the Save Our Springs Ordinance on the ballot.
1992:
1. On January 22, Mark Kirkpatrick and Barbara Mahler petition the
US Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to list the Barton Springs salamander
as an endangered species and to designate critical habitat for the
species.
2. On August 8, the Save Our Springs Ordinance is approved by voters
by a margin of 42,246 to 26,187. Voters reject an alternative proposition
the council had put on the ballot by 44,556 to 24,140.
3. On December 11, the FWS publishes a finding in favor of adding
Barton Springs salamander to the Endangered Species Act.
1994:
FWS publishes in the Federal Register a proposal to list Barton
Springs salamander as an endangered species.
1995:
1. The Save Our Springs Legal Defense Fund (SOSLDF) files suit asking
the court to force US Secretary of Interior Bruce Babbitt to make
a decision on whether to list the Barton Springs Salamander as an
endangered species.
2. Texas Governor George W. Bush's letter of Feb. 14 expresses "deep
concerns because the proposed action by the federal government may
have the potential to impact the use of private property."
1996:
1. On July 10, Judge Bunton grants SOSLDF motion for preliminary
injunction and orders Secretary Babbitt to make a decision on whether
to list the salamander as endangered, withdraw the listing, or extend
the time to make a decision by no more than six months.
2. The Barton Springs Salamander Conser-vation Agreement and Strategy
is signed August 13 by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department,
the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission, the Texas Department
of Transportation, and FWS.
3. On September 14, Babbitt withdraws the proposed rule to list
the salamander as endangered because of the commitment of the state
of Texas to the Conservation Agreement.
4. SOSLDF files suit October 29 challenging Babbitt's decision to
withdraw the proposed listing of the Barton Springs salamander.
1997:
1. On March 25, Judge Bunton rules on the SOSLDF lawsuit and remands
it to the Secretary to make a listing determination with respect
to the Barton Springs salamander consistent with this opinion not
later than 30 days from the date of this order, stating, "The
ESA requires the Secretary to disregard politics and to make listing
decisions based solely on the best scientific and commercial data
available
The court finds as a matter of law that the Secretary's
decision to withdraw the listing of the Barton Springs salamander
was arbitrary and capricious and that the Secretary relied upon
factors other than those contemplated by the Endangered Species
Act."
2. The Federal Register of April 30 lists the Barton Springs salamander
as an endangered species.
1998:
1. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issues a General Construction
Permit on July 6, which regulates the effects of construction and
development on endangered species, including construction in the
recharge and contributing zones of the Barton Springs segment of
the Edwards Aquifer.
2. On October 21, the FWS requests consultation with the EPA regarding
the Construction General Permit's effect on the Barton Springs salamander.
1999:
1. On March 26, the Texas Capitol Area Homebuilders Association
(TxCABA) files suit against the Department of Interior and FWS,
challenging the FWS' request for consultation with the EPA.
2. On June 29, the FWS for the second time requests consultation
with the EPA regarding the permit's effects on the Barton Springs
salamander.
2000:
The SOS Alliance (SOSA) files suit against the EPA on June 15, challenging
the failure to consult with the FWS regarding the General Construction
Permit's effects on the salamander. US District Judge Sam Sparks
consolidates the TxCABA and SOSA cases.
2001:
1. All parties to the lawsuit execute a settlement agreement filed
in court April 23. Judge Sparks dismisses the cases without prejudice
pursuant to the agreement on April 27. Under the agreement, the
EPA agrees to request initiation of the consultation with the FWS
beginning within 14 working days of the execution of the agreement
and the FWS agrees to provide a draft biological agreement within
30 days of receiving certain information from the EPA.
2. On July 19, the FWS issues a draft biological opinion stating
the Construction General Permit is likely to jeopardize the continued
existence of the salamander, and would require additional protective
measures to be instituted.
3. On September 5, FWS, EPA, and Department of Interior (DOI) officials
meet in Washington, DC, to discuss the draft biological opinion
and alternatives.
4. In December, FWS Regional Director Nancy Kaufman is reassigned
to Washington, DC.
5. On December 17, SOSA files a lawsuit alleging EPA, DOI and FWS
breached the earlier settlement agreement and violated the Endangered
Species Act.
2002:
1. A workshop jointly sponsored by EPA and FWS is held in Austin
March 27-28 to gather comments on the draft biological opinion,
focusing on the hydrology and water quality of Barton Springs Recharge
and Contributing Zones as well as the biology of the Barton Springs
salamander.
2. Defendants in the SOSA lawsuit of December 17 move to stay proceedings
in this case until July 25, when they contend they will have completed
the consultation. They provide a Memorandum of Understanding in
which EPA and FWS agree to complete their ESA consultation regarding
the effects of the permit on the salamander by July 25. Meanwhile,
development will continue under the permit.
3. On March 26, Judge Sparks slaps down the motion to stay the proceedings,
writing, "Apparently the defendants expect this court to believe
the self-imposed date they set in the Memorandum of Understanding
will be more effective than the date they selected in the Settlement
Agreement in order to convince this court to dismiss two complex
lawsuits against them. The court is not convinced the defendants
can abide by any deadlines, much less self-imposed ones, and the
defendants have not provided the court with any plausible reason
for the delay. The consultation was to have begun approximately
11 months ago. The defendants claim they need until July 25, 2002,
to complete the consultation. The court cannot fathom why an entity
as resourceful and mammoth as the federal government needs 15 months,
the gestation period of a black rhinoceros, to complete a consultation
concerning the effects of construction on a three-inch creature.
The court especially cannot see any legitimate, apolitical reason
the defendants need over a year-the gestation period of an ass-to
finalize a draft biological opinion. Almost seven months have passed
since the defendants were obligated to complete the consultation
under the terms of the settlement agreement and the court sees no
reason to condone further delay." Judge Sparks orders the EPA
and FWS to complete their consultation regarding the effects of
the EPA's Construction Storm Water General Permit on the Barton
Springs salamander within 40 days.
4. On May 6, a final biological opinion is signed by H. Dale Hall,
acting regional director of FWS. The opinion states "
the
continued operation of the Construction General Permit in the Barton
Springs watershed, as proposed, is not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of the Barton Springs salamander."
5. On or about May 6, FWS Austin Field Supervisor David Frederick
is reassigned to the regional headquarters.
6. On May 17, SOSA files suit, claiming the final biological opinion
is "arbitrary and capricious."
7. On June 24, SOSA files suit against Stratus Properties, its subsidiary,
Circle C Land Corp., and the City of Austin, seeking a court ruling
that the SOS Ordinance is exempt from grandfathering rules under
state law.
-Ken Martin
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