HBA-LJP H.B. 2005 77(R)    BILL ANALYSIS


Office of House Bill AnalysisH.B. 2005
By: Corte
Natural Resources
4/2/2001
Introduced



BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 

Texas faces a difficult challenge to develop water policies that serve both
state and regional interests. The Texas Constitution authorizes the
creation of groundwater conservation districts to plan, develop, and
regulate the use of water. In 1990, the Texas Natural Resource Conservation
Commission designated the Trinity Aquifer, including areas in Bexar County,
as a Priority Groundwater Management Area to address the critical or future
critical water shortage in the area. House Bill 2005 creates the Trinity
Glen Rose Groundwater Conservation District, subject to voter approval at a
confirmation election, in Bexar County. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

It is the opinion of the Office of House Bill Analysis that this bill does
not expressly delegate any additional rulemaking authority to a state
officer, department, agency, or institution. 

ANALYSIS

House Bill 2005 creates the Trinity Glen Rose Groundwater Conservation
District (district), subject to voter approval at a confirmation election
(SECTION 1). 

The bill provides that the district is governed by a board of directors,
one from each of five single-member voting districts, and sets forth
provisions regarding the composition and administration of the board and
the appointment, qualifications, and terms of the directors.  The bill sets
forth provisions regarding an election to confirm the establishment of the
district (SECTIONS 6-12). 

The bill authorizes the district to impose either a fee or a tax to use as
a regulatory mechanism or a revenueproducing mechanism.  The bill sets
forth provisions for an operation and maintenance tax, a fee on each
nonexempt well in the district, a regulatory fee for a retail public
utility, and a lien on property with a well (SECTIONS 13 and 16).  The bill
prohibits the district from imposing a fee or tax on a person who provides
water to a municipality, at least 50 percent of which is obtained from a
source other than the Trinity Aquifer, or a resident of or other water user
within the municipality that obtains water from such a person (SECTION 17).
The bill sets forth the expenditures of the collected fees and authorizes
the district to expend the fees independently or in conjunction with other
natural resource programs in the district.  The bill requires the board to
adopt rules regarding the fee rates, the manner and form for filing reports
of fees, and the manner of collecting fees (SECTION 13). 

The bill prohibits the district from:

_selling, donating, leasing, or otherwise granting rights to underground
water located in the district unless the action has been approved by a
majority vote of the residents of the district; 

_engaging in any action to purchase, sell, transport, and distribute
surface water or groundwater for any purpose other than aquifer storage and
recovery; 

 _assessing an ad valorem tax in excess of three cents for each $100
valuation; or 

_imposing a tax on or charging a fee to any person in the district who does
not obtain water from the Trinity Aquifer (SECTION 15). 

The bill provides that under certain conditions, a public water supply well
is exempt from regulation by the district and from payment of fees to the
district.  The bill requires the owner of a public water supply well to
register the well with the district and submit reports to the district and
provides that the public water supply well is subject to the district's
prohibitions on the waste of groundwater.  The bill prohibits the district
from requiring a construction or operating permit for a public water supply
well approved by the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission
(SECTION 16). 

The bill authorizes the board to require all or certain types of wells to
be registered with the district.  The bill sets forth which acts the
district is authorized to carry out and sets forth provisions relating to
exempt wells (SECTION 14). 

EFFECTIVE DATE

On passage, or if the Act does not receive the necessary vote, the Act
takes effect September 1, 2001.