This evening at its Regular Meeting, the Barton Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation District (BSEACD) Board of Directors denied the request from the Trinity Edwards Springs Protection Alliance (TESPA) for a rehearing of the Needmore Water LLC permit.
Blayne Stansberry, Director and President of the Board, stated that the primary reason the Board denied this request was that TESPA did not present any new information that would warrant another hearing on the matter.
She further stated that the District held a 5-hour public hearing on this permit application on July 29 where the Board received comments from more than 20 members of TESPA and other concerned citizens and that the information presented this evening was the same as that presented at that public hearing.
Mary Stone, BSEACD Board member from Precinct 1 in Hays County, stated that the decision on the Needmore permit was determined by the Texas Legislature when the law was passed in 2015 that expanded the district’s boundaries to include the Needmore Ranch. “I do not like the outcome and personally find it offensive that one landowner can pump so much groundwater in an area like Hays County where water is scarce. But, our hands were tied by the legislature on this permit application.”
The legislature passed House Bill 3405 in 2015 to expand the BSEACD to cover the previously unregulated portions of the Trinity Aquifer in Hays County.

In order to get the bill passed over significant opposition and ensure the management of the aquifer in the future, local legislators agreed to grandfather certain existing wells like the one on the Needmore Ranch.Board President Stansberry, whose Precinct 2 is largely in Hays County, agreed. “The 2015 law made clear that Needmore was entitled to this permit for its existing well. We didn’t write the law, but we took an oath to uphold it.” Stansberry noted that while it would have been more popular to deny the permit in spite of the law, the Board of Directors also has to be good stewards of public money. “A permit denial would have led to costly litigation using public money, which would clearly have been overturned by a court in light of the controlling law,” she said. “We just have to be more financially responsible than that with public funds.”
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