Charles Chaney Jr. has Utopia on his mind. The Texas City resident is a month away from retirement, and Utopia is the name of the scenic Hill Country town where his family has lived for generations. He had planned to build a house on land he owns there near his brother and sister.
Now, he鈥檚 not so sure.
About a month ago, he received a letter from Enterprise Products Partners, telling him it plans to run a 30-inch crude oil pipeline through the land and requesting access to conduct a survey.
鈥淚t upsets me,鈥 Chaney says. 鈥淚t makes me have to hold off right now, because where I had planned on putting my house 鈥 it would be too close to the pipeline.鈥
Chaney is one of many landowners along the pipeline's planned route from Midland to a point southeast of San Antonio.
Like natural gas pipeline, the project has from residents who think the Hill Country is not a good place for a pipeline. They worry about water quality and oppose the company鈥檚 use of .
鈥淲e are all calmly going about our task to be stewards of the land, and out of the blue these letters started showing up,鈥 said Merry Langlinais, president of the Bandera Canyonlands Alliance. 鈥淵ou can imagine that people were taken aback.鈥
Langlinais says she has not seen a detailed plan for the route of the pipeline, and her group is piecing together a map based on letters Enterprise has sent to property owners.
鈥淲e know that it's going to cross the Sabinal River several times," she said, "and before it can even get to our Canyonlands, it has to cross over the recharge zone for the Edwards Aquifer."
The Rivard Report was the first nontrade news outlet . It also published a copy of a presentation it says comes from Enterprise.
In an email to KUT, Enterprise鈥檚 vice president of public relations, Rick Rainey, called information in the Rivard Report 鈥減remature鈥 and said the company is 鈥渓ooking at a number of different routes.鈥
鈥淚t is highly unlikely that the route of the proposed pipeline would go through the recharge zone of the aquifer,鈥 wrote Rainey, who declined KUT鈥檚 request for an interview.
Bandera County Judge Richard Evans said Monday the company delivered the same copy of the presentation to his office.
鈥淭he PowerPoint is very poor, as far as being able to tell where county lines are, but I can tell it鈥檚 at the very west end of our County,鈥 he said.
Evans said the pipeline project could be a 鈥渢radeoff鈥 for the county: If the pipeline reduces oil tanker truck traffic, as promised on Page 6 six of the presentation, it could improve regional road safety.
鈥淥f course you have private property rights,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd these people are not just going to roll over.鈥
At the start of the last legislative session, some Texas lawmakers had hoped to overhaul the system by which the state government gives private pipeline companies the that is, the ability to take private land for their projects with little or no oversight. Some proposed a system that mandated more public notice and input on pipeline projects, akin to what's required in the planning of electric transmission lines.
By the time lawmakers left Austin, however, the only major piece of pipeline legislation that passed was a bill that against people who protest pipelines.
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