80R20400 SGA-F
 
  By: Hegar, et al. S.B. No. 1341
 
  Substitute the following for S.B. No. 1341:
 
  By:  Puente C.S.S.B. No. 1341
 
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the management of groundwater in the area regulated by
  the Edwards Aquifer Authority and to the operations and oversight
  of the Edwards Aquifer Authority.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Subsection (f), Section 1.11, Chapter 626, Acts
  of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, is amended to read
  as follows:
         (f)  The authority may own, finance, design, [contract with a
  person who uses water from the aquifer for the authority or that
  person to] construct, operate, or [own, finance, and] maintain
  recharge [water supply] facilities except in the Uvalde Pool, where
  the authority may only contract with an entity based in Uvalde
  County for the authority or that entity to own, finance, design,
  construct, operate, or maintain recharge facilities. [Management
  fees or special fees may not be used for purchasing or operating
  these facilities.] For the purpose of this subsection, "recharge
  [water supply] facility" means [includes] a dam, reservoir,
  [treatment facility, transmission facility,] or other method of
  recharge project and associated facilities, structures, or works.
         SECTION 2.  Subsections (c), (e), (f), and (h), Section
  1.14, Chapter 626, Acts of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session,
  1993, are amended to read as follows:
         (c)  Except as provided by Subsections [(d),] (f)[,] and (h)
  of this section and Section 1.26 of this article, for the period
  beginning January 1, 2008, the amount of permitted withdrawals from
  the aquifer [may not exceed 400,000 acre-feet of water] for each
  calendar year shall be as close as possible to 572,000 acre-feet of
  water based on:
               (1)  all initial regular permits issued on or before
  January 1, 2005, at the provisional groundwater withdrawal amount
  set out in paragraph 3.0 of those permits; and
               (2)  all filed applications for which permit issuance
  was pending action by the authority as of January 1, 2005, at the
  groundwater withdrawal amount:
                     (A)  set out in paragraph 3.0 of those permits,
  irrespective of when issued; and
                     (B)  calculated in the manner identical to those
  permits provisionally issued on or before January 1, 2005.
         (e)  The authority may not allow withdrawals from the aquifer
  through wells drilled after June 1, 1993, except for replacement,
  test, or exempt wells or to the extent that the authority approves
  an amendment to an initial regular permit to authorize a change in
  the point of withdrawal under that permit [additional water as
  provided by Subsection (d) and then on an interruptible basis].
         (f)  If the level of the aquifer is equal to or greater than
  660 [650] feet above mean sea level as measured at Well J-17, the
  authority may authorize withdrawal from the San Antonio pool, on an
  uninterruptible basis, of permitted amounts. If the level of the
  aquifer is equal to or greater than 845 feet at Well J-27, the
  authority may authorize withdrawal from the Uvalde pool, on an
  uninterruptible basis, of permitted amounts. [The authority shall
  limit the additional withdrawals to ensure that springflows are not
  affected during critical drought conditions.]
         (h)  To accomplish the purposes of this article, [by June 1,
  1994,] the authority, through a program, shall implement and
  enforce water management practices, procedures, and methods to
  ensure that, not later than December 31, 2012, the continuous
  minimum springflows of the Comal Springs and the San Marcos Springs
  are maintained to protect endangered and threatened species to the
  extent required by federal law. The authority from time to time as
  appropriate may revise the practices, procedures, and methods. To
  meet this requirement, the authority shall require:
               (1)  phased adjustments to [reductions in] the amount
  of water that may be used or withdrawn by existing users or
  categories of other users, including adjustments in accordance with
  the authority's critical period management plan established under
  Section 1.26 of this article; or
               (2)  implementation of alternative management
  practices, procedures, and methods.
         SECTION 3.  Subsection (g), Section 1.16, Chapter 626, Acts
  of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, is amended to read
  as follows:
         (g)  The authority shall issue an initial regular permit
  without a term, and an initial regular permit remains in effect
  until the permit is abandoned or[,] cancelled[, or retired].
         SECTION 4.  Subsection (b), Section 1.19, Chapter 626, Acts
  of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, is amended to read
  as follows:
         (b)  Withdrawal of water under a term permit must be
  consistent with the authority's critical period management plan
  established under Section 1.26 of this article. A holder of a term
  permit may not withdraw water from the San Antonio pool of the
  aquifer unless:
               (1)  the level of the aquifer is higher than 675 [665]
  feet above sea level, as measured at Well J-17;
               (2)  the flow at the Comal Springs as determined by
  Section 1.26(c) of this article is greater than 350 cubic feet per
  second; and
               (3)  the flow at the San Marcos Springs as determined by
  Section 1.26(c) of this article is greater than 200 cubic feet per
  second.
         SECTION 5.  Subsection (a), Section 1.22, Chapter 626, Acts
  of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, is amended to read
  as follows:
         (a)  The authority may acquire permitted rights to use water
  from the aquifer for the purposes of:
               (1)  holding those rights in trust for sale or transfer
  of the water or the rights to persons within the authority's
  jurisdiction who may use water from the aquifer;
               (2)  holding those rights in trust as a means of
  managing overall demand on the aquifer; or
               (3)  holding those rights for resale [or retirement as
  a means of complying with pumping reduction requirements under this
  article; or
               [(4)     retiring those rights, including those rights
  already permitted].
         SECTION 6.  Article 1, Chapter 626, Acts of the 73rd
  Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, is amended by amending Section
  1.26 and adding Section 1.26A to read as follows:
         Sec. 1.26.  CRITICAL PERIOD MANAGEMENT PLAN. (a)  After
  review of the recommendations received in the program document, as
  prescribed by Section 1.26A of this article, the [The] authority by
  rule shall adopt [prepare and coordinate implementation of] a [plan
  for] critical period management plan consistent with Sections
  1.14(a), (f), and (h) of this article [on or before September 1,
  1995]. On adoption of the critical period management plan, the
  authority shall provide a written report to the governor,
  lieutenant governor, and speaker of the house of representatives
  describing the actions taken in response to each recommendation
  and, for each recommendation not implemented, the reason it was not
  implemented. The plan [mechanisms] must:
               (1)  distinguish between discretionary use and
  nondiscretionary use;
               (2)  require reductions of all discretionary use to the
  maximum extent feasible;
               (3)  require utility pricing, to the maximum extent
  feasible, to limit discretionary use by the customers of water
  utilities; and
               (4)  require reduction of nondiscretionary use by
  permitted or contractual users, to the extent further reductions
  are necessary, in the reverse order of the following water use
  preferences:
                     (A)  municipal, domestic, and livestock;
                     (B)  industrial and crop irrigation;
                     (C)  residential landscape irrigation;
                     (D)  recreational and pleasure; and
                     (E)  other uses that are authorized by law.
         (b)  In this section, "MSL" means the elevation above mean
  sea level, measured in feet, of the surface of the water in a well,
  and "CFS" means cubic feet per second. Not later than January 1,
  2008, the authority shall, by rule, adopt and enforce a critical
  period management plan with withdrawal reduction percentages in the
  amounts indicated in Tables 1 and 2 whether according to the index
  well levels or the Comal or San Marcos Springs flow as applicable,
  for a total in critical period Stage IV of 40 percent of the
  permitted withdrawals under Table 1 and 35 percent under Table 2:
  TABLE 1
  CRITICAL PERIOD WITHDRAWAL REDUCTION STAGES
  FOR THE SAN ANTONIO POOL
 
Comal San Marcos Springs Flow CFS Index Well J-17 Level MSL Critical Period Stage Withdrawal Reduction- San Antonio Pool
 
Springs Flow San Marcos Springs Flow CFS Index Well J-17 Level MSL Critical Period Stage Withdrawal Reduction- San Antonio Pool
 
CFS San Marcos Springs Flow CFS Index Well J-17 Level MSL Critical Period Stage Withdrawal Reduction- San Antonio Pool
 
225 <96 <660 I 20%
 
200 <80 <650 II 30%
 
150 N/A <640 III 35%
 
100 N/A <630 IV 40%
  TABLE 2
  CRITICAL PERIOD WITHDRAWAL REDUCTION STAGES
  FOR THE UVALDE POOL
 
Withdrawal Reduction-Uvalde Pool Index Well J-27 Level MSL Critical Period Stage
 
N/A --- I
 
5% <850 II
 
20% <845 III
 
35% <842 IV
         (c)  A change to a critical period stage with higher
  withdrawal reduction percentages is triggered if the 10-day average
  of daily springflows at the Comal Springs or the San Marcos Springs
  or the 10-day average of daily aquifer levels at the J-17 Index Well
  drops below the lowest number of any of the trigger levels indicated
  in Table 1.  A change to a critical period stage with lower
  withdrawal reduction percentages is triggered only when the 10-day
  average of daily springflows at the Comal Springs and the San Marcos
  Springs and the 10-day average of daily aquifer levels at the J-17
  Index Well are all above the same stage trigger level. The
  authority may adjust the withdrawal percentages for Stage IV in
  Tables 1 and 2 if necessary in order to comply with Subsection (d)
  or (e) of this section.
         (d)  Beginning September 1, 2007, the authority may not
  require the volume of permitted withdrawals to be less than an
  annualized rate of 340,000 acre-feet, under critical period Stage
  IV.
         (e)  After January 1, 2013, the authority may not require the
  volume of permitted withdrawals to be less than an annualized rate
  of 320,000 acre-feet, under critical period Stage IV unless, after
  review and consideration of the recommendations provided under
  Section 1.26A of this article, the authority determines that a
  different volume of withdrawals is consistent with Sections
  1.14(a), (f), and (h) of this article in maintaining protection for
  listed, threatened, and endangered species associated with the
  aquifer to the extent required by federal law.
         (f)  Notwithstanding Subsections (d) and (e) of this
  section, the authority may require further withdrawal reductions
  before reviewing and considering the recommendations provided
  under Section 1.26A of this article if the discharge of the Comal
  Springs or the San Marcos Springs declines an additional 15 percent
  after Stage IV withdrawal reductions are imposed under Subsection
  (b) of this section. This subsection expires on the date that
  critical period management plan rules adopted by the authority
  based on the recommendations provided under Section 1.26A of this
  article take effect.
         (g)  Notwithstanding the existence of any stage of an interim
  or final critical period adopted by the authority under this
  section, a person authorized to withdraw groundwater from the
  aquifer for irrigation purposes shall, without regard to the
  withdrawal reductions prescribed for that stage, be allowed to
  finish one already planted crop in the calendar year during which
  the critical period is in effect.
         Sec. 1.26A.   RECOVERY IMPLEMENTATION PROGRAM.  (a)  The
  authority, with the assistance of Texas A&M University, shall
  cooperatively develop a recovery implementation program through a
  facilitated, consensus-based process that involves input from the
  United States Fish and Wildlife Service, other appropriate federal
  agencies, and all interested stakeholders, including those listed
  under Subsection (e)(1) of this section.  The recovery
  implementation program shall be developed for the species that are:
               (1)  listed as threatened or endangered species under
  federal law; and
               (2)  associated with the aquifer.
         (b)  The authority shall use its best efforts to enter into a
  memorandum of agreement with the United States Fish and Wildlife
  Service, other appropriate federal agencies, the Texas Commission
  on Environmental Quality, the Parks and Wildlife Department, the
  Department of Agriculture, the Texas Water Development Board, and
  other stakeholders not later than December 31, 2007, in order to
  develop a program document that may be in the form of a habitat
  conservation plan used in issuance of an incidental take permit as
  outlined in Subsection (d) of this section.
         (c)  The authority shall use its best efforts to enter into
  an implementing agreement with the United States Fish and Wildlife
  Service, other appropriate federal agencies, the Texas Commission
  on Environmental Quality, the Parks and Wildlife Department, the
  Department of Agriculture, the Texas Water Development Board, and
  other stakeholders to develop a program document that may be in the
  form of a habitat conservation plan used in issuance of an
  incidental take permit as outlined in Subsection (d) of this
  section not later than December 31, 2009.
         (d)  The authority, the Texas Commission on Environmental
  Quality, the Parks and Wildlife Department, the Department of
  Agriculture, the Texas Water Development Board, and other
  stakeholders shall jointly prepare a program document that may be
  in the form of a habitat conservation plan used in issuance of an
  incidental take permit with the United States secretary of the
  interior, through the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and
  other appropriate federal agencies, under Section 4 or Section 6,
  Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. Section 1533 or 1535), as
  applicable, based on the program developed under Subsection (a) of
  this section. The program document shall:
               (1)  provide recommendations for withdrawal
  adjustments based on a combination of spring discharge rates of the
  San Marcos Springs and the Comal Springs and levels at the J-17 and
  J-27 wells during critical periods to ensure that federally listed,
  threatened, and endangered species associated with the Edwards
  Aquifer will be protected at all times, including throughout a
  repeat of the drought of record;
               (2)  include provisions to pursue cooperative and grant
  funding to the extent available from all state, federal, and other
  sources for eligible programs included in the cooperative agreement
  under Subsection (c) of this section, including funding for a
  program director; and
               (3)  be approved and executed by each agency not later
  than September 1, 2012, and the agreement shall take effect
  December 31, 2012.
         (e)  Texas A&M University shall assist in the creation of a
  steering committee to oversee and assist in the development of the
  cooperative agreement under Subsection (c) of this section. The
  steering committee must be created not later than September 30,
  2007.  The initial steering committee shall be composed of:
               (1)  a representative of each of the following
  entities, as appointed by the governing body of that entity:
                     (A)  the authority;
                     (B)  the commission;
                     (C)  the Parks and Wildlife Department;
                     (D)  the Department of Agriculture; and
                     (E)  the Texas Water Development Board; and
               (2)  eight other persons as follows:
                     (A)  five holders of initial regular permits
  issued by the authority, to be appointed by the authority,
  including:
                           (i)  a representative of the municipal
  permit holder authorized to withdraw the most acre-feet of
  groundwater; and
                           (ii)  a representative of a holder of an
  initial regular permit issued for irrigation; and
                     (B)  three holders of surface water rights in the
  Guadalupe River Basin, to be appointed by the commission.
         (f)  The steering committee shall work with Texas A&M
  University to:
               (1)  establish a regular meeting schedule and publish
  that schedule to encourage public participation; and
               (2)  not later than October 31, 2007, hire a program
  director to be housed at Texas A&M University.
         (g)  Texas A&M University may accept outside funding to pay
  the salary and expenses of the program director hired under this
  section and any expenses associated with the university's
  participation in the creation of the steering committee or
  subcommittees established by the steering committee.
         (h)  Where reasonably practicable or as required by law, any
  meeting of the steering committee, the Edwards Aquifer area expert
  science subcommittee, or another subcommittee established by the
  steering committee must be open to the public.
         (i)  The steering committee appointed under this section
  shall appoint an Edwards Aquifer area expert science subcommittee
  not later than December 31, 2007. The expert science subcommittee
  must be composed of an odd number of not fewer than seven or more
  than 15 members who have technical expertise regarding the Edwards
  Aquifer system, the threatened and endangered species that inhabit
  that system, springflows, or the development of withdrawal
  limitations.  The Bureau of Economic Geology of The University of
  Texas at Austin and the River Systems Institute at Texas State
  University shall assist the expert science subcommittee.  Chapter
  2110, Government Code, does not apply to the size, composition, or
  duration of the expert science subcommittee.
         (j)  The Edwards Aquifer area expert science subcommittee
  shall, among other things, analyze species requirements. Based on
  that analysis and the elements required to be considered by the
  authority under Section 1.14 of this article, the expert science
  subcommittee shall, through a collaborative process designed to
  achieve consensus, develop recommendations for withdrawal
  reduction levels and stages for critical period management
  including, if appropriate, establishing separate and possibly
  different withdrawal reduction levels and stages for critical
  period management for different pools of the aquifer needed to
  maintain target spring discharge and aquifer levels.  The expert
  science subcommittee shall submit its recommendations to the
  steering committee and all other stakeholders involved in the
  recovery implementation program under this section.
         (k)  The initial recommendations of the Edwards Aquifer area
  expert science subcommittee must be completed and submitted to the
  steering committee and other stakeholders not later than December
  31, 2008, and should include an evaluation:
               (1)  of the option of designating a separate San Marcos
  pool, of how such a designation would affect existing pools, and of
  the need for an additional well to measure the San Marcos pool, if
  designated;
               (2)  of the necessity to maintain minimum springflows,
  including a specific review of the necessity to maintain a flow to
  protect the federally threatened and endangered species at the
  Comal Springs and the San Marcos Springs; and
               (3)  as to whether adjustments in the trigger levels
  for the San Marcos Springs flow for the San Antonio pool should be
  made.
         (l)  In developing its recommendations, the Edwards Aquifer
  area expert science subcommittee shall:
               (1)  consider all reasonably available science,
  including any Edwards Aquifer-specific studies, and base its
  recommendations solely on the best science available; and
               (2)  operate on a consensus basis to the maximum extent
  possible.
         (m)  After development of the program document, the steering
  committee, with the assistance of the Edwards Aquifer area expert
  science subcommittee and with input from the other recovery
  implementation program stakeholders, shall prepare and submit
  recommendations to the authority. The recommendations must:
               (1)  include a review of the critical period management
  plan, to occur at least once every five years;
               (2)  include specific monitoring, studies, and
  activities that take into account changed conditions and
  information that more accurately reflects the importance of
  critical period management; and
               (3)  establish a schedule for continuing the validation
  or refinement of the critical period management plan adopted by the
  authority and the strategies to achieve the program and cooperative
  agreement described by this section.
         (n)  In this subsection, "recharge facility" means a dam,
  reservoir, or other method of recharge project and associated
  facilities, structures, or works.  The steering committee shall
  establish a recharge facility feasibility subcommittee to:
               (1)  assess the need for the authority or any other
  entity to own, finance, design, construct, operate, or maintain
  recharge facilities;
               (2)  make recommendations to the steering committee for
  the authority or any other entity to own, finance, design,
  construct, operate, or maintain recharge facilities;
               (3)  maximize available federal funding for the
  authority or any other entity to own, finance, design, construct,
  operate, or maintain recharge facilities; and
               (4)  make recommendations to the steering committee
  regarding the financing of recharge facilities, including the use
  of management fees or special fees to be used for purchasing or
  operating the facilities.
         (o)  The steering committee may establish other
  subcommittees as necessary, including a hydrology subcommittee, a
  community outreach and education subcommittee, and a water supply
  subcommittee.
         (p)  The steering committee shall dissolve as soon as
  practicable after submitting its recommendations to the authority
  under Subsection (m) of this section but not later than December 31,
  2012.
         (q)  The authority shall provide an annual report to the
  governor, lieutenant governor, and speaker of the house of
  representatives not later than January 1 of each year that details:
               (1)  the status of the recovery implementation program
  development process;
               (2)  the likelihood of completion of the recovery
  implementation program and the cooperative agreement described by
  Subsection (c) of this section;
               (3)  the extent to which the recommendations of the
  Edwards Aquifer area expert science subcommittee are being
  considered and implemented by the authority;
               (4)  any other actions that need to be taken in response
  to each recommendation;
               (5)  reasons explaining why any recommendation
  received has not been implemented; and
               (6)  any other issues the authority considers of value
  for the efficient and effective completion of the program and the
  cooperative agreement under this section.
         SECTION 7.  Subsections (b), (h), and (i), Section 1.29,
  Chapter 626, Acts of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993,
  are amended to read as follows:
         (b)  The authority shall assess equitable aquifer management
  fees based on aquifer use under the water management plan to finance
  its administrative expenses and programs authorized under this
  article. Each water district governed by Chapter 36 [52], Water
  Code, that is within the authority's boundaries may contract with
  the authority to pay expenses of the authority through taxes in lieu
  of user fees to be paid by water users in the district. The contract
  must provide that the district will pay an amount equal to the
  amount that the water users in the district would have paid through
  user fees. The authority may not collect a total amount of fees and
  taxes that is more than is reasonably necessary for the
  administration of the authority.
         (h)  Fees assessed by the authority may not be used to fund
  the cost of reducing withdrawals or retiring permits or of
  judgments or claims related to withdrawals or permit retirements 
  [Special fees collected under Subsection (c) or (d) of this section
  may not be used to finance a surface water supply reservoir
  project].
         (i)  The authority and other stakeholders, including state
  agencies, listed under Section 1.26A of this article shall provide
  money as necessary[, but not to exceed five percent of the money
  collected under Subsection (d) of this section,] to finance the
  activities of the steering committee and any subcommittees
  appointed by the steering committee and the program director of the
  recovery implementation program under Section 1.26A of this
  article.  The authority shall provide, as necessary, up to $75,000
  annually, adjusted for changes in the consumer price index, to
  finance the South Central Texas Water Advisory Committee's
  administrative expenses and programs authorized under this
  article.
         SECTION 8.  Subsection (a), Section 1.45, Chapter 626, Acts
  of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, is amended to read
  as follows:
         (a)  The authority may own, finance, design, construct,
  [build or] operate, and maintain recharge dams and associated
  facilities, structures, or works in the contributing or recharge
  area of the aquifer if the recharge is made to increase the yield of
  the aquifer, [and] the recharge project does not impair senior
  water rights or vested riparian rights.
         SECTION 9.  Subsections (b) and (d), Section 1.14, Section
  1.21, and Subsections (a), (c), and (d), Section 1.29, Chapter 626,
  Acts of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, are repealed.
         SECTION 10.  (a)  Before January 1, 2012, a suit may not be
  instituted in a state court contesting:
               (1)  the validity or implementation of this Act; or
               (2)  the groundwater withdrawal amounts recognized in
  Section 2 of this Act. 
         (b)  If applicable, a party that files a suit in any court
  shall be automatically removed from the steering committee
  established under Section 1.26A, Chapter 626, Acts of the 73rd
  Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, as added by this Act.
         (c)  A suit against the Edwards Aquifer Authority may not be
  instituted or maintained by a person who owns, holds, or uses a
  surface water right and claims injury or potential injury to that
  right for any reason, including any actions taken by the Edwards
  Aquifer Authority to implement or enforce Article 1, Chapter 626,
  Acts of the 73rd Legislature, Regular Session, 1993, as amended.
         SECTION 11.  The change in law made by this Act applies only
  to a cause of action filed on or after the effective date of this
  Act. A cause of action that is filed before the effective date of
  this Act is governed by the law in effect immediately before the
  effective date of this Act, and that law is continued in effect for
  that purpose.
         SECTION 12.  This Act takes effect immediately if it
  receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each
  house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  
  If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate
  effect, this Act takes effect September 1, 2007.