LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
 
WATER DEVELOPMENT POLICY IMPACT STATEMENT

88TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
 
May 11, 2023

TO:
Honorable DeWayne Burns, Chair, House Committee on Land & Resource Management
 
FROM:
Jerry McGinty, Director, Legislative Budget Board
 
IN RE:
SB2605 by Flores (Relating to the creation of the Knob Creek Municipal Utility District of Bell County; granting a limited power of eminent domain; providing authority to issue bonds; providing authority to impose assessments, fees, and taxes.), As Engrossed

The Legislative Budget Board, in cooperation with the Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), has determined that:

This bill creates Knob Creek Municipal Utility District of Bell County (the “District”) with the powers and duties of a standard municipal utility district under Water Code Chapters 49 and 54.

Population: The very specific description of the proposed boundaries does not allow staff to develop precise population estimates.

The 2020 population estimate for areas of Bell County served by small water systems or private wells (‘County-Other') was 3,251. The Bell County-Other population projections adopted for the 2022 State Water Plan projects the population to be 2,971 in 2030 and 3,248 in 2040.

Location: The proposed district's initial boundaries are described with a combination of Original Texas Land Surveys, Official Public Records of Bell County, and metes and bounds. Due to the complexity of these boundaries for the various subareas of the district, staff is only able to determine the general location of the proposed district.

The proposed district's area is approximately 1.01 square miles in eastern Bell County, and located south of the City of Temple, and northwest of the Town of Rogers.

Comments on Powers/Duties Different from Similar Types of Districts:
The District must receive consent to the creation of the District from each municipality in whose corporate limits or extraterritorial jurisdiction the District is located prior to holding a confirmation election. The bill grants the District authority for road projects. The bill allows the District to divide if the District has never issued any bonds and is not imposing an ad valorem taxes. The bill specifies that at the time of issuance, the total principal amount of bonds or other obligations issued or incurred to finance road projects and payable from ad valorem taxes may not exceed one-fourth of the assessed value of real property in the District. The District may not exercise the power of eminent domain if the bill does not receive a two-thirds vote of all the members elected to each house.

Overlapping Services: TCEQ does not have mapping information for water and/or wastewater providers because this function was transferred from the TCEQ to the Public Utility Commission on September 1, 2014. As a result, TCEQ is unaware of possible overlapping service providers.

TCEQ's Supervision: As with general law districts, the TCEQ will have general supervisory authority, including bond review authority and review of financial reports.

Water Use: Within Bell County, 88% of the total water use was supplied by surface water, and municipal was the largest volume water use category comprising 86% of the county total water use in 2020. The water source the proposed district might pursue is unknown.


Source Agencies:
580 Water Development Board, 582 Commission on Environmental Quality
LBB Staff:
JMc, AF, CMA