LCRA approves new water management plan
The Lower Colorado River Authority is changing how they release water from the Highland Lakes so they can better cope with a drought like the one we’re in. The LCRA’s board of directors approved a new water management plan Wednesday.
Here’s more from the LCRA:
| LCRA’s Board of Directors Wednesday approved a new Water Management Plan for lakes Buchanan and Travis that provides LCRA more flexibility to respond to severe droughts.
Wednesday’s 10-5 vote was the culmination of more than 18 months of work by LCRA and an advisory committee made up of volunteers from throughout the basin. The plan determines how water is allocated from lakes Buchanan and Travis, the region’s water supply reservoirs. It will now be sent to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality for final approval. “The Board should be proud of the complete and thorough vetting of this plan,”LCRA Chair Tim Timmerman said. “Board members showed that they can disagree about a weighty specific issue, but disagree agreeably. The people of the basin should be gratified in knowing that the Board, our stakeholders and the LCRA staff succeeded in revising a management plan for lakes Travis and Buchanan that seeks to balance a wide variety of needs.” The version of the plan approved Wednesday contains important changes recommended by the advisory committee, as well as changes recommended during the public comment period. Nearly 450 written comments were submitted to LCRA, and 49 people commented to the Board in person during meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday. “Today’s vote is representative of the heartfelt passion that has been evident in the 18-month long stakeholder process,”said LCRA General Manager Becky Motal. The new plan contains many changes from the current one. Among them:
Also Wednesday, the LCRA Board adopted a resolution with a goal of implementing projects to find 100,000 acre-feet of new water supply in the next five years. Both of Wednesday’s decisions come in the midst of one of the worst droughts in the region’s history. Because of the record hot and dry conditions in 2011, the amount of water flowing into the Highland Lakes last year was the lowest since the lakes were built. This has resulted in some of the lowest lake levels in history and could mean that most downstream farmers receive no water from the Highland Lakes this year. “Everyone agrees that we need to develop new water supplies and this is the start,”Timmerman said. “This is the solution to the competing interests of the upper and lower basin.” LCRA has used a state-approved Water Management Plan to manage lakes Buchanan and Travis since 1989. The plan was updated in 1992, 1999 and 2010. The 16-member advisory committee that assisted LCRA by making recommendations on proposed updates to the plan was made up of members representing the major, and sometimes competing, interests that rely on the lakes’ water: cities and industry, environment, lake area businesses and residents, and agriculture. |

Let’s be very clear, the new plan will not go into effect for three years. The new plan does NOTHING to relieve the current toll of human suffering around the lakes. Once Travis and Buchanan come up just a few more feet the LCRA will drain the lakes for the first rice crop of 2012. Speaker after speaker at the Board meeting reported on the extreme financial crisis and personal tragedies of those who have lost or are losing everything because the LCRA let 70% of the water out of the lakes for rice farmers to use for weed control! I find it impossible to have ANY concern for rice farmers who receive millions of dollars in federal subsidies each year. Where are the federal subsidies for the people who have no jobs, have no money to feed their families, are losing their businesses and their homes!? I have a new synonym for “greed” it is “rice farmer”!