Nov. 21, 2024 – The state has granted the city of Grey Forest standing to contest the wastewater permit for the controversial Guajolote Ranch project in northwest Bexar County, and set a contested-case hearing for Feb. 18-21.
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The San Antonio Metropolitan Health District, Greater Edwards Aquifer Alliance and landowner Ann Toepperwein previously were granted standing by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to contest a wastewater permit for the project. Florida-based Lennar wants to build 2,900 homes on about 1,100 acres of Guajolote Ranch, west of the intersection of Scenic Loop and Babcock roads, north of Grey Forest, and dump an average of 1 million gallons a day of treated wastewater into Helotes Creek.
Although Grey Forest previously was denied standing, today’s preliminary hearing before the State Office of Administrative Hearings (SOAH) reconsidered, and approved standing, based on the potential effects of the project on groundwater quality and recreational spaces. And it set the timetable for an expected months-long contested-case process on the wastewater permit for Municipal Operations LLC, Lennar’s proposed wastewater operator for Guajolote Ranch.
Helotes Creek directly recharges the Trinity Glen Rose Aquifer, the primary water source in the immediate area, and flows across the contributing zone and enters the recharge zone of the Edwards Aquifer, the principal source of drinking water for about 2 million people across the region. Scientists believe that up to 15% of the Edwards Aquifer recharge comes from the Helotes Creek watershed.
“I’m so excited to announce that we do have standing in this case, and it was a concerted effort – all citizens, friends of the city of Grey Forest and those who care about our natural environment and the water system,” said Grey Forest Mayor Paul Garro, who testified during the preliminary hearing. “So, congratulations to everyone. We will move forward and go fight the next battle.”
Today’s teleconference of the preliminary hearing drew more than 80 logins, mostly from concerned residents throughout northwest Bexar County. A group gathered at Grey Forest city hall for a hearing watch event, where Garro and Grey Forest Utilities CEO Erik Remmert testified virtually.
The opponents fear that pollutants such as E. coli and toxins like harmful “forever chemicals” entering the aquifer would seriously threaten the health, safety and welfare of those living in and around San Antonio.*
Metro Health opposes the permit on grounds that the city of San Antonio has statutory authority to “prohibit the potential pollution or degradation of streams that may constitute or recharge the source of San Antonio’s water supply,” according to a filing with TCEQ.
A study by the Southwest Research Institute funded through the city of San Antonio’s Edwards Aquifer Protection Plan found that any type of wastewater system pumping treated effluent into Helotes Creek could “significantly degrade the watershed and the quality of water recharging the Edwards Aquifer.”
“The San Antonio Water System does not pretreat its Edwards Aquifer water supplies prior to distribution within its service area,” said Annalisa Peace, executive director of GEAA. “Should pretreatment become necessary to meet water quality standards, it would cost SAWS customers billions of dollars to remediate pollution of this water supply.”
To view a video of ground zero, where waste would leave Guajolote Ranch and enter the headwaters of Helotes Creek on Toepperwein’s property, go here for a guided tour by her daughter, Lynette Munson: S03E02 True Helotes Creek Headwaters.
The upcoming contested-case hearing process will resemble a civil trial, and the attorney for GEAA and Grey Forest can call expert witnesses. SOAH expects to send its proposed ruling to TCEQ by the end of May for a final decision.
More than a residential development?
The Huntress Family of Terrell Hills owns Guajolote Ranch, as for-profit Guajolote Ranch Inc., with Lennar holding an option to purchase the property. The owners made a public filing in March 2023, petitioning Bexar County Commissioners Court to create a Public Improvement District (PID) to be named the Guajolote Ranch Special Improvement District. It provides a glimpse of a vision for an overall mixed-use, mini-city residential and commercial development.
The PID calls for the county to authorize the district for more than $138 million in public “improvements” paid for in part by new taxes and issuance of bonds, saying it is “necessary” for economic development. It would support “residential and commercial activity” and “business and commercial activity,” and impose sales and use taxes in addition to property taxes. It is still before county commissioners, and very much a live issue.
“Adding insult to injury, the people who oppose polluting the drinking water of 2 million people in and around San Antonio are the very ones who would be forced by Bexar County Commissioners Court to help pay for the Guajolote development,” said Michael Wm. Schick, a member of the Scenic Loop Helotes Creek Alliance, a neighborhood organization that represents residents in a wide corridor along Scenic Loop Road, from Bandera Road to north of Babcock Road. “Elected and appointed government officials are supposed to protect the health, safety and welfare of people, not put them in harm’s way – medically or economically.”
Anyone patronizing businesses there (retail, services, restaurants, hotels, etc.) would pay the new sales and use taxes authorized by the county. And homeowners there would be forced to pay new property taxes. Plus, county taxpayers would be on the hook to repay bonds if the development fails.
The PID was filed by Richard “Rick” LePere, treasurer of Guajolote Ranch Inc., and president of LePere Commercial Real Estate Services LLC. He is a son-in-law of Diana Huntress, registered agent and director of Guajolote Ranch Inc., and grandson-in-law of late family patriarch Frank G. Huntress Jr., who filed the original deed for the ranch in 1969.
“While we were thinking the development would add 6,000 cars to two-lane Scenic Loop, the possibility of restaurants, hotels, shopping centers and offices would mean even more cars, and more wastewater,” Randy Neumann, also a SLHCA member said. “And there also would be an issue with stormwater runoff from the development. The pesticides, herbicides, automotive waste, household chemicals, pet waste, lawn waste and other pollution that will wash down Helotes Creek will add to well pollution, flooding and the ruination of our recreational facilities.”
About 80 neighbors and other individuals and entities filed to contest the permit application, fearing illness or high costs of retrofits to safeguard their wells or water systems. Among the opposition, in addition to Metro Health, GEAA and Toepperwein, were San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg, the San Antonio Water System, the cities of Helotes and Grey Forest, State Rep. Mark Dorazio and State Sen. Roland Gutierrez.
* Pathogens such as E. coli, Enterococcus, Pseudomonas, Candida, Aspergillus and Norovirus could impact the ecosystem and potentially enter drinking water wells causing gastric distress and illness. In the last several years polio virus has been found in sewer effluent in Canada, Utah and New York.
The EPA has recently established guidelines for forever chemicals in sewer effluent. Forever chemicals are found in clothing fibers, carpet fibers, non-stick products, plastics and firefighting chemicals among many other sources and are known carcinogens – cancer-causing chemicals that can also cause infertility and birth defects.
Even after treatment, the effluent discharge would potentially pollute Helotes Creek with pharmaceuticals, hormones, over-the-counter medications, illicit drugs, narcotics, heavy metals and other compounds that will likely bioaccumulate, degrading the quality of the water in Helotes Creek, changing or destroying the ecosystem along the creek, potentially harming endangered species, precluding fishing and preventing the use of the creek for recreational purposes: a use which the neighborhood has enjoyed for 95 years.
About the Scenic Loop Helotes Creek Alliance
The Scenic Loop Helotes Creek Alliance represents the largest neighborhood by square mile recognized by the San Antonio Neighborhood & Housing Services Department, a wide corridor along Scenic Loop Road from Bandera Road to north of Babcock Road.
Go to https://www.scenicloop.org/ and https://www.youtube.com/@savescenicloop
Donate: https://aquiferalliance.org/donate-to-geaa/guajolote-ranch-fund/
CONTACTS:
Grey Forest Mayor
Paul Garro, 210-710-0742
pgarro19214@gmail.com
Scenic Loop Helotes Creek Alliance
Randy Neumann, 210-867-2826
uhit@aol.com
Stuart Birnbaum, 210-355-9974
stuart.birnbaum@sbcglobal.net
Michael Wm. Schick, (571) 296-9601
mschick@aol.com
E Bluhm, President – Scenic Loop – Helotes Creek Alliance
emory@scenicloop.org
Greater Edwards Aquifer Alliance
Annalisa Peace, 210-320-6294
annalisa@aquiferalliance.org
https://aquiferalliance.org/donate-to-geaa/guajolote-ranch-fund/
Sams Ranch Road residents
Lynette Munson (daughter of Ann Toepperwein)
210-317-8415
aniton2000@aol.com
Property at ground zero where wastewater would leave Guajolote Ranch and flow down Helotes Creek
Altair residents
Susy Dickerson, 210-843-3358
susydickerson@gmail.com