How to Fight the Trans-Texas Corridor Workshop
Monday, March 17, 2008
Lufkin Pitser Garrison Civic Center
Lufkin, Texas
9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Local control is alive and well in Texas.
At least that is the case in the jurisdiction of the Eastern Central
Texas Sub-Regional Planning Commission (ECTSRPC), where the four towns
and school districts have used Chapter 391 of the Local Government Code
to put a major roadblock in the Trans Texas Corridor I-35 segment.
On Monday, March 17, 2008, from 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m., in Lufkin,
Texas, the strategy used by the ECTSRPC will be taught to others within
the path of the TTC.
The workshop is sponsored by the American Land Foundation, Stewards
of the Range and TURF, all of which have been actively fighting the corridor
since it first took hold in Texas.
But it wasn’t until attorney and president of Stewards of the
Range, Fred Grant, found a key provision in Chapter 391 of the Local
Government Code, which requires state agencies to coordinate projects
such as the TTC with local governments, that they had a way to stop the
TTC.
“Forming a commission is a very simple procedure that took the
ECTSRPC less than a month to complete,” commented Dan Byfield. Byfield
is president of the American Land Foundation and will be showing the
step-by-step process needed to form a 391 Commission at the March 17th
workshop. He, along with his wife, Margaret Byfield, executive
director of Stewards, have been helping direct the Commission’s
formation and coordination efforts.
Once a Commission is formed, it is a political subdivision of the state
and TXDOT has to coordinate the TTC with them. This gives local
governments and citizens a meaningful opportunity to ensure TXDOT addresses
the local impact and come up with either alternatives or solutions.
But while the ECTSRPC is in a good position to protect its citizens,
until other communities take this same step, they will continue to be
ignored by TXDOT and will have no way to prevent the TTC from coming
through their area.
“We can’t count on the legislature to do the right thing. They
have already had three chances to stop the largest land grab in the state
of Texas, and have failed,” commented Byfield. “But
we’ve seen what local governments can do through the 391 Commission,
and how effective they can insist the local priorities and way of life
are respected and protected.”
Time is of the essence on the I-69 Corridor. TXDOT only allowed
less than four months of public comments on the Draft Environmental Impact
Statement (DEIS) and appears to have it on the fast track for final approval.
It may even be finalized before the I-35 Corridor, which has been delayed
ever sense the ECTSRPC began insisting on coordination meetings with
TXDOT and the Region 6 EPA office. TXDOT now says it will be June before
they can send the DEIS 35 for final review to the Federal Highway Administration,
when in October they informed the Commission their target date for final
environmental clearance was January.
“The Commissions that are established now have a chance to insert
themselves into the process and require the same accountability to their
local issues as the ECTSRPC,” commented Margaret Byfield. At
the workshop she will discuss the opportunities that local governments
have to challenge the DEIS through the coordination process, which has
been a key strategy used by the ECTSRPC.
“If we can get Commissions established up and down the I-69 Corridor
we have a real shot at stopping this monster,” commented Hank Gilbert,
Director of TURF, who will also be speaking at the workshop.
You can register today by calling 1-800-452-6389, or click
here to reserve
your seat on-line. Registration is $20 through Friday March 14th,
and $30 at the door. A workbook and barbeque lunch will be provided.
Click here to read more about 391 Commissions, including the latest
paper by Fred Grant titled “The Creation of the Eastern Central
Texas Sub Regional Planning Commission.”
Click here to download the workshop flyer and help spread the word.