This wreaks of the kind of backroom secrecy demonstrated by Cheney's Energy Taskforce. The secrecy continues and a model for theft of public resources is hatched. Pay attention, it's coming to a water resource near you.
It seems that Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and House Speaker Tom Craddick, along with Patterson (Gen. Land Office) secretly hatched a deal to allow private companies (some of them oil industry) to pump billions of gallons of public aquifer water from state lands for profit. They had done the same with oil leases before.
They completely bypassed any public input or discussion with local officials as well as the various county and state water regulatory agencies.
West Texas water talks go on despite a swell of opposition
West Texas officials demand voice in state debate
State Sen. Frank Madla's letter to Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson opposing a state land lease for water sales. (PDF)
10/19/03: State bid for water deals gets first test
By Robert Elder Jr.
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Wednesday, October 22, 2003
Despite opposition from some state and local officials, Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson said the state will continue to explore the possibility of leasing state land to private companies that want to pump and sell underground water.
Patterson spoke Tuesday after the School Land Board, an affiliate of the General Land Office, held a closed-door session to discuss an application from a Midland group, Rio Nuevo Ltd., that wants to lease 646,508 acres of state land in six far West Texas counties.
Rio Nuevo, whose partners include a group of Midland oilmen and Austin investor Steve Smith, has told the land office that it wants to pump at least 16 billion gallons of water a year from aquifers beneath state land. The group said it doesn't yet have customers.
Under Patterson, the land office is considering water deals as a way to produce more revenue from state-owned land for education, beyond traditional sources such as oil and gas royalties and ranching leases.
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