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Notice of Special Called Meeting of the Fire Commissioners of Williamson County Emergency Services District #8

Special Call

The Board of Fire Commissioners of Williamson County Emergency Services District #8 will meet on Monday, March 27, 2023 at 6:00p.m. at Fire Station #6, 6700 RM 2338, Georgetown, Texas 78633.

Williamson County Emergency Services District #8 Board Members: Bobby Bunte, Bennie Piper, Troy Rodriguez, Ira Wood and Greg Eady.

Call to Order
Board may, at any time, recess the Special Call Session to convene in Executive Session at the request of the Chair, Board Member, or legal counsel for any purpose authorized by the Open Meetings Act, Texas Government Code Chapter 551, and are subject to action in the Special Call Session that follows.

  1. Call meeting to order
  2. Establish Quorum
  3. Public Comment
  4. Discussion and possible action regarding presentations for ESD8’s Public Out-Reach.
  5. Discussion and possible action to amend the ESD8 Budget.
  6. Adjourn

I, Nancy Rangel, do hereby certify that this Notice of Meeting was posted on the ESD8 website, a place readily accessible to the general public at all times and with the County Clerk’s Office on March 21st at 3:00 p.m. and remained posted for at least 72 continuous hours, preceding the scheduled time of said meeting.
______________________________
Nancy Rangel

3/27/2023 6:00 PM/Author: bawassink/Number of views (342)/Comments (0)/
Categories: Public Meetings
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Williamson County Regional Animal Shelter Introduces New Best Match Program

Williamson County Regional Animal Shelter Introduces New Best Match Program

The Williamson County Regional Animal Shelter (WCRAS) is excited to announce its new Best Match Dog Adoption Program AND saving 99% of the animals brought to the shelter in February of 2023 – an incredibly difficult but amazing feat in a time of much struggle with capacity.
Monday, March 20, 2023/Author: Richard Powell/Number of views (456)/Comments (0)/
Categories: AlertsPIO
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Why the county needs a groundwater conservation district

Column by Commissioner Terry Cook

This is one of many springs feeding into Brushy Creek discovered by contractors while building the .933-mile stretch of the Brushy Creek Trail that traverses the pedestrian bridge in Round Rock north of Round Rock Avenue.

Williamson Commissioner Cook: Why county needs a groundwater conservation district (statesman.com)

On March 9, the Aquifer Conservation Alliance of Williamson County announced it had withdrawn its petition for annexation by the Clearwater Underground Water Conservation District of Bell County.

The combination of wells going dry from the pressures of development and industries, the absence of any type of drawdown monitoring or conservation practices for the Trinity Aquifer and the drought have all combined to negatively impact wells in Williamson County. Many residents are facing tremendous costs for drilling deeper and deeper wells.

By 2021, 1,775 wells were registered in western Williamson County. Most of those wells serve homeowners, but also municipalities and ranchers. For rural local industries, aggregate mines and batch concrete plants are the primary users of wells. It’s the "Rule of Capture” in Texas, and “he who gets to the water,” that allow unlimited well water draw outside of the protective monitoring by a groundwater conservation district.

Across Texas, approximately 99% of the rural population gets their fresh water from groundwater via wells. Groundwater accounts for 30.8% of the freshwater on this planet, whereby surface water such as rivers, lakes and reservoirs account for only 0.3%. Our creeks and rivers are largely the result of groundwater surfacing along their water basins. It was surprising to find the number of springs and weeps our construction contractors, Chasco, encountered when building the .933-mile stretch of the Brushy Creek Trail that traverses the pedestrian bridge in Round Rock just north of Round Rock Avenue. Without groundwater, those streams would cease to exist. Then where would our municipal wastewater treatment plants send their output? How would life in nature be sustained?

Rural landowners do not benefit from the ordinance and land use planning of municipalities. The Legislature has not granted county government those tools to manage growth – it’s really the wild, wild West. If you’ve got money, that land is yours. 

So, neighborhoods in the unincorporated areas of Texas have seen concrete batch plants move next door with 400 heavy trucks per day driving by their homes and destroying their narrow, low-load county roads. The same is true for the number of active aggregate mines, of which Williamson County leads Texas. Besides that, there’s no limit as to how much free water is pulled from the aquifer for these businesses. Don’t even think about the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality as help; it is a permitting agency, not an environmental protection organization.

Thursday, March 16, 2023/Author: Doris Sanchez/Number of views (299)/Comments (0)/
Categories: Hot Topics
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Mid-March 2023

Mid-March 2023

In this edition of WILCOunty Line, learn how to safely dispose of household hazardous waste, participate in a golf tournament to benefit The Williamson County Brown Santa Association and more. 

Wednesday, March 15, 2023/Author: Yvonne Ramirez/Number of views (0)/Comments (0)/
Categories: WilCounty Line
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Household Hazardous Waste Cleanup Event

Household Hazardous Waste Cleanup Event

Williamson County and Waste Management are hosting a Household Hazardous Waste Cleanup Event on April 15, 2023, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Williamson County Expo Center, 5350 Bill Pickett Trail, Taylor. For a list of items you can bring or not bring, click here.

Tuesday, March 14, 2023/Author: Yvonne Ramirez/Number of views (1406)/Comments (0)/
Categories: AlertsPIO
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