http://whartontexas.com/
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Wharton County Youth Fair, Wednesday, April 30
Wharton County Youth Fair, Crescent, TX - Wednesday, April 30 - Today is Preschool and Special Friends Day at WCYF. The Carnival opens at 5 and it's Buddy Night - 2 ride for the price of 1! The Creative Arts Open for Viewing and tonight Keith McCoy and the COC Band are in the Beer Garden and so much more. You can view the full schedule here:
http://whartontexas.com/ uploads/ wcyf%202014%20schedule.pdf
http://whartontexas.com/
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Wharton County Youth Fair Today
Wharton County Youth Fair, Crescent, Texas, for Tuesday, April 29. The Steer Show, Bull Blowout, and much more! See the full schedule at whartontexas.com/uploads/wcyf%202014%20schedule.pdf
Friday, April 11, 2014
Water
For those of you following water issues, LCRA has published something interesting. Here is the link:
http://lcra.org/water/water-supply/Documents/2013-Water-Use-Summary.pdf
http://lcra.org/water/water-supply/Documents/2013-Water-Use-Summary.pdf
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Monday, March 31, 2014
LCRA press release: water rate proposal
Press release from LCRA:
March 28, 2014
LCRA staff has revised an earlier proposal to change the rates LCRA charges firm and interruptible customers for raw water.
In January, LCRA staff presented its initial rate proposal to the LCRA Board of Directors. Since then, members of the LCRA staff have spent many hours talking with customers and the public throughout the basin to collect feedback. LCRA staff has revised its preliminary rate proposal for the Board's consideration as a direct result of that information-gathering process. Revisions to the proposal will enable LCRA to recover costs while mitigating future rate impacts to its customers.
LCRA has long been committed to being a responsible steward of the river and the basin's natural resources. LCRA is determined to responsibly manage the water of the lower Colorado River from the uppermost tributaries that feed the Highland Lakes down to Matagorda Bay.
Managing the basin's water system comes with financial costs, known as river management costs. LCRA is committed to allocating these costs among firm and interruptible customers in a fair and equitable way. After evaluating feedback from customers and the public across the basin, LCRA is proposing to allocate river management costs among firm and interruptible customers based on the amount of water they use.
LCRA also recognizes that proposed rates need to consider key factors, including:
LCRA has no taxing ability and must rely on rates to cover its costs.
Interruptible water can be, and has been, curtailed in times of severe drought. River management costs continue during these times, and LCRA must recover those costs.
LCRA needs to work toward rates that fully recover the costs of providing interruptible water. These costs are currently under-recovered.
After considering these factors and input from customers and the public, LCRA staff is proposing a change in water rates that differs from the January proposal. The revised proposal:
Allocates river management costs based on the amount of water used instead of a share of committed firm supply.
No longer includes costs of developing new water supply.
Includes updated cost information that has been developed since January.
Interruptible Water Rate Proposal
The revised rate proposal for interruptible water takes a significant step toward achieving full cost recovery.
The proposal calls for the new rates for Lakeside and Gulf Coast interruptible supply to be effective January 2015, with a goal to raise rates to reach full cost recovery over time. New rates for the Garwood Irrigation Division could be approved for 2014 as part of a separate rate process.
All rates are per acre-foot of water. An acre-foot is the amount of water needed to cover an acre with one foot of water, or 325,851 gallons.
*As part of a separate rate process, LCRA is working on rates for 2014 that may be retroactively applied to Garwood and other irrigation customers that use LCRA groundwater and run-of-river water, or make use of LCRA canals to transport their own groundwater.
Press release from LCRA:
March 28, 2014
LCRA staff has revised an earlier proposal to change the rates LCRA charges firm and interruptible customers for raw water.
In January, LCRA staff presented its initial rate proposal to the LCRA Board of Directors. Since then, members of the LCRA staff have spent many hours talking with customers and the public throughout the basin to collect feedback. LCRA staff has revised its preliminary rate proposal for the Board's consideration as a direct result of that information-gathering process. Revisions to the proposal will enable LCRA to recover costs while mitigating future rate impacts to its customers.
LCRA has long been committed to being a responsible steward of the river and the basin's natural resources. LCRA is determined to responsibly manage the water of the lower Colorado River from the uppermost tributaries that feed the Highland Lakes down to Matagorda Bay.
Managing the basin's water system comes with financial costs, known as river management costs. LCRA is committed to allocating these costs among firm and interruptible customers in a fair and equitable way. After evaluating feedback from customers and the public across the basin, LCRA is proposing to allocate river management costs among firm and interruptible customers based on the amount of water they use.
LCRA also recognizes that proposed rates need to consider key factors, including:
LCRA has no taxing ability and must rely on rates to cover its costs.
Interruptible water can be, and has been, curtailed in times of severe drought. River management costs continue during these times, and LCRA must recover those costs.
LCRA needs to work toward rates that fully recover the costs of providing interruptible water. These costs are currently under-recovered.
After considering these factors and input from customers and the public, LCRA staff is proposing a change in water rates that differs from the January proposal. The revised proposal:
Allocates river management costs based on the amount of water used instead of a share of committed firm supply.
No longer includes costs of developing new water supply.
Includes updated cost information that has been developed since January.
Interruptible Water Rate Proposal
The revised rate proposal for interruptible water takes a significant step toward achieving full cost recovery.
The proposal calls for the new rates for Lakeside and Gulf Coast interruptible supply to be effective January 2015, with a goal to raise rates to reach full cost recovery over time. New rates for the Garwood Irrigation Division could be approved for 2014 as part of a separate rate process.
All rates are per acre-foot of water. An acre-foot is the amount of water needed to cover an acre with one foot of water, or 325,851 gallons.
*As part of a separate rate process, LCRA is working on rates for 2014 that may be retroactively applied to Garwood and other irrigation customers that use LCRA groundwater and run-of-river water, or make use of LCRA canals to transport their own groundwater.
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