2010 CENSUS - URBANIZED AREA REFERENCE MAP: Houston, TX 94.732343W
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Texas Rookery Islands Project
5 Chapter 5: Texas Rookery Islands Project 5.1 Restoration and Protection of Texas Rookery Islands: Project Description ................................... 1 5.1.1 Project Summary................................................................................................................. 1 5.1.2 Background and Project Description .................................................................................. 3 5.1.3 Evaluation Criteria ............................................................................................................ 13 5.1.4 Performance Criteria and Monitoring .............................................................................. 14 5.1.5 Offsets ............................................................................................................................... 14 5.1.6 Estimated Cost .................................................................................................................. 15 5.2 Texas Rookery Islands Project: Environmental Assessment ......................................................... 16 5.2.1 Introduction and Background, Purpose and Need ........................................................... 16 5.2.2 Scope of the Environmental Assessment ......................................................................... 17 5.2.3 Project Alternatives .......................................................................................................... 18 5.2.4 Galveston Bay Rookery Islands ........................................................................................ -
Improving Water Quality in Dickinson Bayou One TMDL for Dissolved Oxygen
Texas Commission on Environmental Quality Total Maximum Daily Load Program Improving Water Quality in Dickinson Bayou One TMDL for Dissolved Oxygen Water Quality in Dickinson Bayou Impaired Segment Stream Segment The state of Texas requires that water quality in Project Watershed Houston Seabrook Dickinson Bayou Tidal (Segment 1103) be suitable for Galveston swimming, wading, fishing, and a healthy aquatic HARRIS Bay ecosystem. However, water quality testing found that Webster Kemah dissolved oxygen levels in the water are occasionally low. Oxygen, which dissolves in water, is essential for the survival of aquatic life. While the amount of Friendswood Dickinson dissolved oxygen in water fluctuates naturally, various League City human activities can cause unusually or chronically low 1104 1103 dissolved oxygen levels which may harm fish and other Dickinson Bayou aquatic organisms. Alvin Texas City Santa Fe GALVESTON In response to these conditions, a total maximum daily La Marque load (TMDL) project has been initiated to evaluate the effects of low dissolved oxygen on aquatic life and to BRAZORIA determine the actions necessary to maintain water Hitchcock quality in the tidal portion of Dickinson Bayou. The goal of a TMDL is to determine the amount (or load) of a 012345 pollutant that a body of water can receive and still Miles K support its designated uses. This allowable load is then allocated among all the potential sources of pollution traffic. Rice fields in the upper watershed receive within the watershed. Measures to reduce pollutant irrigation water via canals from beyond the watershed. loads are then developed as necessary. The irrigation water returns to Dickinson Bayou in the form of irrigation return flows. -
Stormwater Management Program 2013-2018 Appendix A
Appendix A 2012 Texas Integrated Report - Texas 303(d) List (Category 5) 2012 Texas Integrated Report - Texas 303(d) List (Category 5) As required under Sections 303(d) and 304(a) of the federal Clean Water Act, this list identifies the water bodies in or bordering Texas for which effluent limitations are not stringent enough to implement water quality standards, and for which the associated pollutants are suitable for measurement by maximum daily load. In addition, the TCEQ also develops a schedule identifying Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) that will be initiated in the next two years for priority impaired waters. Issuance of permits to discharge into 303(d)-listed water bodies is described in the TCEQ regulatory guidance document Procedures to Implement the Texas Surface Water Quality Standards (January 2003, RG-194). Impairments are limited to the geographic area described by the Assessment Unit and identified with a six or seven-digit AU_ID. A TMDL for each impaired parameter will be developed to allocate pollutant loads from contributing sources that affect the parameter of concern in each Assessment Unit. The TMDL will be identified and counted using a six or seven-digit AU_ID. Water Quality permits that are issued before a TMDL is approved will not increase pollutant loading that would contribute to the impairment identified for the Assessment Unit. Explanation of Column Headings SegID and Name: The unique identifier (SegID), segment name, and location of the water body. The SegID may be one of two types of numbers. The first type is a classified segment number (4 digits, e.g., 0218), as defined in Appendix A of the Texas Surface Water Quality Standards (TSWQS). -
07-77817-02 Final Report Dickinson Bayou
Dickinson Bayou Watershed Protection Plan February 2009 Dickinson Bayou Watershed Partnership 1 PREPARED IN COOPERATION WITH TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY AND U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY The preparation of this report was financed though grants from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency through the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................................................ 7 LIST OF TABLES .............................................................................................................................................. 8 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................................................. 9 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................ 10 SUMMARY OF MILESTONES ........................................................................................................................ 13 FORWARD ................................................................................................................................................... 17 1. INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................................................................... 18 The Dickinson Bayou Watershed .................................................................................................................. -
Coastal Planning in Texas
Coastal Planning in Texas Ray Newby Coastal Resources Division Texas General Land Office e The Texas General Land Office (GLO) and the Texas Coast • Since 1836: Manager of Tidally-Influenced State-Owned Submerged Lands. • Lead Agency Responsible for: - Coastal Management Program; - Beach and Dune Protection; - State Coastal Erosion Program; - Debris Removal; - Coastal Oil Spill Response; and - Disaster Recovery Program. The Single Deadliest and Three of the Ten Costliest U.S. Hurricanes Impacted Texas #2: $125 Billion – Hurricane Harvey (2017) #7: $34.8 Billion – Hurricane Ike (2008) GLO Coastal Plans • Texas Coastal Resiliency Master Plan provides a framework for community, socio-economic, ecological and infrastructure protection from coastal hazards. The plan is presented to the state legislature. • Coastal Texas Protection & Restoration Feasibility Study, also known as the Coastal Texas Study, is an engineering, environmental and economic analysis to protect the Texas coast. In partnership with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the study will present coastal storm risk management and ecosystem restoration alternatives to Congress for funding. 4 Planning Team for Texas Coastal Resiliency Master Plan • GLO contracted with AECOM for engineering services, the Harte Research Institute for data analysis, and Crouch Environmental for education and outreach. • The Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) is made up of more than 100 coastal experts. 2017 Texas Coastal Resiliency Master Plan • Described the State of the Coast and a Path Forward toward -
Let's Build the Ike Dike
Let’s Build the Ike Dike William Merrell One hundred years ago in response to the 1900 Great Storm, we built a seawall to protect the East End of Galveston Island from storm surge. The seawall was severely tested by the 1915 Hurricane and again many times after. It stands today as a testimony to the community leaders who funded it and the engineers who designed and built it. The seawall continues to do its job of preventing catastrophic overflows. In the early 1900s, the seawall was a reasonable response to protecting the most precious manmade infrastructure in the region which was then concentrated on Galveston Island. However, over the last century, we have developed many large human settlements and industrial centers throughout the entire Galveston Bay region. In addition to representing considerable wealth, this human footprint now restricts or prevents movements of natural ecosystems in response to storm surge. It is no longer enough to strive to protect Galveston Island alone, we need to protect the entire Galveston Bay region from coastal flooding. Not surprisingly all community leaders are interested in protecting their citizens from the many real and hidden costs of flooding. Recent discussions have focused on building a dike around the east end of Galveston Island - essentially surrounding the area now behind the seawall. This approach argues that, while the seawall did its job in preventing catastrophic overflows like that at Bolivar, a surrounding dike is needed to prevent the backfilling of the Island by heightened bay waters. On the mainland, because the existing Texas City Dike was almost topped, discussions have begun about strengthening it and increasing its height. -
Beach and Bay Access Guide
Texas Beach & Bay Access Guide Second Edition Texas General Land Office Jerry Patterson, Commissioner The Texas Gulf Coast The Texas Gulf Coast consists of cordgrass marshes, which support a rich array of marine life and provide wintering grounds for birds, and scattered coastal tallgrass and mid-grass prairies. The annual rainfall for the Texas Coast ranges from 25 to 55 inches and supports morning glories, sea ox-eyes, and beach evening primroses. Click on a region of the Texas coast The Texas General Land Office makes no representations or warranties regarding the accuracy or completeness of the information depicted on these maps, or the data from which it was produced. These maps are NOT suitable for navigational purposes and do not purport to depict or establish boundaries between private and public land. Contents I. Introduction 1 II. How to Use This Guide 3 III. Beach and Bay Public Access Sites A. Southeast Texas 7 (Jefferson and Orange Counties) 1. Map 2. Area information 3. Activities/Facilities B. Houston-Galveston (Brazoria, Chambers, Galveston, Harris, and Matagorda Counties) 21 1. Map 2. Area Information 3. Activities/Facilities C. Golden Crescent (Calhoun, Jackson and Victoria Counties) 1. Map 79 2. Area Information 3. Activities/Facilities D. Coastal Bend (Aransas, Kenedy, Kleberg, Nueces, Refugio and San Patricio Counties) 1. Map 96 2. Area Information 3. Activities/Facilities E. Lower Rio Grande Valley (Cameron and Willacy Counties) 1. Map 2. Area Information 128 3. Activities/Facilities IV. National Wildlife Refuges V. Wildlife Management Areas VI. Chambers of Commerce and Visitor Centers 139 143 147 Introduction It’s no wonder that coastal communities are the most densely populated and fastest growing areas in the country. -
Chapter 3 – State of the Bay, Third Edition
CHAPTER 3 – STATE OF THE BAY, THIRD EDITION The Human Role: Past Written by Alecya Gallaway At sundown we reached Redfish Bar, composed almost entirely of shells which extend from bank to bank the distance of several miles and appear to be formed by the confluence of the tide and the waters of the San Jacinto and Trinity, which unite a short distance above … This point is undoubtedly the head of navigation for vessels of heavy burden and has occurred to some as a more suitable site for a city than Galveston itself. —Texas in 1837, edited by Andrew Forest Muir (1958) Introduction This chapter examines the history of resource use in Galveston Bay and its adjacent land area. The chapter begins with a look back to the Pleistocene Ice Age and the impact of the earliest humans, continues with the use of resources by Native Americans and changes engendered by the transition to European-American settlement, and then focuses on the alterations that occurred to the bay as the regional focus shifted from agriculture to municipal and industrial development. This chapter describes resource use and human impact from pre-history to 1950. More recent developments and impacts are covered in Chapter 4. Resource Use: Prehistory to 1800 Galveston Bay is a recent feature of the Earth by geological reckoning. Thousands of years before the bay formed, water was held in continental ice sheets causing the sea level to be considerably lower than it is today. The shoreline was located 50–100 miles farther south into the area now covered by the Gulf of Mexico. -
Texas) 94.829139W
29.577418N 29.559979N 95.270329W STATE LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP: State House District 24 (Texas) 94.829139W 1 B r 7 l D El Lago ac Pasadena k a 0 h d aw a 56000 23164 LEGEND k m S Bl a vd R 146 R P ea Bayport Blvd E r Todville Rd la B n D SYMBOL DESCRIPTION SYMBOL LABEL STYLE d ia n P a 1 r IS 20 M k D L RR w n e A y e A T Houston H r n e 2nd St H re International CANADA H G Beamer Rd ESTO 35000 GALV N C B 1 Seabrook y A 6 w Galveston Rd R 7 k P R Saturn Ln A ountry Club D 66392 nd R C la E Nasa Pkwy Clear Lk r Z Federal American Indian a IS e Dr P O L'ANSE RES 1880 2 re Reservation E Broadway 0 West Dr ho R S 1 N I A ve M Gatebrook Dr ini A Seminole Dr a y em r d G in Ju e 0 e r Off-Reservation Trust Land v P s T1880 y A 3 e kw g P a D 9 T s r d h d 3 u n o Nassau Bay s a m lv l Clear Lake Shores r a B L a s n e D o r r d P State American Indian D a r 50376 o S 15328 w D u Tama Res 9400 e l i e l n Reservation Rd v a s d ic d e o d v y t e l w o B k R M Rd SLDL r P i Hanson W 45 E e d t a g n s Lawrence Rd e a e Dixie Farm C N Pearland E D State Legislative District - SLDL Melody Ln r 129 3 Old Galveston Rd Lower (House) 56348 n N o 94 S m F l Rd S lo rien d ira ho o ds a Blv m re S wo Are d od y A B D a lv State (or statistically r B d Kemah W Old Galveston Rd Deke Bacliff equivalent entity) NEW YORK 36 K r o r Slayton Hwy 38776 05180 D b D a yp ayou Colonial Dr w R ya B B ie d s sa Delesandri rv h Na e 71 a S i Av ERS 0 County (or statistically le F y AMB C M Delesandri a CH S Main St Stadium Ln 2 18 Rd E B ERIE 029 Westfield -
Texas Rookery Islands Galveston Bay and East Matagorda Bay, Texas
Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Natural Resource Damage Assessment Texas Rookery Islands Galveston Bay and East Matagorda Bay, Texas Phase IV Proposed Early Restoration Project PROJECT DESCRIPTION The Texas Rookery Islands project would restore Restoration activities at each rookery island would and protect three rookery islands in Galveston Bay increase the amount of available nesting habitat and one rookery island in East Matagorda Bay. by expanding the size of the island and enhancing Rookery islands in Galveston Bay include Dickinson habitat quality by establishing native vegetation. Bay Island II, located within Dickinson Bay; Habitat longevity would be increased by increasing Rollover Bay Island, located in East (Galveston) Bay; the size of the island, establishing vegetation, and and Smith Point Island, located west of the Smith constructing protective features such as breakwaters Point peninsula. Dressing Point Island lies in East or levees. The Texas Rookery Islands project would Matagorda Bay and is part of the Big Boggy National benefit various colonial waterbirds, including Wildlife Refuge. The purpose of the proposed brown pelicans, gulls, royal and sandwich terns, project is to begin to restore and protect bird species and wading birds such as great blue herons, roseate injured as a result of the spill. It would include spoonbills, reddish egrets, great egrets, snowy egrets, coordination with state and federal agency biologists tricolored herons, and black-crowned night herons. and with non-governmental organization partners prior to implementation and would be implemented ESTIMATED COST : $20,603,770 by the Texas Trustees and the U.S. Department of the Interior. The goal is to increase the numbers of nesting colonial waterbirds by restoring and protecting rookery islands in Galveston and East Matagorda Bays. -
Dickinson Bay Oyster Reef/Wetland Restoration Demonstration Project
Dickinson Bay Oyster Reef/Wetland Restoration Demonstration Project 189 Edward (Eddie) Seidensticker USD A/Natural Resources Conservation Service Eddie is a Resource Conservationist specializing in coastal erosion for the entire Texas Coast. He is known as a pioneer in the restoration and creation of coastal marshes in the Galveston Bay system. He developed an Action Plan Demonstration Project for the Galveston Bay National Estuary Program using vegetation for erosion control and habitat restoration. His latest accomplishment was the planting wetland vegetation on the Beneficial Uses Group Demonstration Marsh at Atkinson Island. This 220-acre project was the largest single marsh creation project on the Texas Coast. Eddie is currently developing further cultivation and restoration technology that will be implemented in a variety of habitat restoration projects in the Galveston Bay system. In addition to his conservation activities, Eddie has also been the Project Manager of the award-winning AmeriCorps Program in Galveston Bay. Eddie Co-Authored the Dune Protection Manual for the Texas Coast for the General Land Office. He also co-authored the Texas Coastal Marsh Handbook for the Natural Resources Conservation Service. Affiliations Galveston Bay Estuary Program Member Galveston Bay Council Member Natural Resources Subcommittee Galveston BayFoundation - Advisory Trustee since 1990 Member of Following: Interagency Coordination Team for the Houston Ship Channel Beneficial Uses of Dredge Material Work Group- Port of Houston Gulf of Mexico Program -
18232 Minor Design.Ind
Galveston County Parks Department 4102 Main St. (FM 519) La Marque, TX 77568 The Dickinson Bayou watershed, a natural basin of land, collects water and drains it into tributary streams, then into Dickinson Bayou, the main stream of the watershed. It is located within the San Jacinto-Brazos Coastal Basin, to the southeast of Houston and west of Galveston Bay. The Dickinson Bayou watershed covers a total of approximately 63,830 acres or 99.7 square miles and is elongated in shape, with a length of 22 miles from west to east. The maximum width of the watershed is approximately 7 miles. Water falling within this area eventually makes its way into Dickinson Bayou. Contacts The aim of this publication is to heighten awareness of Galveston County Parks Department Galveston County Health District Dickinson Bayou the impact each and every citizen has on the watershed (409) 934-8100 • www.galvestonparks-seniors.org (409) 938-2314 • www.gchd.org Dickinson Bayou w a t e r s h e d where they live. Since the Dickinson Bayou water- w a t e r s h e d shed impacts Galveston Bay, it is important for each Galveston Bay Estuary Program Galveston County Extension Office No matter where we live, where we work, WE A R E A LWAY S I N A W AT ER SHED individual, community, and business to adhere to the (281) 332-9937 • http://gbep.state.tx.us (281) 534-3413 • http://tevas-sea-grant.tamu.edu priorities of The Galveston Bay Plan. For meeting the requirements of stormwater management, this publica- Houston-Galveston Area Council Texas Cooperative Extension tion provides public outreach and education.