ACCEPTED
03-14-00416-CV
5197870
THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
AUSTIN, TEXAS
5/7/2015 3:28:51 PM
JEFFREY D. KYLE
CLERK
Case No. 03-14-00416-CV
IN THE FILED IN
3rd COURT OF APPEALS
THIRD COURT OF APPEALS AUSTIN, TEXAS
AT AUSTIN, TEXAS 5/7/2015 3:28:51 PM
JEFFREY D. KYLE
Clerk
BRADLEY B. WARE,
Appellant,
v.
TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIROMENTAL QUALITY,
Appellee.
ON APPEAL FROM THE 53RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS
COUNTY, TEXAS
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF
Stephen P. Webb
Bar No. 21033800
s.p.webb@webbwebblaw.com
Gwendolyn Hill Webb
Bar No. 21026300
g.hill.webb@webbwebblaw.com
Attorneys for Appellant
Webb & Webb, Attorneys at Law
211 East Seventh Street
Austin, Texas 78701
Phone: 512-472-9990
APPELLANT REQUESTS ORAL ARGUMENT
Case No. 03-14-00416-CV
BRADLEY B. WARE,
Appellant,
v.
TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY,
Appellee.
REQUEST FOR ORAL ARGUMENT
Appellant, Bradley B. Ware, requests an oral argument in this case.
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Request for Oral Argument .........................................................................................i
Index of Authorities ................................................................................................. iii
Appellant’s Reply Brief ............................................................................................. 1
Additional Procedural History ................................................................................... 1
Restatement and Update of Standard of Review ....................................................... 2
Introduction and Summary ........................................................................................ 7
Ware’s Reply to Appellee TCEQ’s Brief Pertaining to All of Ware’s Points of
Error ............................................................................................................... 11
Ware’s Reply to Appellee TCEQ’s Brief Pertaining to Ware’s Point of Error
Number 1. ...................................................................................................... 19
Ware’s Reply to Appellee TCEQ’s Brief Pertaining to Ware’s Point of Error
Numbers 2 and 5 ............................................................................................ 21
Ware’s Reply to Appellee TCEQ’s Brief Pertaining to Ware’s Point of Error
Number 3. ...................................................................................................... 23
Ware’s Reply to Appellee TCEQ’s Brief Pertaining to Ware’s Point of Error
Number 4. ...................................................................................................... 24
Ware’s Reply to Appellee TCEQ’s Brief Pertaining to Ware’s Point of Error
Number 6. ...................................................................................................... 25
Conclusion ............................................................................................................... 26
Prayer for Relief ....................................................................................................... 29
Certificate of Compliance ........................................................................................ 30
Certificate of Service ............................................................................................... 31
Appendix .................................................................................................................. 31
ii
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
CASES
City of Dallas v. Stewart, 361 S.W. 3d 562 (Tex. 2012) ........................................ 22
Lower Colorado River Authority, et al, v. Texas Department of Water Resources,
689 S.W. 2d 873 (Tex. 1984) ....................................................................... 12
Madden v. Tex. Bd. of Chiropractic Examiners, 663 S.W.2d 622 (Tex. App. Austin
1985) ................................................................................................................ 8
McWatt v. Mattax, 03-133-00332-CV (Tex. App. – Austin 3-18-2015) ............... 4, 5
Oncor Electric Delivery Co. v. Public Utility Commission, 406 S. W. 3d 253 (Tex.
App. Austin 2013) .......................................................................................... 8
TCEQ v. Texas Farm Bureau, et al, Cause No. 13-13-00415-CV (13th Court of
Appeals, Corpus Christi-Edinburg, April 2, 2015) ....................................... 10
Texas State Bd. Of Examiners of Marriage and Family Therapists v. Texas
Medical Assn, No. 03-13-00077-CV, November 21, 2014 ........................... 23
PUC v. City of Austin, 728 S.W.2d 907 (Tex. App. Austin 1987) .......................... 22
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Citizens for a Safe Future & Clean Water, 336
S.W.3d 619 (Tex. 2011) .................................................................................. 6
TEXAS GOVERNMENT CODE
§2001.174 ................................................................................................................ 3,4
TEXAS WATER CODE
§11.021 ................................................................................................................. 9, 20
§11.022 ....................................................................................................................... 9
§11.025 ................................................................................................................ 9, 12
§11.026 ....................................................................................................................... 9
§11.027 ................................................................................................................. 9, 11
§11.046 ...........................................................................................................9, 15, 16
§11.121 ....................................................................................................................... 9
iii
§11.134 ....................................................................................................................... 9
§11.1381 .........................................................................................................9, 13, 14
§11.141 ....................................................................................................................... 9
iv
Case No. 03-14-00416-CV
BRADLEY B. WARE,
Appellant,
v.
TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY,
Appellee.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF
TO THE HONORABLE THIRD COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS:
Appellant, Bradley B. Ware, submits this Reply Brief in appeal of the Order
of the Texas State District Court on administrative appeal affirming the decision of
the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality1 (“TCEQ,” “Commission,” or
“Agency”). This Appeal is from the District Court of Travis County, Texas, 53 rd
Judicial District, the Honorable John Dietz presiding, in which Appellant was the
Plaintiff and Appellee was the Defendant. Appellant Bradley B. Ware may be
referred to in this Reply Brief as “Plaintiff,” “Appellant,” “Ware,” or “Mr. Ware;”
1
To avoid unnecessary confusion in this Reply Brief, the Texas Commission on Environmental
Quality refers to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and any of its predecessor
agencies, including the Texas Water Rights Commission, the Texas Department of Water
Resources, the Texas Water Commission, and the Texas Natural Resources Conservation
Commission.
and Appellee, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality may be referred to
as “Defendant,” “Appellee,” “TCEQ,” “Commission,” or “Agency.”
I. ADDITIONAL PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The prior procedural history of this case is set out in full Appellant’s Brief,
pp. 5-6, in the Statement of Facts. The additional procedural history is set out
below.
1. On January 15, 2015, Ware filed his Appellant’s Brief, wherein he requested
oral argument.
2. On February 13, 2015, TCEQ filed its Unopposed Motion for Extension of
Time for Appellee Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to File
Brief.
3. On February 13, 2015, the Court issued correspondence granting Appellee’s
Unopposed Motion for Extension of Time for Appellee to File Reply Brief.
4. On April 17, 2015, TCEQ filed its Appellee’s Brief.
II. RESTATEMENT AND UPDATE OF STANDARD OF REVIEW
Appellee TCEQ faults Appellant’s brief for not including a Standard of
Review. In light of Appellee’s comment, Appellee restates the Standard of Review
details set out in Appellant’s Brief, pp.2-4, under the heading “Statement of the
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 2
Case,” and updated by recent applicable case law. The Standard of Review is Tex.
Gov’t Code, §2001.174, which states:
Sec. 2001.174. REVIEW UNDER SUBSTANTIAL
EVIDENCE RULE OR UNDEFINED SCOPE OF REVIEW.
If the law authorizes review of a decision in a contested case
under the substantial evidence rule or if the law does not define
the scope of judicial review, a court may not substitute its
judgment for the judgment of the state agency on the weight of
the evidence on questions committed to agency discretion but:
(1) may affirm the agency decision in whole or in part; and
(2) shall reverse or remand the case for further proceedings
if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced
because the administrative findings, inferences, conclusions,
or decisions are:
(A) in violation of a constitutional or statutory provision;
(B) in excess of the agency's statutory authority;
(C) made through unlawful procedure;
(D) affected by other error of law;
(E) not reasonably supported by substantial evidence
considering the reliable and probative evidence in the record as
a whole; or
(F) arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of
discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.
Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 268, Sec. 1, eff. Sept. 1,
1993.
Plaintiff, Bradley B. Ware appeals from the 53rd Judicial District Court of
Travis County, Texas for its failure to overturn the final order of the TCEQ which
denied Plaintiff the right to continue to divert and use water under Permit to
Appropriate State Water No. 5594 (“Permit No. 5594”), attached hereto as Exhibit
A. Appellant asserts that the Commission’s April 20, 2010 Final Order of the
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 3
TCEQ (“Order”) violates extant provisions of the Texas Water Code (“TWC”),
and contains reversible legal error.
Generally, as argued below, the Commission’s order is in violation of the
fundamental precepts of the Constitution of the United States (5 th and 14th
Amendments) and the Texas Constitution (Art. 1, Bill of Rights, Sections 3 and
19), the Texas Water Code and the Texas Government Code; is in excess of the
Commission’s statutory authority; is made through unlawful procedure; is affected
by numerous other errors of law; is not reasonably supported by substantial
evidence when considering the record as a whole; and is on its face arbitrary,
capricious, and characterized by abuse of discretion, or clearly unwarranted
exercise of discretion. The Commission’s final order is not entitled to the deference
that agency decisions are afforded in a simple substantial evidence factual review.
Put simply, the Commission’s April 20, 2010 TCEQ Order is subject to
reversal because it finds and concludes that there is State water available for
appropriation in the Brazos River Basin in the form of return flows, but reserves
the available water to a pending Applicant Brazos River Authority (“BRA”) -- not
an existing or senior appropriator-- and denies water availability as to Ware’s
application against the substantial evidence of record and contrary to the prior
appropriation doctrine. The trial court erred in failing to recognize these
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 4
deficiencies in the Commission’s April 20, 2010 Order and erred in rendering its
June 11, 2014 order which denied Plaintiff’s appeal.
The legal standard for a court’s consideration on appeal of the actions of
administrative agencies in contested case hearings was enunciated by this Court
very recently (March 18, 2015). The opinion in McWatt v. Mattax, 03-133-00332-
CV (Tex. App. – Austin 3-18-2015) is very clear on the role of the judiciary where
questions similar to those urged by Appellant in this case, are involved. The
McWatt v. Mattax, id., opinion states the requirements of Tex. Gov’t Code,
2001.174:
Section 2001.174 of the Texas Government Code provides the
standard for judicial review of the ALJ’s and the
Commissioner’s orders. See id2. §2001.174. Under this standard
we may not, with respect to questions committed to its
discretion, substitute our judgment on the weight of the
evidence for that of the agency. Id. We must, however, reverse
an order if it prejudices substantial rights because its findings,
inferences, conclusions, or decisions
(1) violate a constitutional or statutory provision;
(2) exceed statutory authority;
(3) were made through unlawful procedure;
(4) were affected by other error of law;
(5) are not reasonably supported by substantial evidence
considering the reliable and probative evidence in the record as
a whole; or
(6) are arbitrary or capricious or characterized by an abuse of
discretion or a clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion. Id.
McWatt v. Mattax, at p. 7
2
All “id.” references in the quote from McWatt v. Mattax refer to Texas Gov’t Code, § 2001.174(2) (setting forth
circumstances requiring reversal of agency’s decision in contested case). McWatt v. Mattax, p. 6.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 5
Appellant contends that under the extant legal standard of review, Mr. Ware is
entitled to a reversal of the April 20, 2010 TCEQ Order and remand of his
amendment application for consideration in accordance with applicable facts and
full access to water available in the Brazos River Basin on the basis of his senior
appropriation under the prior appropriation doctrine.
The statutory legal standard is especially important in this case, where
Appellee TCEQ clings to its experts’ versions of the facts, attempting to remove
the Court’s focus from the TCEQ’s violations of constitutional and statutory
provisions, exceedance of statutory authority, unlawful procedures, errors of law,
and abuse of and clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion. Therefore, the TCEQ
should not be allowed to justify its legal missteps in the law by asserting that it has
broad discretion to construe the facts in this case under the protection of substantial
evidence review. It is well settled that the resolution of constitutional questions
such as due process, statutory construction and any other question of law is to
reviewed de novo by a court. [See, Railroad Commission of Texas v. Citizens for a
Safe Future & Clean Water, 336 S.W. 3rd 619, 624 (Tex 2011)] The case is about
the adoption by the TCEQ of a regulatory scheme regarding return State water,
flows, water availability, and water rights permitting which does not appear in its
regulations and is contrary to the statutory directives of the Texas Water Code.
The Agency’s abuse of discretion and its clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 6
are demonstrated in its failure to announce regulations concerning the
appropriation of State water in the form of return flows; the implementation of the
unwritten regulations first by TCEQ staff during the contested case hearing and
then by the Commission without full notice and comment; and the implementation
of the unwritten regulations based on the TCEQ’s previously unannounced
interpretations of the Texas Water Code which are directly contrary to the Texas
Water Code’s statutory directives.
III. INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY
Citizens of Texas, regardless of their occupation or financial circumstance,
have every reason to expect to be treated fairly by their state government and in
accordance with applicable law. In Texas, where water resources are often in short
supply, the Texas Legislature adopted the prior appropriation system and, over
time, organized a variety of state agencies to implement the doctrine of prior
appropriation in accordance with the specific mandates of the Texas Water Code,
the general guidelines of our Texas Constitution and applicable laws, and
especially in this instance, the substantive and procedural due process mandates of
the Texas Administrative Procedures Act. In this case, the staff and Commissioners
of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality substituted their own
unwritten scheme of water rights permitting and administration for the legal
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 7
mandates of the Texas Legislature and the prior appropriation doctrine. In this
case, contrary to the legal mandates of the Texas Legislature, Commission staff
developed and implemented a system whereby later applications of some would-be
junior appropriators were entitled to consideration based on a complete and full
analysis of water availability under the Texas Water Code, and other senior water
rights holders, independent of their priority dates, were not entitled to
consideration of their applications based on a comprehensive determination of
water availability. The courts have held that it is a denial of due process for an
agency to fail to adopt any written statements of agency policy regarding such
issues as priority dates in existing permits so as to provide notice to an applicant of
the burden of proof. [See, Madden v. Tex. Bd. of Chiropractic Examiners, 663
S.W. 2d 622,626 (Tex. App. Austin 1985); and Oncor Electric Delivery Co. v.
Public Utility Commission, 406 S. W. 3d 253, 269 (Tex. App. Austin 2013).
This appeal involves a case of first impression. Rather than adhere to the
legal mandates of the Texas Water Code, which are set out below for ease of
reference, Appellee TCEQ asks this court to accept and to validate its own water
rights permitting and administration system, which it has yet to codify in Agency
regulations. The most important and applicable provisions which TCEQ seeks to
reinterpret to Appellant’s detriment are in the following sections of Texas Water
Code, Chapter 11:
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 8
§ 11.021, State Water - Asserts State sovereignty over the surface
waters of the State in watercourses
§ 11.022, Acquisition of Right to Use State Water - Provides for the
use of State water by authorized appropriators;
§ 11.025, Scope of Appropriative Right - Sets forth the limitations of
the appropriative rights;
§ 11.026, Perfection of an Appropriation - Provides for perfection of
an appropriation by beneficial use in accordance with the permit;
§ 11.027, Rights Between Appropriators - Provides for resolution of
conflict between appropriators on the basis of “first in time is first in
right;”
§ 11.046, Return Surplus Water - Provides that water authorized to
be appropriated but not needed for the authorized use be returned to
the watercourse for further appropriation and for other uses;
§ 11.121, Permit Required - Requires the issuance of water rights
permits to authorize appropriation
§ 11.134, Action on Application - Specifies the conditions under
which the Commission may grant a water rights permit;
§ 11.1381, Term Permits - Establishes a means for issuance of term
permits; and
§ 11.141, Date of Priority - Establishes the priority date for water
rights permits as the date the application was filed.
Taken as whole, the provisions of the Texas Water Code establish the regulatory
framework for the administration of Texas water rights.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 9
At the same time, the water rights program which TCEQ now informs the
Court that it is implementing through the factual assertions of its water rights
permitting staff cannot be allowed to substitute for the legal mandates and
fundamental fairness of the “first in time, first in right” principles of Texas water
law which have withstood the test of generations of continued economic growth
and must continue to be the legal basis of water rights administration by the TCEQ.
The Texas Legislature has not authorized the TCEQ to determine water availability
based on which applicants it would like to grant rights in State water to, regardless
of priority dates. Generally, in its Reply Brief, the TCEQ informs the Court that
“this is how we administer water rights at the TCEQ,” in a manner which is
contrary to law, has no statutory support, and is contrary to the plain terms and
conditions of the Commission’s Final Orders and the Permit to Appropriate State
Water No. 5594 issued by the Commission. This Court of Appeals, as the Corpus
Christi-Edinburg Court of Appeals did recently in TCEQ v. Texas Farm Bureau, et
al, Cause No. 13-13-00415-CV (13th Court of Appeals, Corpus Christi-Edinburg,
April 2, 2015) can honor the doctrine of separation of powers and inform the
TCEQ that it must follow the doctrine of prior appropriation for all water rights
holders.
Appellant TCEQ’s brief contains no case law, statutory basis, or
Commission regulation in support of its contention that it can grant or deny water
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 10
rights without reference to the priority dates included in the permits. Consequently,
the standards of substantial evidence review require a result in favor of Appellant.
The actions of the TCEQ in denying Mr. Ware’s renewal of his term permit are
arbitrary, capricious, founded upon unlawful procedure, and constitute an
unreasonable denial of Appellant’s property right in State water.
IV. WARE’S REPLY TO APPELLEE TCEQ’S BRIEF PERTAINING TO
ALL OF WARE’S POINTS OF ERROR
The main contention of TCEQ in this appeal relating all Appellant’s Points
of Error is that the Commission is entitled to implement a policy of water rights
permitting and administration whereby some State water in the form of return
flows is reserved for later applicants, as opposed to being considered available for
appropriation in accordance with the first in time, first in right principle of the prior
appropriation doctrine set forth in Tex. Water Code §11.027, which states:
RIGHTS BETWEEN APPROPRIATORS. As between appropriators,
the first in time is the first in right.
Amended by Acts 1977, 65th Leg., p. 2207, ch. 870, Sec. 1, eff. Sept.
1, 1977.
TCEQ staff contends that term permit holders are not appropriators, or are a
separate class of appropriators with a floating priority date.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 11
As both Appellant and Appellee have stated, the statutory authorization to
issue term permits came about because the Texas Supreme Court specifically
found that the Commission practice of issuing permits based on streamflows and
assuming that not all permitted water would be put to beneficial use by existing
permittee was unlawful double permitting of already appropriated water. See,
Lower Colorado River Authority v. Texas Department of Water Resources, 689
S.W. 2d 873 (Tex. 1984), sometimes referred to as the Stacy Dam Decision. In
that case, the Texas Supreme Court stated:
Under the law, the Department [of Water Resources] may not grant permits
when its own records show that the supply must come from an existing
downstream permittee’s water that the Department speculates he will not
actually need. [TWC] Section 11.0253 places a limit on the amount of
water that can be used beneficially or the amount the senior holders can
claim, even though the face amount of their permits may be more.
* * * * *
The Water District [LCRA] and the Department have a remedy expressly
granted by the Legislature. If there exists recorded permits, filings and
certificate of adjudication that will not reasonably be used in the future, the
Department or another interested party may seek total or partial
cancellation of those rights. Only after sufficient cancellations have freed
that water from its commitment, may the Department again grant a permit
to appropriate it. Id., at p. 882.
3
Tex. Water Code, Sec. 11.025. SCOPE OF APPROPRIATIVE RIGHT. A right to use state
water under a permit or a certified filing is limited not only to the amount specifically
appropriated but also to the amount which is being or can be beneficially used for the purposes
specified in the appropriation, and all water not so used is considered not appropriated.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 12
As a result of the Stacy Dam Decision, the Commission was temporarily prohibited
from issuing new water rights based on permitted water not being put to beneficial
use.
Appellee TCEQ’s assertions regarding the nature of term permits as not
being permanent water rights and subject to full access to water availability is
inconsistent with written Agency policy and the water code. Specifically, Tex.
Water Code, §11.1381 establishes the TCEQ’s right to issue term permits as
follows:
Sec. 11.1381. TERM PERMITS. (a) Until a water right is
perfected to the full extent provided by Section 11.026 of this
code, the commission may issue permits for a term of years for
use of state water to which a senior water right has not been
perfected.
(b) The commission shall refuse to grant an application for a
permit under this section if the commission finds that there is a
substantial likelihood that the issuance of the permit will
jeopardize financial commitments made for water projects that
have been built or that are being built to optimally develop the
water resources of the area.
(c) The commission shall refuse to grant an application for a
term permit if the holder of the senior appropriative water right
can demonstrate that the issuance of the term permit would
prohibit the senior appropriative water right holder from
beneficially using the senior rights during the term of the term
permit. Such demonstration will be made using reasonable
projections based on accepted methods.
(d) A permit issued under this section is subordinate to any
senior appropriative water rights.
Added by Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 405, Sec. 1, eff. Sept. 1,
1987.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 13
Effective September 1, 1987, the Commission was authorized to issue water rights
for unspecified terms to allow for the use of state water not being put to beneficial
use. Read together, the Stacy Dam Decision and TWC, §11.1381 authorized the
Commission to issue permits for available streamflows not needed by senior
downstream water rights holders4 until such time as water became available as
permits were cancelled for total or partial nonuse under the Texas Water Code’s
cancellation provisions in TWC, Ch. 11, Subch. E, §§11.171-11.186. Term
Permits are specifically subject to the same requirements of all permits under
TWC, §11.134(b), Action on Application, and those same requirements are
clarified and emphasized in TWC, §13.1381 specifically identifying public interest
concerns of the financial viability of water projects (§11.1381(b), and the specific
opportunity for a demonstration of harm by a senior appropriator (§11.1381(b).
But, the limitation of TWC, §11.1381(d), that “A permit issued under this section
is subordinate to any senior appropriative water rights” is no different from the
general limitations of the doctrine of prior appropriation. Every single water rights
permit issued by the Commission for any purpose or for any length of time
contains the proviso: “This permit [or amendment] is issued subject to senior and
superior water rights in the _________ River Basin.” This proviso is not unique to
term permits. Even if it were, there is no seniority or superiority as between an
4
Note that this refers to senior downstream water rights holders, not applicants, perspective
water rights holders or junior water rights holders.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 14
authorized appropriator and an applicant. As between appropriators, first in time
is first in right; Appellant does not claim or request a water right to divert and use
water already permitted to senior appropriators.
In addition to authorizing the issuance of term permits for permitted but
unused water in TWC, §11.1381, however, the Texas Legislature made additional
water available for appropriation under TWC, §11.046. In many ways, TWC,
§11.046 is a codification of the previous Commission analysis of permits being
limited to the water actually being beneficially used by the permittee; and allowing
the Commission to authorize new appropriations for water returned to the stream
after its permitted use. TWC, §11.046 states as follows:
Sec. 11.046. RETURN SURPLUS WATER. (a) A person who
takes or diverts water from a watercourse or stream for the
purposes authorized by this code shall conduct surplus water
back to the watercourse or stream from which it was taken if the
water can be returned by gravity flow and it is reasonably
practicable to do so.
(b) In granting an application for a water right, the commission
may include conditions in the water right providing for the
return of surplus water, in a specific amount or percentage of
water diverted, and the return point on a watercourse or stream
as necessary to protect senior downstream permits, certified
filings, or certificates of adjudication or to provide flows for
instream uses or bays and estuaries.
(c) Except as specifically provided otherwise in the water right,
water appropriated under a permit, certified filing, or certificate
of adjudication may, prior to its release into a watercourse or
stream, be beneficially used and reused by the holder of a
permit, certified filing, or certificate of adjudication for the
purposes and locations of use provided in the permit, certified
filing, or certificate of adjudication. Once water has been
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 15
diverted under a permit, certified filing, or certificate of
adjudication and then returned to a watercourse or stream,
however, it is considered surplus water and therefore
subject to reservation for instream uses or beneficial inflows
or to appropriation by others unless expressly provided
otherwise in the permit, certified filing, or certificate of
adjudication.
(d) Water appropriated under a permit, certified filing, or
certificate of adjudication which is recirculated within a
reservoir for cooling purposes shall not be considered to be
surplus for purposes of this chapter.
Amended by Acts 1977, 65th Leg., p. 2207, ch. 870, Sec. 1, eff.
Sept. 1, 1977; Acts 1997, 75th Leg., ch. 1010, Sec. 2.07, eff.
Sept. 1, 1997.
The additional water—return flows—referred to in TWC, §11.046(c) is
specifically water which is returned to a stream after use, such as a municipal
discharge, for example, and the water becomes available for environmental
purposes “or to appropriation by others.” Nothing in TWC, §11.046(c) authorizes
the TCEQ to treat the appropriation of return flows in manner other than on a first
in time, first in right basis.
In Appellee’s Brief, TCEQ attempts to convince the Court that Ware’s water
right was a not a permanent water right and that Permit to Appropriate State Water
No. 5594 had no priority date, expired by its own terms, and was part of a separate
class of water rights not entitled to consideration under the prior appropriation
doctrine. The TCEQ’s argument rests entirely on its own policy of expedience;
TCEQ has offered no basis beyond its non-lawyer expert staff assertions in favor
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 16
of these “unwritten rules” and statutory interpretations which fall outside of the
Agency’s historical practice and factual determinations of water available for
appropriation. Simply put, there is no law which supports the TCEQ’s position in
this case; the doctrine of prior appropriation favors Appellant.
Not only do these TCEQ assertions have no basis in statute, but they are
directly contrary to the plain language of Ware’s Permit No. 5594. Permit No.
5594 grants a water right with a priority date for a term of years, and states
explicitly:
3. SPECIAL CONDITIONS
The authorization to divert and use 130 acre-feet of water per
year shall expire and become null and void on November 7,
2007 unless prior to such date permittee applies for an
extension hereof and such application is subsequently granted
for an additional term or in perpetuity. The priority date of
this permit and all extensions hereof shall be July 1, 1997.
It is undisputed that Appellant filed his application prior to November 7, 2007; that
the TCEQ found the application to be administratively complete on March 20,
2006; and that the TCEQ issued notice of the application stating that Ware:
“has applied for an amendment to its existing Water Use Permit
on the Lampasas River, Brazos River Basin, in Bell County to
extend or delete the expiration date of November 7, 2007,
add an additional 31 acres for irrigation, and to divert and use
an additional 20 acre-feet of water5.”
5
See TCEQ Interoffice Memorandum dated March 20, 2006, SUBJECT: Bradley B. Ware;
CN601474224, RN102842416; Application No. 5594A to Amend Water Use Permit No. 5594;
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 17
It is simply not true, as TCEQ asserts in Appellee’s Brief, that water rights issued
for a term of years were not issued with priority dates and were not therefore
subject to periodic review and consideration of water availability during that
review.
More importantly, TCEQ’s assertion goes against the evidence in the case
which establishes that the TCEQ policy on amendment of term permit water rights
holders was to grant permanent water rights when, upon review of the amendment
applications, it was found that water was available for appropriation in the
requested source of supply. The undisputed evidence in this case establishes that
Samuel W. Jones, P. E. a former TCEQ employee and part owner of water rights
Permit No. 4166, as amended, was granted a permit for diversion and use of 120
acre-feet of water from Brushy Creek in Williamson County for a term of years on
December 18, 1984 with a July 31, 1984 priority date. He applied for an
amendment similar to Appellant’s (increase in irrigation acreage) in 2000 and was
granted a perpetual water right with an April 26, 1984 priority date. 6 The simple
truth is that in this case, the TCEQ, in reviewing water availability in the Brazos
TWC §11.122, Requiring Mailed and Published Notice; Lampasas River, Brazos River Basin;
Bell County, attached hereto as Exhibit C.
6
This priority date which appears in the preamble of Permit No. 4166A appears to be an error,
and the use of the date Application No. 4470 for Permit No. 4166 was received, rather than the
date it was filed, which was correctly set out in the Special Condition 3. (b), of Permit No. 4166,
which stated: The priority date for this permit and all extension hereof shall be July 31, 1984.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 18
River Basin, found that it was only available for BRA and that the same State
water which flowed past Appellant’s diversion point associated with his earlier
priority, should not be made available to Mr. Ware.
IV. WARE’S REPLY TO APPELLEE TCEQ’S BRIEF PERTAINING TO
WARE’S POINT OF ERROR NO. 1
Ware’s Point of Error One:
The District Court erred in failing to find that the Commission’s April 20, 2010
Order unlawfully ignores the evidence of record regarding the water available for
appropriation by Plaintiff; therefore, the Commission’s action in adopting the April
20, 2010 Order was arbitrary and capricious, and was characterized by an abuse of
discretion.
In Appellee’s Brief, the TCEQ’s claim that return flows are not available to
Appellant, rests on an unauthorized and unlawful attempt to create a separate class
of State water, return flows, to be administered by the TCEQ under some basis
other than first in time, first in right, priority system of property rights in State
water. Again, the TCEQ’s brief presents no Agency rule or statute which supports
the TCEQ staff factual assertions. There is no legitimate factual issue as to
whether return flows are available for appropriation throughout the Brazos River
Basin—Appellant’s contested case hearing Exhibit No. 50, attached hereto as
Exhibit B, a November 25, 2008 Water Availability Analysis regarding
Application No. 5851 by Brazos River Authority specifically details the points of
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 19
discharge of over 100 million gallons per day in authorized discharges of treated
domestic wastewater effluent—return flows—which remain unappropriated.
There is no legal justification for reserving these return flows for a junior
applicant, while at the same time acting to terminate the water use of senior
appropriators on the basis that no water is available for appropriation throughout
the Brazos River Basin.7
Texas Water Code, §11.021 defines State water as follows:
Sec. 11.021. STATE WATER. (a) The water of the ordinary
flow, underflow, and tides of every flowing river, natural
stream, and lake, and of every bay or arm of the Gulf of
Mexico, and the storm water, floodwater, and rainwater of
every river, natural stream, canyon, ravine, depression, and
watershed in the state is the property of the state.
(b) Water imported from any source outside the boundaries of
the state for use in the state and which is transported through
the beds and banks of any navigable stream within the state or
by utilizing any facilities owned or operated by the state is the
property of the state.
Texas Water Code, §11.046 defines return flows, treated effluent wastewater
discharges, and makes them available for appropriation as stated above.
Return flows are State water, subject to appropriation in accordance with the
prior appropriation doctrine. There is no statutory basis which allows TCEQ to
reserve the use of State water in the form of return flows for potential junior
appropriators. The hearing testimony of TCEQ staff members regarding the TCEQ
7
TCEQ’s Finding of Fact No. 44-52.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 20
uncodified policy to develop and apply certain water availability analyses for
certain applicants produces an unlawful reservation of State water which runs
counter to the prior appropriation doctrine principle of “first in time, first in right.”
The water availability analysis of the full amount of State water available for
appropriation throughout the Brazos River Basin, Appellant’s contested case
hearing Exhibit No. 50, showed that there are at least 580 acre-feet/year of
unappropriated return flows from the City of Lampasas which flow past
Appellant’s Ware Farm diversion point. Appellant TCEQ can point to no statutory
or regulatory authority which authorizes the TCEQ to withhold those return flows
from Appellant, and attempt to award them to BRA.
V. WARE’S REPLY TO APPELLEE TCEQ’S BRIEF PERTAINING TO
WARE’S POINT OF ERROR NO. 2 AND 5
Ware’s Point of Error Two:
The Commission’s April 20, 2010 Order violates the directives and requirements
of Texas Water Code, §11.134(b), regarding Commission action on water rights
applications.
Ware’s Point of Error Five:
The District Court erred in failing to find that the Commission acted arbitrarily and
capriciously to deprive Plaintiff of any continued right to divert and use any water
at any time for Ware Farm under Permit No. 5594, an authorized appropriation, on
the stated basis of no water available for appropriation, while at the same time
granting water rights for new appropriations and issuing statements of water
availability for other Plaintiffs, new permittees, and other water rights holders.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 21
In Appellee’s Brief, the TCEQ again puts forward the assertions of TCEQ
non-lawyer experts as dispositive of the legality of the TCEQ’s unwritten law of
water rights permitting and administration concerning the availability of State
water in the form of return flows on a basis other than the prior appropriation
doctrine. TCEQ even goes so far as to say that the statutory framework set out in
the Texas Water Code regarding the availability of return flows for appropriation is
not significant. TCEQ staff’s and Commission’s erroneous construction of the
Texas Water Code is not controlling is this court in the guise of a substantial
evidence review. It is well settled that the court is the ultimate arbiter of statutory
construction, even though State agencies are allowed to construe enabling statutes
as they perform their duties. [See, City of Dallas v. Stewart, 361 S.W. 3d 562,579
(Tex. 2012); and PUC v. City of Austin, 728 S.W. 2d 907, 910 (Tex. App. Austin
1987)] Agencies and Staff are simply not legally authorized to develop and
implement policies which are directly contrary to or even unsupported by statutory
mandates.
The text of Texas Water Code, §11.027; §11.135(b); §11.1381; and §11.046
is plain and unambiguous. Therefore, the tortured statutory interpretations of the
TCEQ non-lawyer staff which run counter to the prior appropriation doctrine
should be disregarded. It simply is not the case that the statutes do not mean what
they plainly state and that water available for appropriation can be reserved for
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 22
what could only be a junior appropriator while senior appropriators are denied
access to those return flows.
Therefore, the Agency’s construction of the Texas Water Code, §11.027;
§11.135(b); §11.1381; and §11.046 are not entitled to judicial deference because
the subject sections are completely unambiguous. This court has recently held that
deference should be given to an agency’s interpretation of statutes only when the
statutory authority is ambiguous. Texas State Bd. Of Examiners of Marriage and
Family Therapists v. Texas Medical Assn, No. 03-13-00077-CV, November 21,
2014, citing Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Summers, 282 S.W. 3d 433, 437 (Tex.
2009).
VI. WARE’S REPLY TO APPELLEE TCEQ’S BRIEF PERTAINING TO
WARE’S POINT OF ERROR NO. 3
Ware’s Point of Error Three:
The District Court erred in failing to find that the Commission’s April 20, 2010
Order is in violation of the requirements of Texas Water Code, §11.1381,
regarding the consideration and granting of water rights permits for a term of
years.
In Appellee’s Brief, TCEQ attempts to convince the Court that specifically
quantified return flows shown to be available from various sources throughout the
Brazos River Basin and passing downstream to the authorized diversion point for
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 23
Permit No. 5594 should not be available to Appellant, but should be made
available to a later applicant, BRA.
TCEQ’s contention that the water is available only at the mouth of the
Brazos River directly contradicts the water availability analysis of Application No.
5851, Appellant’s contested case hearing Exhibit No. 50, which identifies not only
the specific locations, but also the specific amounts of return flows available
upstream of Ware Farm. TCEQ’s contention that State water is available in the
Brazos River Basin to BRA, a later applicant, but not to Ware, an earlier
appropriator makes no sense, and is not factually correct. It is simply not true that
State water is available in large quantities for a later applicant, but a much smaller
quantity of water is not available for a senior appropriator. And, any policy of the
TCEQ which provides for that result is unlawful.
VII. WARE’S REPLY TO APPELLEE TCEQ’S BRIEF PERTAINING TO
WARE’S POINT OF ERROR NO. 4
Point of Error Four:
The District Court in failing to find that the Commission’s April 20, 2010 Order
violates the fundamental doctrine of water rights law of “first in time, first in
right,” as set forth in the Texas Water Code, Section 11.027.
In Appellee’s Brief, TCEQ asserts that Permit No. 5549’s 1997 priority date
is meaningless and should be given no consideration as compared to later
applicants for water rights. Again, other than the assertions of TCEQ staff, and
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 24
Appellee TCEQ in its Brief, TCEQ offers no applicable law in support of this
contention. Not a single written or adopted rule of the TCEQ or statutory
interpretation authorizes the TCEQ’s position. Moreover, for the TCEQ staff in
the context of a contested case hearing to assert this “revision” of a water rights
permit issued by the Agency pursuant to a final order over which the Agency has
long lost jurisdiction, amounts to the Staff unlawfully collaterally attacking the
validity of its own final order.
TCEQ’s continual assertion that Ware’s priority date is meaningless
contradicts the terms of the Final Order of the Commission, which is set forth in 3.
Special Condition (b) of Permit No. 5499, and has no legal support.
VIII. WARE’S REPLY TO APPELLEE TCEQ’S BRIEF PERTAINING TO
WARE’S POINT OF ERROR NO. 6
Point of Error Six:
The District Court erred in failing to find that the Commission’s April 20, 2010
Order adopted Findings of Fact pertaining to a pending non-party applicant;
Moreover, the details of said Plaintiff’s pending application and proposed
appropriation were unlawfully used as a basis to deny Plaintiff’s water right
application.
In Appellee’s Brief, TCEQ asserts that findings regarding BRA were made
necessary by Applicant’s use of the Brazos River Basin Water Availability
Analysis applied to the BRA application. TCEQ also asserts that the Brazos River
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 25
Basin Water Availability Analysis contained in Appellant’s contested case hearing
Exhibit No. 50 is “irrelevant.” TCEQ’s assertion that the Brazos River Basin water
availability analysis related to Application No. 5851 by BRA and detailing the
availability of yet to be appropriated return flows is directly contrary to the first in
time first in right doctrine of prior appropriation, and has no legal support. More
importantly, TCEQ’s reliance on staff testimony in a contested case hearing to
explain away the relevance of water available for appropriation under TWC,
§11.046 only highlights the Commission’s lack of regulatory support for its
implementation of an unauthorized and unwritten water rights permitting and
administration system regarding return flows.
IX. CONCLUSION
As discussed above, the Commission’s April 20, 2010 Order denying
Appellant’s water rights Amendment Application No. 5594 to continue to divert
and use his authorized appropriation of 130 acre-feet of water per year from the
Lampasas River, Brazos River Basin, should be reversed and remanded to the
TCEQ in accordance with Tex. Gov’t Code, §2001.174. The TCEQ’s April 20,
2010 Order violates the Texas Water Code, the Texas Constitution, and the
Constitution of the United States and is voidable and reversible for the following
reasons:
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 26
(1) In this case, the TCEQ created an unwritten parallel system of water
rights related, at Commission Staff discretion, only to term permits,
which deprived those permits and the authorizations to appropriate
State water of their legal priority;
(2) The TCEQ, contrary to the plain terms and conditions of Appellant’s
Permit to Appropriate State Water No. 5594, stated that Appellant’s
July 1, 1997 priority date did not apply to this amendment Application
No. 5594A;
(3) The TCEQ Water Availability Analysis of the Brazos River Basin
dated November 28, 2008, details the location and extent of over 100
million gallons per day in return flows available for appropriation
throughout the Brazos River Basin;
(4) In this case, the TCEQ staff and Commissioners have implemented an
unwritten water rights permitting and administration program related
to State Water in the form of return flows;
(5) In their final order in this case, the TCEQ has refused to recognize the
presence of State Water in the form of return flows shown to be
available at Appellant’s diversion point in its Brazos River Basin
Water Availability Analysis Model as available for appropriation
pursuant to Tex. Water Code, §11.046(c); and
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 27
(6) The unwritten TCEQ policies and procedures regarding State water in
the form of return flows do not provide for allocation of return flows
on a first in time, first in right basis.
The tacit adoption of these unlawful and statutorily inconsistent policies in the
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in the TCEQ’s April 20, 2010 Order
render the action of the TCEQ voidable as a matter of law pursuant to Tex. Gov’t
Code, §2001.174.
Apart from being unlawful, the Commission’s role in administering water
rights is called into question when it denies a family farmer access to water
available for appropriation in the Brazos River Basin for continued diversion and
use of water for any term at all on the one hand, and yet supports the issuance of
perpetual permits for the use of State water in the form of return flows and based
on updated streamflow conditions and data sets for other, later water rights
applicants on the other hand.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 28
X. PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, CONSIDERING THE FOREGOING, Plaintiff asks this
Court to:
A. Reverse the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality’s unlawful
April 20, 2010 Order denying the Application of Bradley B. Ware to
Amend his Permit to Appropriate State Water No. 5594;
B. Remand Appellant’s water rights Amendment Application No. 5594A
to the TCEQ for further and lawful consideration of Appellant’s
application based on the evidence of record of State Water available
for appropriation in the Brazos River Basin in the form of return
flows;
C. Require the consideration of Appellant’s water rights Amendment
Application No. 5594A to be consistent with the Texas Water Code
and all applicable law, and not subject to any unwritten, unlawful and
statutorily inconsistent policies for permitting and administration of
State water; and
D. Provide such other and further relief that Appellant may show himself
to be justly entitled.
APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 29
Respectfully Submitted,
WEBB & WEBB
Attorneys at Law
712 Southwest Towers
211 East i h Street
Austin, Texas 78701
(512) 472-9990 Telephone
(512) 472-3183 Facsimile
~~
g.hill.webb@webbwebblaw.com
State Bar No. 21026300
STEPHENP. WEBB
s.p.webb@webbwebblaw.com
State Bar No. 21033800
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT,
BRADLEY B. WARE
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(3), I hereby certifY that
this reply brief contains 6,767 words (excluding the caption, table of contents, table
of authorities, signature, proof of service, certification, and certificate of
compliance). This is a computer generated document created in Microsoft Word,
using 14-point typeface for all text, except for footnotes which are 12-point
typeface. In making this certificate of compliance, I am relying on the word count
provided by the software used to prepare the document.
ApPELLANT'S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 30
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that I have this 7th day of May, 2015, served copies of the
foregoing instrument upon the parties to this proceeding, who's full and complete
names and addresses appear below, by certified mail, facsimile, hand delivery, or
regular u.s. mail.
Linda Secord, Asst. Attorney General
Office of the Attorney General
P.O. Box 12548-MC015
Austin, Texas 78711-2548
Phone: 512-475-4002
Fax: 512-320-0911
Linda.secord@texasattorneygeneral.gov
~
Gwendolyn II We b
APPENDIX
Exhibit A. Permit to Appropriate State Water No. 5594
Exhibit B. November 25, 2008 Interoffice Memorandum regarding Water
Availability Analysis for BRA's Application No. 5851
Exhibit C. March 20, 20016 Interoffice Memorandum Requiring Mailed and
Published Notice
ApPELLANT'S REPLY BRIEF PAGE 31
i'
TEXAS NATURAL RESOURCE CONSERVATION COMMISSION
PERMITTO APPROPRIATE
AND USE STATE WATER
APPLICATION NO. 5594 PERMIT NO. 5594 TYFE:.Section 11.121
Name: Bradley B. Ware Address: Rte~ 3, Box 211
Killeen, TX 76542
;
Filed: . July 1, 1997 Granted: HOY 0 7 1997
Purposes: Irrigation County: Bell
Watercourse: Lampasas River, tributary Watershed: Brazos River Basin .
of the Little River, tributary
'of the Brazos River
.:'.
--WHBREAS:-Bradlei"i3::WareIas -requestedatithorizatlon- to'divei:iand use- noTio exceed -130
acre-feet of water per annum to irrigate' 100 acres of'land owned by the: applicant in Bell County
approximately
..
15 miles southwest of Killeen,
..
Texas; and
.,
WHEREAS, the Texas Natural Conservation Commission fmds that jurisdiction over the
application is establishe~; and
WHEREAS, no person protested the granting'ofthis application; and
WHEREAS, the Commission has complied with the requirements of the Texas Water Code
and Rules . ofthe
.,' '.
Texas Natural
..'
',,'
Resource
.
Conservation Cominission
. ' ~ . .
in- issiIiIi.g this' permit. .'
' . '
. . .
NOW, THEREFORE, this permit to appropriate and use State Water' IS issued to 'Bradley B.
Ware, subject to the following terms and conditions: '.
. _ ."'._.-
Permittee is authorized to divert and use neit to exceed 130 acre-feet of water per
:. anilUni. from the Lampasas River to irrigate 100 acres of-land out of 261"acres in
the W. Brown Survey, Abstract No. 67, the D.G. Van Vicheton (Vecheton)
1
I-
Survey, Abstract No. 851, and the C. Edwards Survey, Abstract No. 291 in Bell
County, Texas approximately 15 miles southwest of Killeen,' Texas. This land 'is
conveyed. to permittee in a deed recqrded in Volume 1524, page 671 of the Bell .
County Deed Records.'
2. . DIVERSION
a. Diversion Area: Permitte is authorized to divert water from any point
on the left or east· bank' of the Lampasas River, between a point
N60.6°W 2,050 feet from the southeast corner of the aforesaid Van
Vicheton Survey and a point . located S37"E 4,200 feet from the
aforesaid sutvey comer in Bell Courity. This downstream point is
located at Latitude 31.032°N, Longitude 97.~92°W. .
b. Maximum Diversion Rate: 2.67 cfs (1200 gpm).
3. SPECIAL CONDITIONS
a. In order to protect instream uses, biological habitats and water quality,
perinittee is authorized to divert water hereunder ·during. the months of
Apr.il through ·June only when the flow of the Lampasas River at
U.S.G.S .. Gaging Station No. 08103800 near Kempner; Texas equals
- ...- - _........ ',:-on~xceeds38 cfs'!uid 'dlitihgthe"otliei'" fiionths brilY::WhelntequalS' or
exceeds 12 cfs.. _. ... - . ........-
b. The authorization to divert and use 130 acre-feet of water per year shall
expire and become null and void on :November. .7., 2007 unless'
prior to such date permittee applies for an extension hereof and such
application is suhsequently granted for an additional term or' in .
perpetuity, The priority date of this permit apd l!ll ex~ensions hereof
shall be July 1, 1997. .. " .
4, WATER CONSERVATION .. . . ;.:. '-:.
-" ' ':'.
Permitee shall' unplement a .water' conServation' plan that provides fbr the
utiliz~tion of tho;epraciices, tecIriques, ';~d'tecb;;oi;ii;s 'th~tr~d~c~ the
consumption of water, prevent or reduce the: l(jss _or waste of water, maintain or
improve the efficiency.in the use of water, or increase the recycling and reuse
of water so that a water supply is made avaiiablefor future or alternative uses .
. . 'Thls permit is
o •
issueds~bject t~ all sup~rior and senio~ ~~t~; .ri~hts in.the B;azos River Basin,
• • •
2
"
Permittee agrees to be bound by the terms, conditions and provisions contained hereih and such
agreement is a condition precedent to the granting of this permit. .
All other matters requested in the application which are not specifically granted by thi~ permit
are denied.
This pennit is issued subject to the Rules of the Texas Natural Resource Conservation
Commission and to the right of continuing supervision of State water resources exercised by the·
Commission.
TEXAS NATURAL ~OURCE
CONSERVATION COMMISSION
For _.....'"'"
DATE ISSUED: NOV 0 7 1997
ATTEST:
b--)··fd . . .:.
. I\,.~
Eugenia K. Brumm, Ph.D.,ChIef Clerk
. ,
3
App. Exh. _--'S""~,,-.,:__
Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM
To: Ron Ellis, Application Manager November 25, 2008
Water Rights Permitting Team
ThroUgh:.fS Lann Bookout, Team Leader
6~ Surface Water Availability & Interstate Compacts Team
From: Kathy Alexander, Hydrologist
Surface Water Availability & Interstate Compacts Team
Subject: Brazos River Authority
Application 585 I
CN600506794
Brazos River, Brazos River Basin
WATER AVAILABILITY ANALYSIS
Application Summary
The Brazos River Authority (BRA or the Authority) has applied for a pelmit, designated its "System
Operation Pelmit". The BRA owns the following water rights, which comprise BRA's system of
reservoirs: Certificate No. 12-5155 (Possum Kingdom Lake), Certificate No. 12-5156 (Lake GranbUlY),
Certificate No. 12-5165 (Lake Limestone), Celtificate No. 12-5157 (Lake Whitney), Certificate No. 12-
5160 (Lake Belton), Celtificat~ No. 12-5159 (Lake Proctor), Certificate No. 12-5164 (Lake Somerville),
Celtificate No. 12-5161 (Lake Still house Hollow), Celtificate No.1 2-5163 (Lake Granger), Celtificate
No. 12-5162 (Lake Georgetown) and Celtificate No. 12-5158 (Lake Aquilla). The BRA, along with the
Texas Water Development Board and the City of Houston, owns Water Use Pennit 2925A (Aliens Creek
Reservoir). The BRA also owns Celtificate Nos. 12-5166 and 12-5167, which authorize various uses of
water within the applicant's other certificates and penn its. The applicant is cutTently authorized, pursuant
to a TCEQ order, to manage and operate its tributalY reservoirs as elements of a system, coordinating
releases and diversions from the tributalY reservoirs with releases and diversions from the applicant's
main-stem reservoirs to conserve water.
BRA seeks a Water Use Permit to authorize:
• A new appropriation of state water in the amount of 421 ,449 acre-feet per year for mUltiple use
purposes on a firm basis in the Brazos River Basin. Out of the 421,449 acre-feet per year of
unappropriated water being requested, the maximum amount of unappropriated water that will be
available if such water is divelted upstream at USGS gage No. 08091000 near Glen Rose. Texas
is 150,538 acre-feet per year of firm water, and if such unappropriated water is divelted upstream
at USGS gage No. 08098290 near Highbank, Texas, the maximum amount of unappropriated
water that will be available at that location is 144.306 acre-feet per year offirm water.
• Diversion of the water from: (i) the existing diversion points authorized b) BRA's existing water
rights: (iiJ the Brazos River at the USGS gage No. 08091000 near G len Rose, Texas: (iii) the
Brazos River at USGS gage No. 0809S~90 near Highbank. Texas: (i,,) the Brazos " ~. . .
Bra;os Ri\'(!r Authority
Pel'm{f 5851
Page 2 of 14
Gulf of Mexico; and (v) at such other diversion points that may be identified and included in
BRA's proposed Water Management Plan (WMP), which is subject to TCEQ's approval.
• Use of up to 90,000 acre-feet of water per year of the firm supply to produce, along with other
unappropriated flows, an interruptible water supply of 670,000 acre-feet pel' yeai' and the
appropriation of that interruptible water supply. Out of the 1.001.449 acre-feet of firm and
interruptible water being requested, the maximum amount offirm and interruptible water that will
be available if such water is diverted upstream at USGS Gage No. 08091000 near Glen Rose,
Texas is 60,538 acre-feet of firm water pel' year and 157,000 acre-feet of intelTuptible water pel'
year and if such water is diverted upstream at USGS Gage No. 08098290 neal' Highbank, Texas,
the maximum amount of firm water is 54,306 acre-feet of water per year and 303,000 acre-feet of
interruptible water pel' year.
• An exempt interbasin transfer authorization to use, on a film and interruptible basis, the
appropriated water in the adjoining San Jacinto-Brazos Coastal Basin and the Brazos-Colorado
Coastal Basin.
• An appropriation of cUlTent and future retum flows (treated sewage effluent and brine
bypass/return) to the extent that such retum flows continue to be discharged 01' returned into the
bed and banks of the Brazos River, its tributaries, and BRA's reservoirs. BRA indicates that such
appropriation of return flows would be subject to interruption by direct use 01' indirect use within
I the discharging entity's city limits, extratelTitorial jurisdiction, or contiguous water celtificate of
I convenience and necessity boundary. Specified discharge points and amounts of water will be
accounted for on a monthly basis as part of BRA's WMP, which is subj ect to TCEQ's approval.
• Operational flexibility to (i) use any source of water available to BRA to satisfy the diversion
requirements of senior water rights to the same extent that those water rights would have been
satisfied by passing inflows through the BRA's reservoirs on a priority basis; and (ii) release,
pump and transport water from any ofthe BRA's reservoirs for subsequent storage, diversion and
use throughout the BRA's service area.
• Recognition that the System Operation Permit will prevail over inconsistent provisions in the
BRA's existing water rights regarding system operation.
• Use of the· bed and banks of the Brazos River, its tributaries and BRA's reservoirs for the
conveyance. storage, and subsequent diversion of (i) water appropriated under this application;
(ii) waters that are being conveyed via pipelines and subsequently discharged into the Brazos
River, its tributaries or stored in the BRA's reservoirs; (iii) surface water impOlted from areas
located outside the Brazos River Basin for subsequent use: (iv) in-basin surface water and
groundwater subject to BRA's control;(v) waters developed frol11 future projects; and (vi) current
and future reuse of surface and groundwater based e'ftluent requested by this application. This bed
and banks authorization is subject to BRA. after identifYing specific points of discharge and
diversion and conveyance and other losses, obtaining future authorizations to satisfy the
requirements ofTWC § 11.042. Such points of discharge and diversion and conveyance and other
losses may also be identified and included in BRA's proposed WMP, which is subject to TCEQ's
approval.
(
Bra=as R,ver Authority
Permit 5851
I>uge 3 of 14
Until the construction of Aliens Creek Reservoir is completed, the BRA requests that the System
Operation Pennit include special conditions which authorize:
• Appropriation of state water in the amount of 425,099 acre-feet per year for mUltiple use purposes
on a firm basis in the Brazos River Basin. Out ofthe 425,099 acre-feet per year of unappropriated
water being requested, the maximum amount of unappropriated water that will be available if
such water is diverted upstream at USGS Gage 08091000 near Glen Rose, Texas is 150,538 acre-
reet per year of firm water and if such unappropriated water is diverted upstream at USGS Gage
08098290 near Highbank, Texas the maximum amount of unappropriated water that will be
available is, at that location, 175,306 acre-feet per year finn water.
• Use of up to 90,000 acre-feet of water pel' year of BRA's finn supply to produce, along with other
unappropriated flows, an interruptible water supply of 869,000 acre-feet per year. Out of the
1,204,099 acre-feet of firm and intefl'uptible water being requested, the maximum amount of finn
and interruptible water that will be available if such water is divClted upstream at USGS Gage
No. 08091000 near Glen Rose, Texas, will be 60,538 acre-feet of firm water per year and 190,000
acre-feet of interruptible water per year and if such water is divClted'upstream at USGS Gage No.
08098290 neal' Highbal\k, Texas the maximum amount of finn water will be 85,306 acre-feet of
water pel' year and 284,000 acre-feet of interruptible water pel' year.
• Exempt interbasin transfer authorization to use, on a firm and interruptible basis, the appropriated
water in the adjoining San Jacinto-Brazos Coastal Basin and the Brazos-Colorado Coastal Basin
I and to transfer such water to any county, municipality or the municipality's retail service area that
is partially i'n the Brazos River Basin for use in that part of the county or municipality's retail
service area not within the Brazos River Basin.
Water Availability Analysis
The Commission's Water Availability Model (W AM) for the Brazos River Basin protects existing water
rights based on the prior appropriation doctrine. The period of record for the Brazos WAM is 1940
through 1997. The application was declared administratively complete on October 15, 2004. TCEQ
Resource Protection Staff recommends that the application be subject to special conditions to protect
aquatic habitat and the environment, including the following (For specific numeric values for the flow
requirements below, refer to the Resource Protection Staff memo dated November 25, 2008):
I. Total storage in Permittee's system reservoirs is the trigger for determining hydrologic
condition, which, in tUI'll, determines instream flow requirements.
2. Interim instream flow requirements apply at six USGS gaging stations. The instream
flow requirements are applicable at all times.
3. The level of flow (i.e., Subsistence, Dry, Average, or Wet) is determined seasonally
based on hydrologic condition.
4. Permittee shall meet a seasonal schedule of individual high flow pulses. The
magnitude, duration. timing and frequency and measurement location for the pulses
are included as special conditions in Resource Protection Staffs memo (Additional
discussion of how these high flow pulses were included in the availability analysis is
included in Section C.2 (Unappropl'iated Watel') of this memo).
5. In addition to the above requirements. Permittee is prohibited from divelting and
!
Bra;os River Authority
Peril/II 5851
Page 4 of 14
storing water authorized by this permit unless streamflow meets or exceeds the 7Q2
value at additional gages located below Pennittee's reservoirs as specified in Resource
Protection Staff s memo.
A. Interbasin Transfer and Bed and Banks
Pursuant to TWC § 11.085(v)(3) and (v)(4), the request for an exempt interbasin transfer does not require
a water availability analysis. For the request to use the bed and banks of the Brazos River and its
tributaries, the application indicates that although specific locations, quantities and diversion rates for the
bed and banks request are unknown at this time, potential diversion locations include the perimeter of a\l
existing and proposed BRA reservoirs. The application also indicates that potential diversion locations
include the following stream reaches:
• Brazos River from the confluence of the Salt and Double Mountain Forks to the Gulf of
Mexico,
• Double Mountain Fork of the Brazos River below Lake Alan Henry to its confluence
with the Brazos River,
• Leon River from Lake Proctor to the confluence with the Little River,
• Lampasas River from Lake Stillhouse Hollow to the confluence with the Little River,
• Little River from the junction of Leon and Lampasas Rivers to the confluence with the
Brazos River,
( • Yegua Creek from Lake Somerville to the confluence with the Brazos River,
• Navasota River from Lake Limestone to the confluence with the Brazos River,
• Allens Creek from below Allens Creek Reservoir to confluence with the Brazos River,
• Any other tributary of the Brazos River into which water appropriated under this
application (groundwater or surface water under the control of BRA) is discharged.
With the exception of Pennit 2925 (Aliens Creek Reservoir), BRA's cunent rights authorize use of the
bed and banks of the Brazos River and its tributaries below the Authority's reservoirs to deliver water to
downstl'eam customers. The application indicates that the location of specific amounts, rates, releases and
loss infonnation will be detailed in BRA's Management Plan once the specific amount of unappropl'iated
water and retul11 flows available to BRA is detel·mined. Staff is of the opinion that accounting for the bed
and banks transfer of water through a delivery plan will mitigate any effects on basin water rights. The
accounting/delivel)' plan should be included in BRA's Water Management Plan (WMP).
B. Return Flows
The application requests appropriation of current and future I'eturn flows in the Brazos Basin discharged
from 136 locations by various entities. These dischal'ges includ.e surface and groundwater based retul11
flows. The surface water based retul11 flow includes discharges from BRA facilities, discharges of water
originating from BRA's water rights, as well as discharges from facilities owned by other entities and
originating from non-BRA sources of supply.
A review of water rights in the Brazos River Basin indicates that Permit 4218 (diversion of 172 acre-feet
of water from South Nolan Creek): Permit 5088 (diversion of 37 acre-feet of water from South Nolan
Creek): and Permil 5089 (diversion of 60 acre-feet of waleI' from South Nolan Creek) were explicitly
granted based on the presence of retul11 flows now being claimed as palt of this application. Staff
Bra:o:. River Al/thoriI)'
Parrl/if 5851
Page 5 ofl4
recognizes the possibility that other basin rights were granted based on the presence of the requested
return flows. Because of this, a priority date of October 15,2004 is assigned to the applicant's diversions
of historically discharged return flows. To evaluate the request for reuse of return flows, staff identified
those return flows discharged fi'om BRA facilities, 01' originating from diversions authorized by BRA's
existing water rights, that have not been previously appropriated by other water rights as indicated in
Table I. below. BRA also requested reuse of return flows generated by foul' power plants that receive
contract water from BRA's water rights. These return flows result from once through cooling water, or
other power plant operations, and are thus highly variable. The application did not provide sufficient
information to evaluate this request and these return flows were not included in the analysis.
The Current Conditions data set was updated with the amount of current return flows as indicated in the
application (74,387 acre-feet which is the sum of the maximum repolted annual discharge amounts for
each plant). The request to reuse return flows was modeled at the most downstream point in the basin to
detennine the volume of return flows available to BRA on a basin-wide basis. Results indicate that 100%
and 75% of the return flows were available in 45% and 81 % of the years in the period of record,
respectively and the monthly amount of discharged return flows was available in 87% ofthe months.
Table 1. Return Flows Available to BRA
Current Current
Percent Surface Ground-
TPDES Permitted
Current BRA ofSW Water water
Name Permit Discharge
Source from Returns Returns
Number (mgd)
BRA (ac- (ac-
ftlyr) ftlyr)
Sportsmans World
MUDWTP 02461000 0.01 Possum Kingdom 100% 11.2 0
Double Diamond 02789000 0.06 Possum Kingdom 100% 67 0
Authoritv SWATS . 02889000 2.5 Granbury System 100% 730 0
City of Copperas
Cove 10045003 2.5 .Lake Belton 100% 923 0
City of Copperas
Cove 10045004 2.5 Lake Belton 100% 1.375 0
City of Copperas
Cove 10045005 4.0 Lake Belton 100% 1.600 0
City of DeLeon 10078001 0.3 Lake Proctor 100% 192 0
City of Marlin 10110002 ~.O Whitney System 16% 159.4 0
Cit)' of Harker
Heights 10155001 3.0 Lake Belton 100% 2.780 0
City of Gatesville 10176002 2.2 Lake Belton 100% 1.731 0
City of Gatesville 10176004 1.0 Lake Bellon 100% 703 0
City of Granbury 10178002 2.0 Granhury System 100% 1313 0
Bl'a:oJ, River Allthority
Pel'll/if 5851
Page}6 0 r 14
Current Current
Percent Surface Ground-
TPDES Permitted
Current BRA ofSW Water water
Name Permit Discharge
Source from Returns Returns
Number (mgd)
BRA (ac- (ac-
ftlyr) ft/yr)
Lake Stillhouse
City of Lampasas 10205002 1.5 Hollow 100% 580 0
City of McGregor
(South WWTP) 10219002 ·0.99 Lake Belton 95% 651.7 0
City of Moody 10225001 0.2, Lake Belton 100% 157 0
Authority/LCRA Georgetown/Still
BCRWSS West 10264001 3.0 -house System 100% 2.402 1-657
Authority/LCRA Georgetown/Still
BCRWSS East 10264002 21.5 -house System 100% 16.767 0
City ofTaylor 10299001 4.0 Granger System 100% 2.220 0
Bell County
WCIDIII 10351001 0.9 Lake Belton 100% 983 0
Bell County
WCID#I 10351002 18.0 Lake Belton 100% 14.123 0
Bell County
WCID#I 10351003 6.0 Lake Belton 100% 5,389 0
City of Brenham 10388001 3.55 Lake Somerville 100% 2.485 0
City of Dublin 10405001 0.45 Lake Proctor 100% 325 0
Georgetown/Still
City of Georgetown 10489002 2.5 -house System 100% 1,815 0
Georgetown/Still
City of Georg~town 10489003 2.5 -house System 100% 1,423 0
Georgetown/Still
Gity of Georgetown 10489005 1.5 -house System 100% 1.389 0
City of Hamilton 10492002 0.44 Lake Proctor 100% 392 0
City of Hillsboro 10630001 1.81 Lake Aquilla 100% 1,440 0
Lake Stillhouse
Citv of Rosebud 10731001 0.25 Hollow 100% 194 0
Bell County
WClD#3 10797001 0.675 Lake Belton 100% 360 0
Lake Stillhouse
City of Holland 10897001 0.2 Hollow 100% 93 0
Bell County
WClD#2 11090001 0.094 Lake Belton 100% 63 0
Bell Count)'
WClD#2 11091001 0.08 Lake Belton 100% 70 0
Authority TBRSS 11318001 10.0 Lake Belton 100% 8.523 0
Hra;os River Authority
Perl/II ( 585 J
Paoe 7 of 14
~
Current Current
Percent Surface Ground-
TPDES Permitted
Current BRA ofSW Water water
Name Permit Discharge
Source from Returns Returns
Number (mgd)
BRA (ac- (ac-
ftfvr) ftfyr)
Acton MUD 14211001 0.6 Granburv System 100% 366 0
Acton MUD 14212001 0.49 Granbury S)'stem 100% 268 0
City of Comanche 14445001 0.6 Lake Proctor 100% 324 0
C. Unappropriated Walel'
The request for unappropriated water was incorporated into the TCEQ WAM as follows:
1) The Dual Simulation 1 approach was used. For each existing BRA authorization:
a) Water rights activated only in the initial simulation represent existing diversions and storage
authorized by the BRA's senior rights. These water rights calculate the total depletions and
storage. .
b) Water rights activated during the second simulation calculate the depletion for the senior rights
limited by the streamflow depletion in the preceding step.
c) The final depletions are stored at a viltual control point until the priority date of the System
Operation Pennit application (October IS, 2004), and
d) BRA's reservoirs are refilled using a priority date of October 15, 2004, with the stored final
depletions. Any remaining water is returned to the stream at the control points of the BRA's
existing water rights.
2) TCEQ Resource Protection Staff recommendations for in stream flow protection were incorporated
into the Brazos WAM at the priority date of the application as follows:
a) Seasonal flow requirements were converted to monthly values in acre-feet.
b) The instream flow requirements were subtracted from the seasonal pulse values to determine the
incremental HFP (high flow pulse).
c) The incremental HFP was multiplied by the seasonal pulse frequency to determine the total pulse
va lume for each season.
d) The total pulse volume for each season was distributed by month
e) The monthly pulse volume was added to the monthly instream flow volume for each flow regime
to determine the WAM in stream flow constraint for each month for each flow regime. and
f) 7Q2 flows for the additional control points were convelted to an annual value in acre-feet and
added to the model. .
g) Based on a distribution of the annual diversion amount to a monthly value in '1v'AM and
conversion of that value to a daily diversion in cfs, staff determined that the diversion rate for
BRA's diversions would be below 7,535 cfs at USGS Gage 08114000. Brazos River near
Richmond.
3) After applying the instream flow constraints. the new appropriation of water was then included in the
1 For additional explanation of Dual Simulation. see \\\lrb~. Ralph A. 2(J07 Wafer Rlgh,.\ Anulysl,l Package (Wu"/PJ .\Iode/JIl1/ System {"ler,1
:\falllrai Tl{~256. Texa!> Water Resource$ in.'Hitllle. College Station. Texa~. Pp. lJ4-lJ6
Bra:os River Allthority
Permi! 585/
Pag.e 8 of 14
second simulation (which generated the final results) as follows:
a) All BRA reservoirs are refilled with any unappropriated water at the priority date of this
application.
b) Diversions are made, backed up by system storage in all BRA reservoirs, and
c) All BRA reservoirs are then refilled again to ensure that all water potentially available under the
permit application is impounded.
To determine the amount of water available for appropriation, Staff first evaluated the applicant's request
for finn water, i.e., that amount of water that would be available 100% of the time during the period of
record. The request for finn water was modeled using the TCEQ Full Authorization simulation, which
does not include return flows. Staff evaluated the requests for firm yield water at the three points
requested in the application; from upstream to downstream being Glen Rose, Highbank and the Gulf of
Mexico. The most downstream point for measurement of instream flow requirements is the Richmond
gage. Staff calculated the amount of flow available to BRA at the Gulf of Mexico by determining the
amount of flow available at the Richmond gage and applying a drainage area ratio relationship between
the Richmond gage and the WAM control point representing the basin outlet at the Gulf of Mexico.
The analysis was conducted for two scenarios. The first simulation included Allens Creek Reservoir at its
fully authorized amounts for storage and diversion, and was used to detennine the amount of water
available for appropriation after considering all water rights at their fully authorized amounts. The second
simulation was conducted to deternline if the water appropriated for Allens Creek Reservoir could be
I
used more efficiently by the BRA, in conjunction with other water rights requested by this application,
(
until such time as Allens Creek Reservoir is constructed. The amount of firm water available to BRA is
indicated in Table 2. below. To the extent that removal .of the requirement for wet season pulses at
Richmond resulted in additional unappropriated water, staff recommended the additional amount.
The application requested an amount of additional water that would be available on a reasonably
dependable basis. The application states that this water would be available if 90,000 acre-feet of firm
water was used, along with other sources available to the applicant, to produce the additional supply;
Pursuant to 30T AC §297.42(d), Staff may recommend granting applications that are not based upon the
continuous availability of historic, normal stream flow on a case-by-case basis. A system operation in
conjunction with other water rights is an application that may not be required to be based on the
continuous availability of historic, normal streamflow. The applicant has requested that the additional
amount of water be evaluated using the criteria in 30TAC §297.42(c). that is, 75% of the water is
available 75% of the time when distributed on a monthly basis (75175 criteria). Staff modeled this request
using the Full Authorization simulation and included the applicant's estimated CUITent return flows.
Model results (Table 3.) indicate that additional amounts of water are available to the applicant using the
7517 5 criteria.
T a bl e 2 N ew Aqlpl'oprmtlOn 0 fW ater ('mc Iudes All ens C ree {)
Volume in acre-feet
Location Firm Non-Firm
Glen Rose 131.363 157.000
Highbank 144,306 303.000
Richmond 188.470 670.000
Gulf of Mexico 191.516 670.000
Bra=os RIl'el' Authority
Permit j8jJ
Page 9 of 14
Table 3. New Appropriation of Water (does not include Aliens Creek)
Volume in acre-feet
Location Firm Non-Firm
Glen Rose 131,363 190,000
Highbank 175,306 284,000
Richmond 237,920 869,000
Gulf of Mexico 241,765 869.000
No InjUJ'Y Review
The application requests authorization for operational flexibility to use any sOUrce of water available to
BRA to satisfY the diversion requirements of senior water rights to the same extent that those water rights
would have been satisfied by passing inflows through the BRA's reservoirs on a priority basis. The new
authorization requested in this pennit has a priority date junior to most basin water rights. Although
changes in operations for BRA's existing water rights resulting from additional operational flexibility
have the potential to affect river flows in the Brazos River and its tributaries, Staff is of the opinion that
implementation of accounting measures should mitigate any impacts to senior and superior water rights.
These accounting measures should be part of the accounting/delivery plan, which should be included in
theWMP.
The application requests authorization to release, pump and transport water from any of the BRA's
reservoirs for subsequent storage, diversion and use throughout the BRA's service area. The request to
release, pump and transport stored water should have no effect on other basin rights so long as BRA
obtains the appropriate bed and banks authorizations as needed. In addition, special conditions requiring
BRA to maintain an accounting of water in storage by priority date should mitigate any impacts to
downstream senior and superior water rights.
The application requests that the Commission recognize that the System Operation Permit will prevail
over inconsistent provisions in the BRA's existing water rights regarding system operation. This would
include existing limitations on the percentage of reservoir storage allowed to be used in system operations
and identification of sources of supply. Specifically, the existing system operation order requires the BRA
to exclude tributary reservoirs from operation of the system during any period of time in which BRA's
permitted storage space is less than 30% full. The application states that the Commission's review and
approval of the BRA's Management Plan will provide equivalent safeguards and, at the same time, allow
the BRA greater operational flexibility. Staff agrees that there may be inconsistent provisions and
recommends special conditions to clarify inconsistencies while protecting other basin water rights.
Conclusion
Based on the revie,," and analysis of this application. staff can support granting the application provided
the permit contains the special conditions proposed by Resource Protection staff and additional special
conditions as indicated below.
A. inte"hasin Transfer and Bed and Banks
The water requested for exempt interbasin transfer will be authorized with a priorit) date of October IS.
2004 and as such will be among the most junior rights in the Brazos River Basin. Therefore. there can be
Bra:os River Authol'Il)'
Bm;os Rive,.lJm';II
Page 10 oflS
no effects on existing water rights and staff can recommend granting this request.
Staff can recommend authorization for the use of the bed and banks of streams already authorized in
BRA's cun'ent permits, certificates and amendments, subject to identification of specific losses. Staff
recommends that the permit contain the following special conditions:
1. The lise of the bed and banks of Aliens Creek from below Aliens Creek Reservoi I' to the Brazos
River is not authorized until Pennittee applies for and is granted an amendment to Permit 2925A.
2. Permittee is authorized to use the following reaches, authorized in Permittee's celtificates and
amendments, for conveyance of water, previously appropriated to the Pennittee and water
authorized by this pennit, downstream for diversion at Glen Rose, Highbank and the Gulf of
Mexico and any of the Pennittee's currently authorized diversion points within these reaches:
A. Brazos River from below Possum Kingdom Reservoir to the Gulf of Mexico
B. Leon River from Lake Proctor to the confluence with the Little River
C. Lampasas River from Lake Stillhouse Hollow to the confluence with the Little River
D. Little River from the junction of Leon and Lampasas Rivers to the confluence with the
Brazos River .
E. Yegua Creek from Lake Somerville to the confluence with the Brazos River
F. Navasota River from Lake Limestone to the confluence with the Brazos River
3. Prior to use of the bed and banks identified in Special 'Condition A.2. above, Pennittee must
submit to and have approved by the Executive Director, as part of its accounting/delivery plan, a
procedure to estimate daily deliveries of water. This procedure should be in electronic fonnat and
detail by source, type and priority date, the amounts to be conveyed and delivered, losses
associated with the conveyance, specific points of diversion, associated travel times, and times of
commencement and termination of transit for conveyed waters. Documentation of actual
deliveries as well as the accounting/delivery plan shall be maintained by the Permittee in
electronic fonnat and made available to the general public during normal business hours and to
the Executive Dil'ector upon request. Modifications or changes to the accounting/delivery plan
must be approved by the Executive Director.
4. The use of the bed and banks of additional streams and tributaries in the Brazos River Basin for
conveyance of water appropriated under this permit, or other sources available to the Permittee, is
subject to Permittee, after identifying specific sources and types of water, specific points of
discharge and diversion, and conveyance and other losses. obtaining future authorizations to
satisfy the requirements ofTWC § 11.042.
5. The use of additional points of diversion within the reaches specified in Special Condition A.2.
above is subject to Permittee, obtaining authorization to use those diversion points. The points of
diversion may also be identified and included in Permittee's proposed WMP which is subject to
Commission approval.
B. Reuse of Return Flows
Staff can recommend granting BRA authorization to reuse retul"ll flows discharged from BRA facilities or
originatin" from dive;sions ~nder BRA's water rights. as indicated in Table-I. above. subject to the
folrowing~pecial conditions to protect water rights gran'ted based on the presence or those retu;'11 flows as
Bra:os RiveI' AurhoriT;l'
Bro:os Rh'er Basin
Page 11 oriS
well as other senior water rights:
I. Prior to the diversion of return flows authorized by this permit, Permittee must submit to and
have approved by the Executive Director, a reuse accounting plan. The reuse accounting plan
must be in electronic fonnat and account, by source, for all return flows discharged and
subsequently diverted. The reuse accounting plan should include amounts discharged by outfall.
amounts of return flows used by permits gl'anted based on the presence of these retum flows, and
estimated travel times and conveyance losses from discharge point to diversion point(s). If the
return flows will be stored in Permittee's reservoirs, the reuse accounting plan should include any
evaporative losses associated with the storage. Pennittee shall maintain the approved reuse
accounting plan in electronic fonnat and make it available to the general public during normal
business hours and to the Executive Director upon request. Modifications or changes to the reuse
accounting plan must be approved by the Executive Director. The reuse accounting plan shall be
included as part of Permittee's accounting/delivery plan.
2. The right to divert discharged retum flows from plants owned by the City of Granbury (TPDES
Pennit No. 10178002), Acton MUD (TPDES Pennit Nos. 14211001 and 14212001), Bell County
WCID #2 (TPDES Pelmit No. 1109000 I), City of Georgetown (TPDES Permit Nos. 10489002
and 10489003) and the City of Holland (TPDES Pennit No. 10897001) is limited to the amount
of surface water based return flows discharged from those plants that originates from water rights
owned by the Permittee. Pennittee is not authorized to diveli groundwater based retum flows
\ discharged from these plants, except as may be authorized by Special Condition B.4 .. Pennittee
( must include in the reuse accounting plan the total amount discharged from the plants and the
percentage of that water that is divertable undel' this permit.
3. Permittee is authorized to divert historically discharged groundwater based retulll flows from the
Brazos River Authority/LCRA BCRWSS West (TPDES Permit No. 10264001).
4. FutUl'e discharges of groundwater based retum flows may be diverted if those retum flows
originate from groundwater owned by Pelmittee or are discharged from treatment plants owned
by the Permittee. Prior to diversion, Permittee must apply for and be granted an amendment to
this permit authorizing these diversions and shall submit for approval by the Executive Director, a
revised accounting/delivery plan addressing such new groundwater based discharges ...
5. Pennittee is authorized to diveli only that water discharged by the City of Marlin (TPDES Permit
No. 10 II 0002) originating from water rights owned by the Permittee. Permittee shall calculate
the divertable amount of the City's discharge and include this information in the reuse accounting
plan.
6. Permittee shall only divelt the actual annual amount of return flows discharged from the Bell
County WClD #1 (TPDES Permit Nos. 10351001 and 10351002) and the City of Harker Heights
(TPDES Permit No. 10155001) less up to 172 acre-feet as authorized by Permit 4218.37 acre-
feet as authorized by Pel111it 5088 and 60 acre-feet as authorized by Permit 5089 when the
aforementioned permits are being used.
7. Diversions and storage of retum flows shall not occur at rates or in amounts higher than the actual
daily amount of ret~rn flows discharged into watercourses in the Brazos 'River Basin. after
accounting for the calculated losses and travel time from the discharge point(s) to the diversion
point(s) in accordance with the accounting/delivery plan.
Bra;Q5: Rm:r Aufhorily
Bra:os R,ver Basin
Page 12 of 15
8. Prior to diversion of the water authorized herein, if sufficiently accurate measuring devices are
not available, Permittee shall install and maintain measuring device(s) capable of measuring
within plus 01' minus 5% accUl'acy, at the discharge point of each wastewater treatment plant
(WWTP) to record the amount of return flows discharged into the Brazos River or its tributaries
on a daily basis.
9. The priority date for diversion of up to 116,434 acre-feet (103.899 mgd) of return flows is
October 15,2004.
10. The priority date for diversion of future return flows in excess of 116,434 acre-feet (103.899
mgd) of discharged return flows is October 15, 2004 but is not subject to call by senior and
superior pelmit holders in the basin and is not subject to instream flow limitations.
11. Prior to diversion of any return flows in excess of the individual TPDES Permit limits indicated
in the Table 1. Retul'l1 Flows Available to BRA, Permittee must apply for and be granted the right
to reuse those return flows. Permittee must amend the reuse accounting plan to include future
return flows prior to diverting sa id return flows.
12. The diversion of up to 116,434 acre-feet (103.899 mgd) of water is dependant upon potentially
intenl.lptible return flows 01' discharges and is conditioned on the availability of those discharges.
The right to divert the discharged return flows is subject to revocation if discharges become
permanently unavailable for diversion and may be subject to reduction if the return flows are not
available in quantities and qualities sufficient to satisfy the pennit. Should any of the discharges
become permanently unavailable for divel'sion, Pelmittee shall immediately cease diversion of
those return flows and reflect such reductions in the reuse accounting plan.
13. Pel1l1ittee's diversion and use of return flows is subject to interruption by direct use or indirect
use within the discharging entity's corporate limits, extraterritorial jurisdiction, or contiguous
water certificate of convenience and necessity boundary, provided the discharging entit), has
applied for and been granted authorization to reuse the retul'll flows.
C. Unappropriated Water
Staff can recommend granting reduced amounts of unappropriated water as follows:
Table 4. New Anoro dation of Water
Volume in acre-feet
Location Firm Water Non-Firm 'Vater
Glen Rose 131,363 157,000
Highbank 144306 303.000
Richmond 188.470 670.000
Gulf of Mexico 191.516 670.000
!Jra:o,t Rlvcr Authority
!Jra:o,1 n;1'cr Basill
P(lJ!,1! 13 of I;
Table 5N ew A , I ude A lens Creel<)
.ppropnatton of Water (does not mc
Volume in acre-feet
Location Firm Non-Firm
Olen Rose 131.363 190,000
Highbank 175,306 284,000
Richmond 237,920 869,000
Oulf of Mexico 241.765 869,000
In order to ensure that existing basin rights are protected, the following special conditions should be
included in the pennit:
1. Prior to diversion or storage of the additional water authorized by this pelTIlit, Pennittee shall
provide to and have approved by the Executive Director, a daily accounting/delivery plan that
includes, at minimum, the following:
a. The accounting/delivery plan shall address reservoir storage and withdrawal plans for
each system reservoir and account by priority date and amounts for any inflows,
evaporation, water in storage and diversions from the reservoirs under all o{ Permittee's
priority dates and authorizations including reuse.
b. A method to account for inflows to system reservoirs for .purposes of compliance with
special conditions requiring passage of pulse flows and estimation of those inflows.
c. An accounting of instream flow and pulse requirements to include total system storage,
I gage flows at the measurement points, high flow pulse volume impounded and the release
( schedule for the impounded high flow pulse, and timing, magnitude and duration of pulse
flows.
d. The accounting/delivery plan must detail how measurements will be taken to detennine if
impoundment or diversions under either Permittee's senior orjunior rights can be made.
e. The accounting/delivery plan must identify, accou;lt for, and distinguish between finn
and non-firm water supplied or delivered from Permittee's system of reservoirs. In
addition, the accounting/delivery plan must specify diversion points for this water if those
diversion points are not specifically identified in this pennit. Any additional diversion
points must be within the reaches where use of the bed and banks is authorized. Any
diversion points outside those reaches will require an amendment to this pennit.
f. Permittee shall maintain the approved daily accounting/delivery plan in electronic format
and make it available to the general public during normal business hours and to the
Executive Director upon request. Modifications or changes to the plan must be approved
by the Executive Director.
') If the total amounts of firm water indicated above are divelted at Glen Rose or Highbank. the
additional amount of firm water available below those points is reduced accordingly. Permittee
shall include the amount of that reduction in the accounting/delivery plan.
3. The full additional amount of non-firm water is only available when the amount of firm water is
reduced by 90.000 acre-feet at Glen Rose, Highbank and the Gulf of Mexico. If less than the full
amount of non-firm water is used, the amount of the finn water reduction shall be adjusted
propOltionately.
4. The non-firm water authorized above includes 74.387 acre-feet of historically discharged return
flows. A reduction in firm yield waler is not required in order to divelt these retul1l flows
\' Bl'a:os River Allthorit),
8l'a:os RIver Basin
Page 14 of 15
5. The remaining 42,047 acre-feet of retul11 flows out of the total amount of 116,434 acre-feet of
return flows (Table I.) may be divelted by the Permittee so long as the total diversions under this
permit for all of the authorizations do not exceed the amounts of firm water and non-finn water
indicated in Tables 4. and 5., above unless Permittee applies for and is granted the authorization
to divert additional amounts of water.
6. Permittee may not exercise a priority call on water rights in the Brazos River Basin with priority
dates seniOr to October 15, 2004 for purposes of increasing storage in and/or diversion from
Permittee's system reservoirs where drawdown of Permittee's system reservoirs is caused by
compliance with the terms and conditions of this pelmit.
7. The request for operational flexibility to use any source of water available to Pelmittee to satisfy
the diversion requirements of senior water rights to the same extent that those water rights would
have been satisfied by passing inflows through the Permittee's system reservoirs on a priority
basis is limited as follows:
a. To water previously stored in Pennittee's reservoirs as documented in the
accounting/delivery plan required in Special Condition C.I. above.
b. Use of this option shall not cause Permittee to be out of compliance with Special
Condition C.1. and Special Condition C.6.
I 8. Pelmittee may divelt water from storage in its pel1nitted reservoirs and store that water in
( Pennittee's other reservoirs for use within the Pennittee's service area so long as all diversions
and storage are included in and comply with the provisions of the accounting/delivery plan and
Special Condition C.1. above.
9. The total amount of water divelted and released from Permittee's system reservoirs in any year
for each authorized purpose of use may not exceed the cumulative authorized total for each
purpose until Pennittee applies for and is granted amendments to the underlying authorizations.
10. Pennittee is required to comply with the existing System Operation Order and certificates of
adjudication requiring Pennittee to exclude tribut81Y reservoirs from operation of the system
during any period of time in which Permittee's pel1nitted storage space in that reservoir is less
than 30% full (until all system reservoirs al'e below 30% capacity, at which time the reservoir can
resume system opel'ation), until such time as Permittee submits, and the Commission approves. a
WM P for the Brazos River Basin which details how such limitations will be altered. Any
alterations to the limitations must be in compliance with the accounting provisions required in
Special Condition C.I above.
11. Until such time as the POlts are closed on the dam impounding Allens Creek Reservoir,
authorized by Permit 2925, Permittee may impound and divert additional unappropriated water as
specified in Table 5. subject to Special Conditions C.l. through C.l O. above.
12. Permittee shall prepare and submit to the Commission. a Water Management Plan (WMP) which
shall include such studies and other information as may be required by the Commission to
demonstrate Permittee's compliance with and its ability to comply with all of the Special
Conditions included in this permit.
, .
Bra;os River All/hority
Bra:os Rivet Basil!
Page 15 of 15
13. The initial p)'oceedings to consider the adoption of the WMP, and any major amendment thereof,
shaH be pursuant to contested case procedures. Any proceeding to consider the adoption or major
amendment of the WMP shal1 be preceded by notice and 0ppOltunity to request a hearing, in
accordance with the Commission's regulations applicable to water rights permitting proceedings.
The WMP shaH provide an adaptive management strategy for water supply and thus may be
amended from time to time upon the request of Pennittee or on the Commission's own motion,
The initial accounting/delivery plan shall be submitted as pm1 of the WMP.
TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL OUALITY
INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM
TO: Office of the Chief Clerk DATE: March 20, 2006
Texas Commission on EnvirOllllental Quality t~ ..~
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THRU: Kellye Rila \LJl-- E8
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FROM: Kathy C. Hopkins, Project Manager =If;'~i~~i>
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Water Rights Permitting Team 0
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SUBJECT: Bradley B. Ware 0rn 1..;JJ
CN60l474224,RN1028424l6
Application No. 5594A to Amend Water Use Pennit No. 5594
TWC § 11.122, Requiring Mailed and Published Notice
Lampasas River, Brazos River Basin
Bell County
The application was received on November 17, 2005. Additional infonnation and fees were,
received on February 8, 2006. The application was declared administratively complete and
accepted for filing on March 20, 2006. Notice is being published and mailed pursuant to TAC
§295.l58 to the water rights holders of record in the Brazos River Basin.
Bradley B. Ware has applied fo,' an amendment to its existing Water Use Permit on the
Lampasas River, Brazos River Basin, in Bell County to extend or delete the expiration date of
November 7,2007, add an additional 31 acres for in'igation, and to divert and use an additional
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20 acre-feet of water .
,,,';,,tio., ;, _""", fm fill ,g.
Kathy C. Ho~ins '
Water Rights Permitting Team