Public Citizen Testimony in Support of HB 482 — Notice to Legislators of TCEQ Administrative Actions
Public Citizen Testimony in Support of HB 482 — Notice to Legislators of TCEQ Administrative Actions
To: Chairman Brooks Landgraf and the Members of the House Committee on Environmental Regulation
CC: Vice-Chair Claudia Ordaz, Rep. Rafael Anchía, Rep. Keith Bell, Rep. Ben Bumgarner, Rep. Penny Morales Shaw, Rep. Tom Oliverson, Rep. Ron Reynolds, Rep. Steve Toth
Via hand delivery and by email.
From: Adrian Shelley, Public Citizen, ashelley@citizen.org, 512-477-1155
Re: HB 482, TCEQ notice of administrative actions – Public Citizen support
Dear Chairman Landgraf and Members of the Committee:
Public Citizen appreciates the opportunity to testify in support of HB 482, relating to the provision by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to the pertinent state representative and state senator of notice of certain administrative actions of the commission.
Last session this bill as SB 813 (88R) passed the House and passed this committee 8-0.
HB 482 would provide legislators with notice of administrative actions by TCEQ.
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality issues about 1,000 administrative orders each fiscal year to resolve violations of environmental laws.1
At present, the only way for a state Senator or Representative to receive notice of these administrative actions is to monitor the general notice procedures followed by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. This is very difficult to do in practice.
HB 482 would send each state Senator and Representative notice of each administrative order issued in his or her district. This includes penalties and settlement agreements.
Notice to members of penalties could improve compliance with environmental laws. Most permit holders are good faith actors who genuinely want to comply with the law. If local elected officials are more aware of violators, they might exert public pressure that brings them into compliance. This would have the effect of reducing violations of environmental laws, which means cleaner air, water, and land for the public.
Polluting facilities are concentrated in certain districts.
Polluting facilities are not evenly distributed across the state. Certain House and Senate districts have a disproportionate number of such facilities. The TCEQ does not track administrative orders by county or district, but we can count the number of facilities in a county that report air pollution in the TCEQ’s Point Source Emissions Inventory.2 Doing so for the 2023 PSEI, we find that 184 counties have facilities hat report air pollution data to the TCEQ. The top ten counties are as follows:
County # of polluting facilities County # of polluting facilities
Harris 264 Wise 57
Dallas 67 Nueces 43
Tarrant 65 Chambers 38
Brazoria 60 Bexar 37
Jefferson 58 Galveston 35
This data shows that members in Harris County especially might have an interest in receiving notice about penalties and administrative orders in their districts.
Compliance with HB 482 should not burden the TCEQ.
The bill does not have a fiscal note, as the agency is expected to be able to absorb the additional burden of notice to members who request it.
In conclusion, we ask you to support HB 482 because it will provide members of the legislature with notice about TCEQ administrative actions in their districts.