Wednesday, June 8, 2016

HAVE THE HIKE-AND-BIKE FOLKS READ U.P. DEED TO COUNTY?

A new state law that took effect Oct. 15, 2015, exempts information about freight rail cargo from Maine’s Freedom of Access Act. While shipping crude oil by rail, as illustrated in the 2013 photo in Hermon, has largely ceased, a spokesman for the environmental group 350 Maine questions whether the new exemption is meant more to quell protests than to protect business interests or promote better communication between railways and first responders.
By Juan Montoya
As word spreads that the installation of Eddie Treviño, the newly-elected Democratic Party nominee for Cameron County Judge for the November general election will not happen until the results are in, those of his supporters allied with the group advocating a hike and bike trail for the abandoned Union Pacific Railroad right-of-way, might be feeling a little edgy.
What if a vote is taken by the county commissioners today – or before the November general election – deciding that they will go ahead and build the planned road or a combination road hike and bike trail?
Once a decision has been taken and the plans are drawn up (perhaps they are already for the bidding process) it'll be very difficult, even with a legal challenge, to take the authority the deed gives the county commission to do as it pleases with the 100-foot wide, eight-mile easement that Union Pacific has granted the county.
In Government 101, our teachers inculcated in us that government is a process of give and take and compromise. However, given the stridency demonstrated by some hike and bike trail supporters, compromise may be out of the question and a battle might be in the offing.
That battle, however, has to take place within the parameters of the deed without warranty that the Union Pacific Railroad conveyed to Cameron County. Included in the deed are several restrictions that pretty much tie up the grantee's ability to do much with that stretch of land.
Image result for ALEX DOMINGUEZ, BROWNSVILLE TEXASIn the deed, conveyed to the county August 5, 2015 and accepted by Cameron County Judge Pro-Tem Pct. 2 commissioner Alex Dominguez, the county "accepts this deed and agrees for itself, its successors and assigns, to be bound by the covenants herein."
Dominguez said that U.P., in trying to shield itself from any liability of people coming into contact with any potential hazardous substance contamination that has accumulated on the land after more than 100 years of its cars and engines hauling dangerous substances and chemicals, was reluctant to yield on the county's wish to include a hike and bike trail option in the deed. Union Pacific did not want it originally but grudgingly accepted its inclusion when the county insisted.
Here are some of those covenants:

1. Union Pacific retains all mineral rights and prohibits such exploration by the county. If any such exploration is performed, it will have to be 500 feet below the surface of the property.

2. The county – within 180 days – agreed to remove railroad trackage and track appurtenances or it would be in a breach of the covenants contained in the deed.

RESTRICTIONS:

1. The county may use the property for hike and bike trail purposes (including, but not limited to, structures constructed on paved ground that support the trail use, such as water fountains, restrooms, and benches), for roadways, or for any other use not consistent with the terms...

2. The property must not be used for any of the following purposes:
1.) residential
11.) lodgings or accommodations (including, without limitation, hotels, boarding houses, dormitories, hospitals, nursing homes,, or retirement centers) or
111.) Cultural, educational, or child-care facilities (including without limitation, schools, kindergartens, day-care centers, gymnasiums, athletic fields, picnic grounds or parks). Notwithstanding any other provisions herein, the term "picnic grounds" and "parks" expressly do not prohibit structures being constructed on paved ground that support hike and bike trail use as described herein.

If the county decides it wants to do remediation ($$$$$$), it is authorized to do it at its own expense to the extent required by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Until the county complies with the TCEQ rules, regulations, ordinances, laws and other requirements, and obtains a Certificate of Completion, it may request the UP release the restriction on the prohibited uses.
When and if it does that, UP may (or may not) issue the release.

And even if the TCEQ does not require remediation, the county cannot just go ahead and use the property as it wishes. Its request to remove the uses restriction has to be accompanied with analytical data and other evidence satisfactory to UP. Only when UP determines, at its sole discretion, that the data is sufficient to warrant unrestricted use of the property will it release its uses restriction.

U.P. made sure it would incur no liability for potential chemical contamination making the transfer in an "as is, where is" condition and states that the county acknowledges that it accepted the land on the basis of its own investigation of the "physical and environmental conditions of the property, including the subsurface conditions and  (it) assumes the risk that adverse physical and environmental conditions may not have been revealed by its investigation."

Likewise, U.P. required that the county release it from "all claims, suits, actions, causes of action, demands, rights, damages, costs, expenses, penalties, fines or compensation whatsoever, direct or indirect, which (the county) now has or which (it) may have in the future on account of of or in any way arising out of or in connection with the property (including, without limitation, "ANY CONTAMINATION IN, ON, UNDER OR ADJACENT TO THE PROPERTY BY ANY HAZARDOUS OR TOXIC SUBSTANCE OR MATERIAL), OR ANY FEDERAL, STATE, OR LOCAL LAW, ORDINANCE OR REGULATION APPLICABLE,...INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE TOXIC SUBSTANCES CONTROL ACT, THE COMPREHENSIVE ENVIRONMENTAL RESPONSE, COMPENSATION AND LIABILITY ACT, THE RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT, THE TEXAS SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL ACT AND THE TEXAS WATER CODE..." EXISTING, NEW, OR CHANGES IN EXISTING LAWS THAT WOULD "IMPOSE ON (UP) ..NEW LIABILITIES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS AFFECTING THE PROPERTY..., REGARDLESS OF ANY NEGLIGENCE OR STRICT LIABILITY OF (U.P.) ITS EMPLOYEES, AGENTS, OFFICERS, SUCCESSORS OR ASSIGNS."

We're not lawyers here, but that seems to pretty much exclude nature trails or any park or structure that is not built on a cap of asphalt. Taking into consideration that millions have already been spent by the county, the state and the federal government to build a boulevard, it is highly unlikely that the county can now decide it will end up repaying the money it has been awarded to plan for the road (even if it is not a toll road).

How about it? Give and take? Compromise?
Or a useless battle which will be governed by the restrictions in the deed that conveyed the property from Union Pacific to Cameron County.

There are more complications. The deed that covers the rail switching yards abutting Fronton Street also came from Union Pacific. That's where the City of Brownsville has agreed to enter into an agreement with Sam Marasco's San Diego, Calif., LandGrant Development's plans for a railroad switch yard deal to build a tax-funded downtown revitalization district. The "facilitator" for this little money maker is none other than Ambiotec's (and United Brownsville cum OP 10.33) Carlos Marin.

According to the presentation, the area envisioned for the project is bounded between East C. Street and East Fronton Street and between South 11th Street and East Fourth and the land bounded by Sam Perl Blvd. and the Rio Grande and between the B&M Bridge and the Gateway Bridge."

The company presented the Feasibility Recommendation Plan (FRP) and the Riverfront and the Railroad Reuse Plan (RRUP). Marasco also made a presentation before the city and the port of Brownsville commissioners. Marasco's plans have been approved at public hearing and incorporated into the Foundational Development Agreement between LandGrant and the city.

But if the restrictions on the property are similar to the county's deed on the right-of-way and are respected, it is hard to imagine hotels, nature trails or any other purposes that might put people (especially the elderly, pregnant women or children) in contact with the potentially contaminated ground.

And if the city agreed to these plans for the switching yards (which will be deeded to the Port of Brownsville by the county eventually) is it willing to put up the big bucks to remediate the potential contamination? Or did it enter the agreement without considering the deed restrictions on the land?

19 comments:

Chief cool Arrow said...

Juan if it has been in use for over 100 years as a rail ship route you and I know there will be contamination and the cost for that remediation is VERY COSTLY. I think the County should proceed with caution on this project or maybe even abandon it altogether. In the end is you, me and us the taxpayers that pay for all of these mistakes. I just say NO. CCA

Elver Galarga said...

Have you noticed that Da Blimp never writes about bikes, like Cyclobia. Maybe because it's harder to mount a mountain bike than it is to mount a strapping hulk of a stud. Ya think?

Anonymous said...

To the person writing about Ted Hasse's skin: I don't know the guy, but it could be a genetic thing. Some people age faster and worse than others. I'll go to the forum and check it out myself, maybe shake his hand to get a feel of whatever it is you see. Still, this city is not one for beautiful skin, is it>?

Anonymous said...

Why not give us a map that shows this "path" for bikes or cars. It is hard to discuss this issue without a map. It seems to me that the proposed trail leads downtown. Not sure why bikers or drivers would be going downtown these days. Why not close downtown to automobiles and make it one big bike and hike area. Whether a bike and hike trail or street for vehicles, I am not about to use either. Here, Juan, you advocate following the law....when was that ever a consideration for the corrupt Democrats?????

Anonymous said...

(Maybe because it's harder to mount a mountain bike than it is to mount a strapping hulk of a stud. Ya think?)

I'll bet duardito, the fag, err I mean Lad, from Kyle would know.
Judas.

Anonymous said...

Great let's put a trail and condos where bullets fly or is it the government subsidies and grants there looking for.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous at 2:14. The pest posting about Ted's skin is Duardo Martinez . He's not concerned or anything like that, he's just a bitter individual who is constantly posting idiotic comments . Maybe if we ignore him enough he will go away.

Anonymous said...

The idea that remediation for a trail is more costly than a road doesn't jibe. First, whether they build a road or trail, they'll have to excavate the rail bed + underlying earth anyway and take special measures to haul all that material to the dump, especially with so many houses along the tracks. Second, Oliveira and Dean Porter parks were former dumping grounds - much worse toxic stews than your average railroad. Yet given the limited budget, the city somehow found a way to remediate those areas. Which tells me that remediation isn't much of a problem.

Notably, the author of this post doesn't identify what the "compromise" is. Ladies and gentlemen, the "compromise" is a road with a sidewalk.

The real compromise would be to leave the area alone. Don't drop a dime on it. But the community has been watching this issue for the last 10 years, and it's exceedingly clear that road proponents and their contractor/developer friends will never rest until they cash in on this parcel of land - at the expense of everyone else.

This area will be developed - that's for sure. The question is: Do we spend a huge sum of taxpayer dollars on an unnecessary road (BTW, the author never defends this idea), or do we spend a small sum on a nature trail with all of its economic, social, and health benefits?

Anonymous said...

Fuck you duardy Paz Martinez.....vato joto!

Anonymous said...

No, I'm not Duardo. I'm local and I do think Hasse is strange looking.

Anonymous said...

I want to know why no Republican has stepped up to running against Mr Ed aka Eddie "Teeth" Treviño.

Harambe said...

Toxic chemicals aren't good for gorillas.

Anonymous said...

You seem to be obsessed with his skin,way more than just "thinking ". Grow up and stop wasting your time looking at men.

Anonymous said...

Because Frank Morris drove the all away.

Diego lee rot said...

Someone should just organize a clean the trail day. In the morning just pass out a few bottles of Fabulosa and let the people go at cleaning the trail. Fabulosa cleans anything.

Anonymous said...

Diego, stop embarrassing your family . ..........SHUT THE FUCK UP !

Anonymous said...

Suck my dick Eduardo Paz Martinez, you old, pamper wearing senior citizen. Stop wearing the same shirt idiot, Banana republic stopped making those in the 70's...and get a haircut and expose that residing hairline, Motherfucker!

Anonymous said...

JUAN MONTOYA-why the Commissioners Lies about the Railroad Track the Union Pacific used to go around the City of Brownsville and the Southmost ares and they move all kind of Materials and including Toxic Chemicals the land belongs to the PEOPIE Not the GOVERMMENT.

Anonymous said...

Could it be possible that Eddie Trevino and his buddy Gilberto Hinojosa knew this all along and played the people of the west trail group to block walk for him and give him enough votes to win over Sanchez? I sure as shit bet so! They knew about all of this and yet played all of us who want a trail for votes!! Thats why he would not sign anything promising he would fight for our trail! Damn you Trevino! Wait until reelection! I will be having all my family and friends block walking and supporting your opponent! Once a rat always a rat!

rita