Tuesday, June 26, 2018

ONCE MORE TO THE LAKE THAT IS BROWNSVILLE TEXAS

Image result for flooding, rrunrrun
By Juan Montoya
It's like a friend told the the guy who had been married seven times and was going for an eighth try,: "One of these days you're going to get it right."

Image result for flooding, rrunrrunIn today's front page of the Brownsville Herald, the two main stories remind us of the nuptials addict. We have the main story of the recent flooding after two days of intermittent storms and the aftermath, and a sidebar on the Supreme Court striking down plastic bag bans.

Former City of Brownsville Mayor Henry Gonzalez used to quip (he was a jock in school) that if a dog peed at Four Corners, the whole of Boca Chica Blvd. would flood. That is not entirely incorrect. After each "flood event" FEMA would come down to Cameron County and tell officials that the county needed a countywide drainage system to prevent such occurrences.

Of course, everyone nodded their head in agreement until they got their disaster relief and then go back to the piecemeal systems in place with floodways, retention ponds, and cleaning drainage ditches until the next big dog came around and relieved himself at Four Corners again.

And there we remain. Drainage District No. 1, which has the same board members appointed when the district was created back in the days when the late Pete Benavides was Cameron County Pct. 1 commissioner, has refined the task of cleaning ditches to a fine art, but the flooding still occurs because despite its massive annexations of city properties, it is still a piecemeal design that does not incorporate all the areas of the city. In fact, the same board members appointed by the county commissioners court remain in office with no elections held by the district in all those years.

The district is now delving into recreation uses for its land, creating a water park on Robindale Road across the street from the Robindale Sewage Treatment Plant.

Its engineer has pointed out that neither the city Public Works nor the Brownsville Public Utilities Board coordinate flood responses with the district and we end up with bottlenecks at the juncture of the systems (resacas, ditches, etc.) that make it almost impossible for the watershed to function naturally as when the water flowed to the Rio Grande. The territorial nature of these entities to protect their turf has long stopped the runoff of rain water and the cooperation to let it flow.

The flow of the water in the river has been greatly diminished with the construction of dams upstream and in northern Mexico. The levee system that was constructed to keep the annual spring rains upstream from flooding downtown. We really can't remember the last time the levees were threatened by the water coming from upstream unless it was the runoff from a hurricane that had struck northern Mexico from the gulf. Now, instead of protecting the city, the levees act to hold the flow into the river and create a reservoir of southeast Cameron County.

We have long advocated the creation of multiple outfalls to the river from San Pedro to Oklahoma Road divert the flood waters to the river instead of waiting for it to drain naturally up the main drains to the Port of Brownsville channel. If the tide is high, it will take that much longer. Instead, we spend millions on silk stocking pet projects like hike and bike trails which do nothing to address the most basic of municipal functions: good drainage.

Image result for plastic bags, rrunrrunNow that the Supreme Court has outlawed plastic bag bans, it will be up to the local grocers to decide whether to maintain the illegal ban imposed by the city upon the residents, or to allow them to give  customers single-use plastic bags again. We have said it time and time again.

There will always be a 10 percent who throw away the bags and create litter. But should the other 90 percent be penalized by having to buy the bags to satisfy the nanny-state instincts of folks like city commissioner Rose Gowen and her ilk?

(The photo at right was taken about a year ago, about ix years after Bownsville’s plastic bag ban was put into effect in 2011. The Texas Attorney General charged that the $1 environmental fee paid  by Brownsville residents who chose to use plastic bags at checkouts were illegal.)

How many years did it take for us to realize that the irrigation-designed system of ditches we relabeled as a drainage system isn't going to do? After each "flood event," Public Works crews set about to patch the potholes washed away by the runoff.

If anything, it's job security for these city workers and the city's administrations literally washing city money down the drains by not addressing the implementation of a real drainage scheme.

We know. Fixing a drainage system is not as sexy as riding around in an expensive bike wearing the latest designer cyclist outfit. But how long must our neighborhoods and street continue to be inundated and torn up by rain waters because we never addressed the most basic of municipal services, drainage?

21 comments:

Anonymous said...

Plastic bags are what clog the drains. You complain about poor drainage but want thousands of bags to be given out every day that will end up cloggin the drains again?

Plastic bags didn't exist in stores before 1980. Everyone used to bring their own bags or get the brown paper bags. Think about it why do we have to put bananas, avocados, pineapples, oranges in little separate plastic bags? And then put those bags into bigger plastic bags? When you are going to peel the orange or avocado or banana anyway. Its not even convenient to have to put it in the bag then take it out of the bag again when you get home, and it makes them rot faster if you leave them in the bag in the fridge. What is the point??? I used to think the only reason groceries started giving away the plastic bags for fruits is because the fractions of weight, the one or two cents that the baggies add to each purchase adds up to serious bucks when hundreds of thousands of people are paying a few extra pennies every time they buy groceries for months and years. Also the faster rotting in the bag makes people throw more food away and have to go to the store more often to buy fruit and veggies which again means more money for the stores. The old brown paper bags eventually broke down into dirt, they didn't last forever clogging up the drainage system or collecting in the resacas. The plastic ones clog our drains and rivers for years after. Don't understand how someone who advocates for better drainage could also be in favor of plastic bags.

Anonymous said...

Mexicans do not know how to govern!

Anonymous said...

There is an alternative to no bags.

Since the grocery stores are the ones giving out most of the bags that end up in our drainage system, why not require the stores to pay a little bit more for compostable bags that eventually dissolve? That way people can keep using their bags, but the bags will dissolve into dirt and won't end up collecting and blocking our drainage system.

It might cost the grocery stores a tiny bit more, but if they don't pay it, we are going to pay it in taxes when the city has to send out heavy equipment to clear out all their plastic bags and the mud and grime packed in the drain tubes. We are paying the price already.

Anonymous said...

Cool, Brownsville newest attraction is flooded properties becoming beach front real estate.
Honestly.
We need to drain the swamp.

Anonymous said...

They use that money from tenaska for drainage issues what is the Mayor and commissioners thinking.Many properties were affected by the rain.PUB had several days warning that the rains were coming and the resacas were not drained and some pumps were not working from i understand.This is unacceptable and PUB and some commissioners should be held accountable.

Anonymous said...

Brownsville is the barrio of the RGV, dude! The rest of the valley expects shit like this to happen to us. Can't you hear them laughing in Harlingen? LOL

Anonymous said...

The stupid commissioners are to busy with getting rid of the untouchable Charles Cabler who has cheated on their mileage claims, and travel allowance, they have not got the time to get the problem of the drainage sorted out, also it doesn't effect the bike trails, as people don't go out in the rain. Investigate the commissioners claims, investigate Charles Cabler and send him to jail, then the commissioners will do their jobs, and sort the drainage problem out.

Anonymous said...

Historically local governments don't cooperate with each other. The members, especally the head of the governments, see dialogue and cooperation as a sign of weakness and that cooperation and compromise means giving up power. They fail to see that progress can only come cooperation. So, a regional or even county drainage system is impossible and regional or county water district cooperation and unification is impossible. They had rather pray that there are no more floods than to give up any power. True Democrats....refusing to cooperate in order to improve the region, county or community to benefit all or most of the citizens/customers. The idea of "patronismo" rule in the RGV. Four Corners will likely flood forever....Henry Gonzalez is right.

Anonymous said...

The answer to this problem is a BOAT-BIKE. Exclusively sold by RG & Associates design by Babosos Inc. subsidy of BH50Y. FlyBike coming soon.

Anonymous said...

Plastic bags shut funk up that wasn't the reason brownsville streets got flooded.

Anonymous said...

It's all Trump's fault.


Anonymous said...

Why didn't Brownsville city' officials issued sandbags for its citizens? A lot of flood damage to homes could have been prevented had the city would have handed sandbags to the citizens. Another example of poor leadrship, God protects us from a major hurricane because we have. City officials who are always in the reactive mode.

Anonymous said...

Hey, I know...Let's build a city in a river's flood plain and then wonder why it floods!

Anonymous said...

Who's the owner of that dog? Look for the owner and give him a citations. END OF PROBLEM!!!
Go back to your priority TRAIL BIKES

Anonymous said...

There were no funds for sand bags the monies went to patch the bike trails.

Anonymous said...

We need to focus on the positive that our city has to offer. Wether it be free mediocre esucation at BISD or our proximity to the beach and whatever else positives that our city has to offer that i cant seem.to think of.now.

Anonymous said...

Great Ideal at 8:17am:

I know bike trails. La chiquiada wants to prohibit gas stations to sell gas (hers) within the city limits and 10 kilometers over the Extraterritorial jurisdiction limits

Anonymous said...

on the positive Wether free mediocre esucation i cant our proximity
Great idea like better teachers

Anonymous said...

Mediocre esucation? You must be one of those illegals demanding more and more when they don't even pay taxes. I resent you stating that BISD has mediocre education when all it does throughout the year is show the nation that Brownsville does do something right. Look at all the awards we get in so many different areas and the number of scholarships that our children get every year. They qualify for entrance into Ivy League schools and not like you that probably had to take remedial classes at TSC before you were let in if you even applied. Don't know something that you don't support. Just do something to make it better.

Anonymous said...

WRONG he's a racist republican hillbilly or a redneck or both, not an illegal. Typical teacher always blaming one of their own.

Anonymous said...

Always blaming the illegals why not the hillbillies or red necks or trump or yourself idiota! Pinche gringa -O- COCO.

rita