Wednesday, August 9, 2023

AT PASO REAL, A LONG ROAD TO A BEAUTIFUL DESTINATION: $1.5 MILLION DRAINAGE PROJECT WILL END FLOODING, PESTS

Special to El Rrun-Rrun

It has been said that difficult roads often lead to beautiful destinations. 

And in the case of relieving the chronic flooding of homes in Cameron County Pct. 1's Paso Real Subdivision, it has been a journey that started way back in 2015 when an opportunity arose to apply to the Texas Department of Public Safety Division (TDPS) of Emergency Management and the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) to assist residents plagued by a resaca that bred mosquitoes, pests, and other rodents that inhabited the stagnant waterway.

Now, eight years since the initial application was made to mitigate the silted-over and vegetation-overgrown waterway, the roar of heavy equipment echoes through the area roughly bounded by N. Minnesota Road on the west, N. Dakota Road on the west, Travis Road on the north and Houston Road to the south. 

According to the county's panning department, the drainage improvements will benefit population of some 2,415 residents and about 400 homes.  

The resaca which surrounds the subdivision is a section of  the Brownsville Irrigation and Drainage District #1, and is not part of the road and bridge duties of the county. Nonetheless, Pct. 1 commissioner Sofia Benavides said that when the opportunity arose to help the residents with the drainage and health hazards caused by the stagnant and silted-over waterway, she jumped at the chance. 

"Precinct 1 is not a drainage district, but the residents have long complained of the stagnant water coming into their back yards and homes when it rained," she said. "As if that wasn't bad enough, you had swarms of mosquitoes, snakes, bats, tlaquaches, and other animals crawling all over. It was really dangerous for the families who live here." 

For the past month or so, the roar of heavy equipment has echoed through the subdivision as workers constructed a berm to allow them to dredge the silted over resaca which stretches some 1,000 feet to the east and another 2,000 feet to the west and north ringing the subdivision.  (At right, Benavides is given a progress report by County Road Engineer Carlos Sanchez, who grew up in the Southmost area.) 

But the road to a solution has been long and arduous.

The initial application was submitted by the county's Program Management and Development Department back in December 2015, required an archeological survey that was completed by the University of Texas-San Antonio in 2017, the approval by the Texas General Land Office's Disaster Recovery, and the completion of a Hydrologic and Hydraulic Study. 

Only after all these technical studies had been completed did Benavides and the county get the long-awaited  news that FEMA and TDPS Emergency Management Division had approved funding of the project.

"We also got funding from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to help with the county's match, " said Grace Salinas, the county's planner. "It's been a long road, and we've gotten a few extensions from the state, but we're finally getting there."    

"We were awarded $1,459,872 grant from FEMA that was matched by the county at 75 to percent 25 percent match of about $365,000," Benavides said. "Part of that grant included money to rent the heavy equipment that the county does not have. To save money, we are using the county's Public Works crews and workers from Precinct 1. They have been busy operating the equipment to dredge the resaca and clear it so that rain water can flow into the city's drainage system across Minnesota Road."

Pct. 1 Foreman Ruben Rios said that the silt in the overgrown resaca accumulated over the time that it had been neglected so that the drainage pipes were below the silt level, effectively plugging them and bottling the runoff back into the subdivision.

"We had to dredge the sides of the banks and look at the subdivision's plats to find where they were located," Rios said. "We're in the process of clearing the overgrown brush and trees, and even stands of palm trees that grew wild in the middle of the dry water bed. First we clear the overgrown trees and then we come in and dredge the resaca to allow the water to flow when we finish." 

Benavides and road engineer Sanchez said that weather permitting, it should take another six to eight weeks to finish clearing and dredging the length of the resaca on both sides of Paso Real Street. After that is finished, the project will enter into Phase Two and bids will be let out to a private contractor who will install large concrete boxes below the street, the berm will be removed, and the water from the resaca will flow freely into the city's drainage ditch across Minnesota Road.

"We are grading the elevation so that the water will flow from both ends to the middle and into the city ditch," Sanchez said. "We are using some of the dirt and chips from the trees we cut down to  to help the city's landfill to cover their mounds of garbage. Everything is used."

On a recent inspection tour, Sanchez and Rios showed Benavides a stand of palm trees and other trees that have sprouted along the remaining channel carved out by water runoff from the subdivision.

"There were even some hardwoods along the edge,"  Sanchez said. "We had to use power saws to remove them. We might be able to save some of the palm trees by leaving a small island in the resaca. But our main goal is to allow the rain runoff to flow out of the subdivision."

To residents, the clearing of the silted over resaca is something they never thought they would live to see. One woman living along Paso Real Street having a garage sale said residents had resigned themselves to put up with the hazardous conditions of the plugged up drainage.

"When we were told that there was a plan to clear it and make the rain water flow, we thought it was just another false promise," she said. "But now we are seeing that the promises made by commissioner Sofie and the county's officials are coming true. We had been forgotten for so long we found it hard to believe. But you can see the crews working and doing it and realize it is true."

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

✔️

AT THE CITY MEETINGS YOU SHOULD BE TALKING ABOUT.
HOW TO FIX POTHOLES, PREVENT FLOODINGS, A TANKER PICKING UP WATER IN FLOOD AREAS,(ALL OF BROWNSVILLE RESIDENTS).
BUT INSTEAD YOUR MEETINGS ARE ABOUT GIVING MONEY AWAY.
!!!LOSERS!!!!

Anonymous said...

It's a big hole in the ground to hide all the money stolen from the property taxpayers. NOTHING ELSE BOLA DE RATAS!!!!!!

AN UNDERGROUND BANK!

Anonymous said...

Glad they are getting this cleaned up but I wanted to point out that of all the creatures Ms. Benavides mentioned as creating danger for area residents (mosquitos, snakes, bats and opossums) only one is dangerous to people but that one can be very dangerous. In fact, one is the animal that causes the most human deaths worldwide than any other creature and that is the mosquito. However, bats, which unlike mosquitoes do not seek out people, spend their nights eating mosquitoes and other insects so getting rid of bats benefits the much more dangerous mosquito. It is true that bats may carry rabies but the solution to that is easy --- don't touch bats and you will not be bitten. The rabies virus is actually very fragile and dies quickly when exposed to the environment so the only way to get rabies from a bat, or any creature, is to be bitten. So leave them alone to eat insects and they will leave you alone. As for snakes, there are two venomous species of snakes in the Valley, coral snakes and western diamond-backed rattlesnake. Coral snakes do indeed posses a very toxic venom but they are not an aggressive animal and unlike a rattlesnake will not coil and strike at a person. Also, unlike a rattlesnake, they are not pit-vipers. This means they cannot inject venom into a person. They have short fangs that may not even penetrate denim and even if they do, they kinda have to gnaw on you to create an opening in your skin into which they can drip toxins. That means that virtually anyone bitten by a coral snake is holding it in their hands. So don't do that and they are no threat to you. Rattlesnakes may strike a person if they feel threatened but most neighborhoods are not rattlesnake habitat. As to other snakes, the smaller ones eat insects and other reptiles and the larger ones like indigo snakes, bull snakes and rat snakes eat things like rats. Rats are much more of a threat to people and propery than are snakes. But if you like rats, get rid of snakes. By the way, there are no water moccasins in South Texas. Those big, fierce water snakes in the canals and resacas are diamond-backed water snakes and they are none--venomous but, if you are silly enough to grab one they will bite the fire out of you.
And finally opossums. Though they look fierce with big incisors and will hiss and seem aggressive when cornered they are actually timid and no threat at all. Opossums, it turns out, prey on things like ticks and a single opossum may eat hundreds of ticks a year. Ticks that carry a host of dangerous diseases. And since they are immune to rattlesnake venom they prey on rattlesnakes, too. So if you like ticks and rattlesnakes get rid of opossums. But, you may ask, don't opossums carry rabies? The answer to that is no, they do not. A opossum's body temperature is higher than a human's body temperature and is too warm to support the rabies virus. When rabies virus hits a opossum's system it dies.
So, if you have bats, snakes and opossums in your neighborhood leave them alone because they are busy protecting you from things that really are dangerous.

Anonymous said...

Puro Show.

Anonymous said...

City leaders are to blame.
This happens when you do not know how to work with two hands.
(No disrespect for the disabled.)


This only happens when you go to work to get a paycheck.
Everything man-made between space station to underwater pumps need maintenance.

Anonymous said...

No one I know gives a shit about this, Toya.

give some other scandal, ese. Like the price of hamburger meat.

ha ha








Anonymous said...

Y linda que? NADA NADA Y NADA verdad gringo mayorsito!!!

YA SE VENDIO!!!! NUNCA GANAMOS!

Anonymous said...

What about the drainage issues on East Monroe? All that area has been flooding for years.This is in the so called historical district, what a joke.

Anonymous said...



“I pulled into Brownsville, was feelin’ about half past dead / I just need some place where I can lay my head / Hey, mister, can you tell me where a man might find a bed? / He just grinned and shook my hand, ‘No,’ was all he said.”


Anonymous said...

San Benito Greyhound Marching Band getting ready for school year with new show

pobresitos they just learned a new song "when the saints come marching"
notes are color coded.

sanbene sanbene ay Diosito mio mandales un hotdog porfavor.

Anonymous said...

Disney+ hikes prices as sales sink across the company

Ya estufas mickey and goofy have to go been here since the 1940's

Anonymous said...

Do I smell election time?

Anonymous said...

Commissioner Benavides continues to do a good job. Re-Elect Benavides 2024. Experience matters.

Anonymous said...

The only potholes she can fix are in her designated areas which are checked and fixed diligently. For inside city limits streets contact your city officials.

Anonymous said...

Paso real
isn't this like the border fence gap to America

Anonymous said...

This means nothing. What city leaders lives in this area?
Start with the old then with the new.
You need to focus on 4 corners, South most, price Rd,. Tear down convention and make resaca bigger. Make room for More run off water.
You think starting new project makes you think your doing good. Wrong.

Anonymous said...

There will be a great beautiful street and then PUB or some other entity will go tear the street because pipes need to be installed.

Anonymous said...

Que te paso Juan? El sonso that always degrades your post is missing his daily dose of vergamina. He likes it a la Tina Turner "rough."

Anonymous said...

August 9, 2023 at 9:49 AM

YOU FORGOT ONE, THE MOST IMPORTANT ONE! ONE THAT WEARS A BADGE AND CARRIES A LOADED GUN AND IS LICENSE TO KILL, WITH IMMUNITY. YOU CAN STEP ON AN INSECT BUT YOU CAN'T STOP A BULLET. NO SEAS UN IDIOTA.

Anonymous said...

Juan its ELECTION TIME, just like Tony "Me Vistes: Yzaguirre, time to go meet the folks, REELECTION MODE ES TODO. Full steam ahead.

Anonymous said...

9:31am
He will shoot himself first. Just like at the academy.

Anonymous said...

August 9, 2023 at 10:48 AM
Quit insulting the blog owner if you don't like this blog or him JUST MOVE THE HELL OUT OF HERE PINCHE JOTITO MARICON. LEAVE JOTO!!!!!

QUIT THE INSULTS JOTO.

Anonymous said...

August 9, 2023 at 10:48 AM

CHECK OR NO CHECK this blog ain't never gonna close. Las ratas your friends will never succeed on closing this blog. everytime you don't get a check you go into a trandrum and insult everbody here. Its gonna stop soon guaranteed.

Anonymous said...

WOW ITS AMAZING TO SEE SOFIA OUT THERE.......LMAO YOUR OUT LADY.......

rita