Bastrop, Tx–What is he thinking? That’s Jim Carpenter, the leading figure in Austin-based Carpenter & Associates, who is seeking Legislative aid to created a new general aviation facility west of Bastrop between the Colorado River and the intersection of FM 1704 and FM 969. Apparently the firm was pushing its agenda among state lawmakers before winning the essential backing of Bastrop county commissioners and the Bastrop city council.
Apparently no legislation has actually been introduced so far to ease the way for the project, which has already drawn heated public opposition.
County commissioners will convene a public hearing at 7 p.m. Monday on the second floor of the Courthouse Annex at 804 Pecan St. in Bastrop. The city council will conduct a similar session beginning at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall, 904 Main St. in Bastrop.
Carpenter is asking state lawmakers to authorize a special district which will include the borrowing powers of a municipal utility district, some features of a public improvement district and perhaps some powers of eminent domain (the right to condemn property for public uses). The city’s consent is essential for any such plan to move forward because the 2,000-acre site is in Bastrop’s extra-territorial jurisdiction, an area where the city must consent to the creation of such new districts with taxing and similar powers.
Across the Colorado River from the proposed airport site lie some residential subdivisions as well as the Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort and Spa and is less than four miles from the new Cedar Creek High School now under construction at the intersection of Texas 71 and Pope Bend Road South.
The 2009 Texas Legislative session is already more than half over, and lawmakers who represent Bastrop County may be reluctant to push the airport measure without strong signals of support from both county and city officials.
Some local officials have hinted recently they still have far more questions than answers about the Carpenter project.