Posts Tagged ‘Bastrop County’

Authorities probe suspected cock fight

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Cedar Creek, Tx–A Bastrop County constable and officers from the sheriff’s department broke up what might have been a cock-fighting party in far southwestern Bastrop County on Saturday afternoon with 50 or more people in attendance.

Pct. 3 Constable Matt Henderson said he was in the area about 2 p.m. June 27 when he was asked to respond to a complaint on Royal Road, not far from the intersection of FM 812 and Old San Antonio Road. At the scene he found at least 25 autos and 50 or more people, along with evidence of cock fighting, including dead chickens, fighting gear and what appeared to be a fighting pit, said Henderson.

The constable said he called for backup and tried to keep as many of those in attendance as possible on the site.

Those responding to the incident included Sheriff Terry Pickering, Sgt. Richard Cole who heads the criminal investigation division, criminal investigator Arnold Gonzalez and half a dozen other deputies, according to sheriff’s department records.

Pedro Moreno Maldanado, 44, possibly the owner of the property on Royal Road, was jailed later Saturday on a charge of animal cruelty. He was released Sunday after posting $7,500 bail, according to jail records.

Sheriff’s department officials did not respond to requests for further information Tuesday.

Monday airport hearing yields high drama

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Bastop, Tx–Monday’s 7 p.m. hearing before Bastrop County commissioners was a sterling example of how exciting local political theater can be in these parts. The issue was whether the county should endorse a private general aviation airport proposal put forward by James Carpenter of Austin-based Carpenter & Associates. The proposed site is north of the Colorado River across from the new Cedar Creek High School and the Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort and Spa.

For building dramatic tension and emotion-releasing resolution, I don’t recall such a riveting show in years, though we’ve seen some pretty good dust-ups in that time. Even the famous Austin City Council marathon hearings have seldom matched the intensity and clarity of Monday’s impromptu theater in Bastrop. And it took less than two hours from start to finish.

The protagonist, of course, was Carpenter himself with his ample silvery hair. It’s not clear yet, however, whether he was the hero caught in an unexpected ambush or merely acting bravely in the face of looming disaster. Think, perhaps, of George Armstrong Custer with his flowing locks at the Little Big Horn River. I must stop short, I think, of comparing Bluebonnet General Manager Mark Rose to Crazy Horse or some other Sioux war leader, but by the end of the evening Monday he certainly counted coup on Carpenter.

Here’s the deal. Carpenter & Associates wants the Texas Legislature to created a special municipal utility district (MUD), perhaps with enhanced powers, to aid the creation of the private airport and associated business/industrial park proposed for a 2,000-acre site between the Colorado River and the intersection of FM 969 and FM 1704 southwest of Elgin.

But State Sen. Glen Hegar and Rep. Tim Klienschmidt won’t carry this water in the Lege without the express backing of county commissioners and the Bastrop City Council. Bastrop City Manager Mike Talbot is worried by some of what he’s hearing about the deal, and Bastrop County Judge Ronnie McDonald won’t call by a vote by commissioners without public input and airing some relevant issues.

Residents of a nearby upscale subdivision have already complained to the city council about potential deleterious effects on their rural tranquility, personal safety and property values. Hyatt officials aren’t entirely pleased either, evidently, and a Bastrop school trustee has written a critical letter to the editor of the local newspaper.

Hence Monday’s hearing. Carpenter was forced to face a skeptical public or pack up his tent and ride off over the hill, at least until the next session of the Texas Legislature. A similar hearing is set for 6:45 p.m. April 14 before the Bastrop City Council.

McDonald was expecting a testy crowd and engaged the services of a public meeting manager to keep the proceedings civilized. The room was packed when the meeting convened, the atmosphere was tense and largely hostile to the airport cause.

Carpenter, backed by a team of consultants, associates and aides, was fluent in arguing that the airport is a money-maker, does not involve public funding, and will boost the local property tax base as well as attract additional jobs and businesses. It will be safe and won’t bother anyone at the Hyatt or the new high school, he said. And future high-dollar development will be attracted to the area because the airport will cater to affluent customers, he added.

Questions from the crowd were typically tinged with hostility. Some were answered by repeating earlier points in Carpenter’s presentation, some were dodged, and some were answered frankly. (Yes, Carpenter went through bankruptcy in the late 1980s. “FAA approval” of the proposed airport means only that its flight patterns won’t interfere with activities at other nearby airports.)

Judge McDonald assured the audience they will have a chance to voice their opinions (not just ask questions) at a later session, but before he closed the session he allowed brief remarks by Bastrop school trustee (and former county commissioner) Johnny Sanders who called for commissioners to consult with the school board before acting on the Carpenter request.

Of course, Sanders also works for Rose, and McDonald allowed the general manager to offer his own comments. And Rose blew the roof off.

In accusatory terms he declared that Hyatt officials are alarmed by the airport prospect and that Carpenter tried to sneak his propposed MUD bill through the Legislature without first consulting local officials. Rose also thundered that the proposed MUD law is no ordinary local matter because it would grant developers “enormous powers” (including eminent domain) and would authorize “a super MUD” beyond the control of local governments. “(If approved) it will forever change the character (of the Bastrop area),” Rose said. The proposal “is outrageous at best,” he added, to a tumult of applause from the crowd.

Carpenter did not attempt to reply before McDonald gaveled the session to an end.

County commissioners in Bastrop okay wildfire recovery measures, waive redevelopment fees

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–With the Wilderness Ridge Fire fully contained Monday, Bastrop County commissioners agreed to waive a series of ordinary development fees for home and business owners who undertake to rebuild on properties ravaged by the 1,500-acre wildfire which broke out about noon Feb. 28.

Roughly two dozen homes and perhaps half as many businesses were destroyed over the next two days, plus an uncounted number of vehicles, outbuildings and other personal property.

For qualified owners in the affected areas along Cottletown Road between Park Road IC and the Colorado River who were affected by the wildfire, development fees will be waived for at least the next year, commissioners decided. The fees include those associated with site development, onsite wastewater disposal systems, driveway/culvert installations and disposal of debris at the county’s solid waste transfer station, said Julie Sommerfeld, the county’s developmental services manager.

For details, visit the development services office at 806 Water St. in Bastrop or call 581-7176.

Sommerfeld estimated the forgiven fees will likely range from about $10,000 to as much as $30,000 if all the damaged properties are redeveloped over the coming year.

Mike Fisher, the county’s emergency management coordinator, said other state and federal aid is being sought to offset fire losses which will amount to millions of dollars. Fisher also noted that more than 400 threatened homes, six business structures and as many as 44 recreational vehicles were saved by the combined efforts of hundreds of local and state firefighters, plus personnel and equipment from state agencies and other units from as far away as North Carolina and Michigan.

The Wilderness Ridge blaze was Bastrop County’s worst since May 1984, when some 900 acres of the Lost Pines area was burned along with six residences, according to Fisher.

Bastrop County (TX) hires toad habitat manager

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

Bastrop, Tx–Bastrop County has hired Roxanne Hernandez as its first administrator to oversee management of its innovative habitat conservation plan aimed at protecting the endangered Houston toad in the Lost Pines area, mostly east of Bastrop and north of the Colorado River.

Hernandez holds a wildlife management degree and has been working for the Lower Colorado River Authority as a right of way acquisition manager, said Pct. 2 County Commissioner Clara Beckett.

Hernandez was in the news earlier this year when she helped organize a non-profit group to provide volunteer support for the Bastrop County Animal Shelter.

After years of study, debate and research the citizen-driven habitat conservation plan for the Houston toad in Bastrop County was approved by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the agency charged with enforcing the Endangered Species Act, earlier this year. The county budget for FY 2009 includes funds for plan administration.