Suing Polluters: Texas Again Considers Curbing County Attorneys

Jackie Young at San Jacinto River Superfund site tells why local lawsuits are important in our Radio Story

Dave Fehling / StateImpact

Jackie Young at San Jacinto River Superfund site tells why local lawsuits are important in our Radio Story

After being the target of intense lobbying that drew criticism in last year’s Texas legislature, lawmakers will again hear why big business wants restrictions on local governments that go after polluters in court. The House Judiciary Committee will take up the issue at a hearing May 16th.

Bills to curtail pollution lawsuits by local governments died in the last legislative session.

“I wasn’t surprised to see it still out there. There’s an effort to limit cities and actually it’s been going on for several years now,” said Bennett Sandlin, Executive Director of the Texas Municipal League.

Sandlin cites cases like one recently in which Ector County sued an oil field services company after acid was dumped into Odessa’s sewage system.

“This is a situation where cities — to protect their water supply — occasionally have to go after polluters who aren’t being adequately regulated at the state or the federal level,” Sandlin told StateImpact. “Cities are not real anxious to do this, it’s not in their wheelhouse to bring environmental litigation it’s just when you have a case like pouring toxic chemicals down a sewer system, cities feel backed into a corner and in some cases they have to do this.”

Counties Hire Private Lawyers

Last year, there was a bill to give the Texas Attorney General the power to settle environmental lawsuits without the consent of local government. Another tried to restrict local litigation by banning city and county governments from using private law firms to file the suits.

Harris County is using private lawyers in on-going litigation over a decades-old waste dump along the San Jacinto River which now involves companies including Waste Management Inc. which acquired a company previously liable for the site. The county has used similar tactics to go after AT&T Services Inc. for underground gasoline storage tanks that leaked.

Big industry says those tactics are an unfair money grab by local governments. Industry groups say private lawyers will try to inflate their fees by getting big penalties against companies that may have already agreed to do clean-ups under agreements with state or federal environmental regulators.

“The state’s objective is clean up the contamination and make someone else other than the taxpayers do it,”  said Steve Minick, VP of Government Affairs at the Texas Association of Business.

“if everyone one of those companies can be sued by the local jurisdiction solely to collect money the state didn’t collect…(then) no company in their right mind in Texas is going to build their company on property that’s ever been used for commercial industrial purposes,” Minick told StateImpact.

‘One of the State’s Most Serious Challenges’

Those concerns apparently led House Speaker Joe Straus to put the issue back under consideration, listing it among the “interim charges” that he wants next year’s session of the Texas Legislature to address.

But supporters of local government litigation ask, why?

“Lawmakers should not be bringing this up, lobbyists should move on,” said Alex Winslow, Executive Director of Texas Watch, a corporate accountability group. He contends it’s a case of big industry wanting the more “business friendly” state regulators to have the final say in pollution cases.

“Polluters would rather have those bureaucrats in Austin handle these matters than local authorities that are accountable directly to their communities,” said Winslow.

Comments

  • browningtx

    Absolutely crazy. The state of Texas wants to get in the way of cities and counties trying to make life better for their citizens. And then on the other side, Texas state officials have sued the EPA to keep them from improving air quality. The Loon Star State, indeed! (with a tip of the hat to Ben Sargent, in the Texas Observer.)

  • browningtx

    Great reporting. Thanks!

  • glock49

    Already a national embarrassment in many ways, my home state of Texas continues to find new ways to race to the bottom when it comes to taking care of its citizens. The U.S. is known internationally as a nation which places a very high priority on money and business, and among all the states, Texas is perhaps the leading example. What an embarrassment. Conservative Texas legislators find ways to protect corporations that do harm to citizens; what about protecting the citizens for a change? Portland, here I come…

    • Chance Pemberton

      I agree and what do you have after all is said and done if you can’t drink the water, breathe the air or touch the soil?

  • KingCranky

    Surprise, surprise, surprise, big business against corporate accountability.

  • Chance Pemberton

    Here’s the bottom line, you pollute, you pay. Trouble is business wants to pollute our environment free of charge, well too bad, time to pay up. It is a shame that cities have to take matters into their own hands because the state is not doing it’s job.

  • Chance Pemberton

    Our biggest problem with regard to the state failing to take care of the environment is directly related to Rick Perry and his Republican legislature. And no, you can’t leave politics out of it because it is politics……….and money.

About StateImpact

StateImpact seeks to inform and engage local communities with broadcast and online news focused on how state government decisions affect your lives.
Learn More »

Economy
Education