Axios - March 9, 2022
Population growth challenges Texas' Hill Country
Booming population growth, coupled with changing climate patterns, unslakable groundwater thirst and political challenges, leave the Texas Hill Country newly vulnerable.
Driving the news: A recently released report from the Texas Hill Country Conservation Network reveals a region facing profound threats to its future.
The network is a partnership of dozens of organizations working across an 18-county region of Central Texas to protect waterways, vistas and wildlife.
Full Analysis (Subscribers Only)
What they're saying: "The Hill Country's breathtaking vistas, natural spaces, clear waters, abundant wildlife, starry night skies, and small-town charms must not be taken for granted," says Katherine Romans, chair of the conservation network. "The choices we collectively make now will determine whether the region and its inhabitants survive and thrive, or whether we willfully live beyond the means and carrying capacity of this place we call home."
What they found: Less than 5% of Hill Country land has been set aside for conservation as ranches are broken up and transformed into sprawling subdivisions.
Creeks key to the region's recreational economy are under siege from a proliferation of sewage-treatment plants.
Dark skies, vital for the region's quality of life, local tourism economies and wildlife, are slowly brightening.
Between the lines: The Texas Legislature, known for its friendliness toward the real estate industry, regularly rebuffs proposals to give more authority to county governments to regulate land development.
 |