Video of the Week

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

H20 : The New Oil

With the continuing drought and the strive to compete for more and more water, a recent Supreme Court ruling have turned a few heads. In this editorial by the Austin American Statesman, the authors questions the ruling that was made regarding how groundwater would be regulated under one's property. The ruling made it possible for property owners to pump as much water out underneath their land as possible. This has made regulating water essentially the same as regulating oil and gas. This ruling has also encouraged property owners to sue the water districts for compensation. There are 96 water districts in Texas. Each districts tries to strike a balance between a landowner's needs and the needs of other Texans. The ruling has a opened Pandora's Box in regards to the amount of litigation that ensue in the months ahead when landowners will catch onto this scheme. The regulators and landowners will fight over the meaning of "reasonable". What is fair for the landowner to use and how much will other Texans get. The authors try to pinpoint the logic behind this decision only to come out pondering what in the world were the justices thinking when they approved of this measure. Of course, the authors said it in a much nicer tone by filtering it with much more words. I concur with the authors about preserving property rights but what about the non property owners; do we cast them aside? Do we tell them to "go find their own water"? Is there a point where the government can step in to say, "hey you need to share with everyone else." I certainly believe so, ground water does not just flow beneath their land, but it connects with other sources and one landowner should not have the rights to take away all of that water for themselves. When will people realize that Texas is more than half desert and the need for water is not just a problem for landowners, but a problem for us all. I'm all about sharing but if landowners are gonna get greedy, then what is the point being nice to them? I'm not a mean person but i do hate greed.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Repeat After Me: Education Is Important!

While Governor Perry was on the trail during his doomed campaign for the White House, Texas lawmakers began to further cut down the state's dwindling education budget. According to this post on the Burnt Orange Report (BOR) website, lawmakers slashed a total of 5.4 billion dollars in education funds while his Governorship was away. This indeed caused quite a stirred among the members of the Texas State Teachers Association (TSTA) and the Democratic party. With elementary school classrooms size exceeding the legal limit due to the closures of schools of previous cuts, one would think that the cut would be unwise; but then again the people running the show in this state don't think. Education should be the among the last to be cut if not cut at all, but hey what do I know; subsidizing an archaic cloth industry in South Texas seems to be more important. Keeping ranchers happy in this state is a serious business. The TSTA have began to launch a petition to tell his Governorship to  call a special session in order to reverse the cuts. We would wise to sign this petition in order to save our future generations.