Darby Denounces 'Character Assassination' Over Potty Water

 

State Rep. Drew Darby had scolding words for the person or group who mailed an anonymous form letter to residents of San Angelo attacking Councilwomen Elizabeth Grindstaff and Charlotte Farmer.

Darby spoke to the San Angelo Rotary Club Friday at noon. He pulled the letter he received in the mail from his coat jacket and held it up. He didn’t pull any punches.

“The purpose of the letter is to say, ‘vote them out of office’ [about] Elizabeth Grindstaff and Charlotte Farmer,” Darby said.

Darby said the letter was against what he is convinced is the City of San Angelo’s best option to solidify San Angelo’s long-term water supply challenge: wastewater reclamation.

The letter:

Tired of San Angelo’s ‘tax and spend’ Fat Cat politicos who don’t want tax paying citizens to vote on important issues like the potty water for drinking proposal and other high dollar ideas? This insane project is not affordable! San Angelo already has the highest per capita debt in the United States! If you hate the idea of having your family drinking or bathing with life-threatening toilet water, call the ‘Chief Potty Water Promoters!’ Tell them ‘no toilet water for drinking in San Angelo.’

It listed the cell phone numbers and home addresses of the councilwomen,  two of three females on the council.

[[{"fid":"19236","view_mode":"default","type":"media","attributes":{"alt":"A photo of the letter. ","title":"A photo of the letter. ","height":"854","width":"1200","class":"media-element file-default imgbody"}}]]
Above: A photo of the letter Darby denounced Friday. 

“Don’t ever take seriously any piece of literature that you get where they (the authors) don’t care enough about their issue to sign their name,” Darby said. “They should (have) signed their names to it, tell you who is supporting this initiative, and how they’re funded, and what their ultimate purpose is.”

[[{"fid":"7176","view_mode":"preview","type":"media","attributes":{"alt":"State Rep. Drew Darby gets things going at the West Texas Legislative Summit in San Angelo on Wednesday. (LIVE! Photo/Matt McDaniel)","title":"State Rep. Drew Darby gets things going at the West Texas Legislative Summit in San Angelo on Wednesday. (LIVE! Photo/Matt McDaniel)","height":"811","width":"978","class":"media-element file-preview imgbody"}}]]
Above: State Rep. Drew Darby. (LIVE! Photo/Joe Hyde)

“This is character assassination. I’ve been victimized by it.  I know Carmen (Dusek) and Andrew (Graves) have also been victimized by behind-the-back innuendos and references that they don’t have a chance to refute,” Darby said.

Dusek and Graves recently were candidates in heated contests for judge and district attorney respectively and were sitting in the audience.

The letter was mailed in opposition to the City of San Angelo’s effort to begin building a $136 million wastewater reclamation plant that will convert wastewater into drinking water. Currently, Wichita Falls and Big Spring have similar plants.

Proponents of the plant argue that it is the only reliable short- and long-term solution. The design parameters for the proposed San Angelo plant is to recycle 88 percent of all wastewater, or as some call it, potty water.

Darby explained why he is a strong proponent of wastewater reuse and is in favor of San Angelo moving forward with the project.

“My service on the (City of San Angelo) Water Advisory Board informs me that we have invested heavily in surface reservoirs and there’s very little water in them,” Darby said.

In the mid-2000s, Darby urged the city to build the Hickory pipeline to capture water the City of San Angelo owned located deep underneath McCulloch County. “And we were within a very few short months of being absolutely dependent upon the Hickory for our basic needs when we brought that project online (in 2014),” Darby said.

He added, “I will be there for the city when it needs the funding to build this as a member of the Texas Water Development Board.” The TWDB provides low-interest loans from the state government to Texas municipalities and other local government entities to procure water sources.

A political firestorm over the cost and the safety of the wastewater reclamation project has ensued since the council tabled moving forward to get financing for the project at the Feb. 2 city council meeting.

During that meeting, Water Advisory Board member Chuck Brown explained why he was the lone dissenting vote and against recommending the $136 million project to council. His primary concern was that the water wasn’t proven to be absolutely safe. He cited four articles he had previously emailed to all members of the council.

Brown’s stated primary health concern was a question of how well pharmaceutical waste is cleaned and if the remnants are properly monitored in existing plants.

Water Utilities Director Bill Riley noted that at least two of the articles Brown submitted are from the late 1990s or early 2000s and that science has improved a great deal since then. He also noted that the articles concluded that wastewater reclamation is the future. (We do not have copies of the articles Brown shared, but will attach them to this story if we can obtain them.)

“I urge you to read them,” Riley said to the council.

Brown also felt that there were other options that should be considered before spending what can be 100 percent of the city’s water enterprise fund’s available credit for one capital project.

A second Water Advisory Board member, Kendall Hirschfeld, told the council on Feb. 2 he should have voted against the project at the WAB with Brown.

In late 2015, the city council approved spending $1.5 million for a pilot wastewater reclamation project. What Hirschfeld understood then, when he voted in favor of recommending moving forward with the expense, was the project was a true “pilot” project to prove wastewater reclamation was viable. Since then, Hirschfeld said, he has learned that the $1.5 million project was not a pilot at all, but an integral part of the design of the $136 million plant itself. In other words, when the council approved spending just $1.5 million, they were making a down payment on the entire project—akin to drawing up the architectural plans.

Hirschfeld urged the council to put the brakes on everything and allow the Water Advisory Board to investigate other options before moving forward. “I am not anti-wastewater reclamation. It may be the best option, but we need to look at all other options first,” he said.

Earlier in the discussion, Councilwoman Elizabeth Grindstaff asked pointed questions. 

“We just spent $122 million on the Hickory and that doesn’t solve much of our water shortage problem. What is to say after we spend $136 million on this we aren’t in the same situation?” she asked.

One option opponents of the wastewater reclamation frequently mention is the Red Arroyo project. Chuck Brown, who is also the Director of Operations at the Upper Colorado River Authority and a storm water expert, has a convincing presentation of the idea.

The Red Arroyo water capture proposal is undergoing a study by consultants that should be complete in April. That project proposes to capture storm water runoff from San Angelo and store it in deep water pools or tanks near the banks of the Concho River.

Exactly how many acre-feet of water this project will provide varies wildly depending upon the source.

Riley and Darby do not place as much value on the Red Arroyo idea as a sustainable water source because for it to be successful, it has to rain. The water utilities director’s mission is to find a sustainable water supply for San Angelo in a drought. Rain or shine, there will always be plenty of wastewater, he contends.

To Riley, wastewater reclamation and the Red Arroyo are apples and oranges in comparison. Yet both may be soon be competing for the same limited capital funds to build one or the other.

Darby agrees with Riley and argues the alternatives to wastewater reclamation that Hirschfeld, Grindstaff and Brown seek are going to be as expensive if not more.

“We’ve looked all around the San Angelo area. All of the cheap water is gone. There will never be another surface water reservoir built in Texas, certainly [not] in west Texas. So where do we look for the next project?” Darby asked.

Darby listed other options that have been on the table now or in the past, such as a pipeline from the Lake Amistad area, finding other underground sources of water, and etc. All of them have large price tags, he said.

There are challenges to getting water from were it is located to where it is useful, Darby said. “There’s enough water in Texas to sustain us all, it’s just not located where we need the water.”

All other options require going a great distance, at a great expense, having to trample over private property rights, Darby said. “Landowners may not want a pipeline running across their property; landowners may not want you taking water out of their county.”

The West Texas Water Partnership, a joint venture of the cities of Midland, Abilene and San Angelo, is looking at a project that may cost $500 million or more, Darby said.

Lacking other options, wastewater reclamation makes more sense, he said.

That is because it will give San Angelo 9,000 acre-feet of water that the citizens here will have complete control and can reuse it as many times as we want, Darby said.

Since the Feb. 2 council meeting, no further action in public has been taken on moving forward with the $136 million project. According to the minutes on the city’s website, the Water Advisory Board hasn’t met since Oct. 2015.

Cash flow to finance the project with long-term debt is already baked into the recent water rate increases.

With a city council election upcoming May 7, expect wastewater reclamation to become the top issue.

--

Correction: Originally published that Farmer and Grindstaff where the only two females on council. The author forgot that Lucy Gonzales was elected to represent SMD 4 in May 2015. The story is updated.

Subscribe to the LIVE! Daily

The LIVE! Daily is the "newspaper to your email" for San Angelo. Each content-packed edition has weather, the popular Top of the Email opinion and rumor mill column, news around the state of Texas, news around west Texas, the latest news stories from San Angelo LIVE!, events, and the most recent obituaries. The bottom of the email contains the most recent rants and comments. The LIVE! daily is emailed 5 days per week. On Sundays, subscribers receive the West Texas Real Estate LIVE! email.

Required

Most Recent Videos

Comments

It always amazes me how out of touch with the way the world works some people can be. The truth is that all the water San Angelo (and other cities) uses is in effect potty water i.e. water that has previously been used by some other human, animal, plant, etc.. In a broad sense, we are drinking the potty water of dinosaurs and mammoths and the people that were here before Columbus. It's been treated and recycled by natural processes that make it safe enough to drink. Getting closer to home San Angelo's "potty" water (waste water for the P.C. among us) after going through our local treatment plant eventually makes it down stream into the Ivey reservoir, where San Angelo (and several other communities) retrieves it, treats it, and eventually makes more potty water. Truth is that there is not water available that isn't at least part waste water. The question is not whether or not San Angelo will drink waste water. The question is whether or not capturing the waste water before nature has had a chance to do the heavy natural treatment is safe and cost effective and what can be done to ensure and verify that safety and cost effectiveness.

That being said, it's way to early to commit to such an expensive project until some basic research has been done and critical questions answered. Yes, there are cities that are already using recycled water. The long term issues, pluses and minuses are still being tracked, analyzed and debated. The question for the future is not if we will be using recycled, treated waste water but how much of that treatment will be left to nature and how much will be done by man.

I just commented previously with my thoughts on reusing "potty water". Now I want to address a couple misconceptions that are apparent in the mailing Rep. Darby received that was posted.

First off, it's ludicrous to single out two council members on an issue where they are clearly in step with the majority of council in a consensus that's existed for over a decade. Ms Grindstaff and Ms Farmer are very vocal in supporting their positions but no more so than many of the rest of the council. If you replaced everyone on council that shared their perspective on water issues, we would effectively have a completely new council after the elections.

Another misconception is that the city council can put issues such as this before the public for a vote. We expect the to call for a referendum, even a non-binding one, just so the citizens can have input in these type of important decisions. Truth is that there are very few issues the City Council can put before the voters. State law severely limits what councils can put before voters. If it's not specifically spelled out in the Texas Constitution or statutes (like the 1/2 cent sales tax is) or specifically in a city charter (like recall and citizen organized initiatives and referendums are in our charter) then it can't be put on the ballot by the city council. You want to get waste water on the ballot, start a petition drive, get enough verified signatures of registered voters, and it will (must) be put on the ballot. City Council can't do it any other way.

If you're going to complain about positions and actions by city council members, at least complain about all the the members that share in those positions and actions. And if you're going to ask for the council to do something like put something before the voters, please make sure it's something the city council can actually, legally do.

No way will I vote for drinking "pottywater" and I don't know anyone that will. I've lived in San Angelo all my 80 years and I've never seen a place that has had so many pipelines put in. We could take all of those pipelines, dig them up and run them to the gulf and remove the salt water and have plenty of water.

Every molecule of water on earth is "potty water." The fatuitousness of the content in the postcard is dismayingly stunning in its ignorance.
The fact the senders did not reveal who they are not only is reprehensible and cowardly, it likely is illegal.
The thuggish inclusion of addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses of two of the three female members of the city council is a bullying tactic every citizen should reject with revulsion.

Gus:

I'm so pleased that we have a wordsmith such as you to let folks know that they should mind the words their 'betters' may say from time to time. On Mar 12, 2016 4:25 pm CST, Martin Farris posted information that indicates he knows a bit about such mailings, and indicates that State Law permits such mailings, so your strong, stern statement of 'it likely is illegal', is only your opinion. In my opinion, your use of words such as, 'ignorance', 'reprehensible and cowardly', 'thuggish', and 'bullying', are complacently stupid, or foolish. Have a great day!

of the most obvious solution to the problem, and that is to stop wasting large amounts of water on landscapes. It's a lot easier to cut usage then to find more water. Of course, since the city is in the business of selling water...

I've done my part, Martin. 100% xeriscaped yard; I haven't watered my yard for three years. Electricity comes from solar panels, too. Two recyle bins. We need to recyle our water, too. Simple science.

on the postcard, I'm part of an informal group that has been doing mailings to oppose the Wall ISD school bonds. It's a postcard, if we put all our names on the card there would be no room for anything else, and state law does not require it for mailings that cost less than $500 to publish and distribute, which our mailings don't. Who is supporting this initiative is largely irrelevant, read what they have to say and make up your own mind whether you agree with it, or is the real reason for wanting to know to target them? Have we reached the ridiculous point in this country where who said it is more important than what was said? How they’re funded is also pretty much irrelevant, you either agree with the message or you don't. If it was paid for by a certain party is it going to change the accuracy of what was said, or are we just too lazy to ascertain that sort of thing ourselves without knowing who paid for it? What their ultimate purpose is appears obvious, they don't want to drink their own toilet water, and they sure as heck don't want to pay for the project to make it happen. And no, I didn't have anything to do with this particular postcard and really couldn't care less either way, I live outside the city and have my own water sources.

Why do we have twice a week watering? it's not needed, never has been... When San Angelo was in the BIG drought, it went down to once a week and everyone was ok with that..I don't care what the paper work says, change it back to once a week.!!!!!!!!!! With that being said, maybe we won't have to drink "potty Water" It just makes sense.... P.S. garbage pickup went from twice to once a week. Get my point? Water more important !!!!!!

Lbar, Sat, 03/12/2016 - 17:54

It is true that all water on earth has been recycled as previous wastewater. Recently, there have been some complaints about the chemicals and unknowns that would be in this purified wastewater. Isn't that what the purification process is supposed to do... remove all of these impurities and make it a highly purified drinking water even better than bottled water? Could this purified wastewater be even safer and tastier than what we currently get out of our river?

Mr. Clemens is a wise man.

Once in a while I experience some delirium and give some consideration to moving back to San Angelo. Then sanity kicks in and I do a mental CTL-ALT-DELETE to flush that notion. Many of the people there are beyond marvelous and I love them, but I have lived in too many other places to ever think that is where I would be most happy. The place has significant chinks in its armor.

Having said that, were I ever to give in to such a lapse in logic, I would certainly do things like xeriscape. I would maintain a wee bit of greenery in the back yard so the dogs could do their business in a setting more to their liking, but I would water this greenery with grey water. I would recycle to the fullest extent possible there. I would at least give consideration to augmenting my use of electricity with solar sourcing.

I would try to have a minimal environmental impact. The area is, after all, at best semi-arid. I really don't care whether folks think the heating of the planet is being caused significantly by us primates (I happen to think we ain't helping one bit), but we all have to deal with the result. San Angelo in the best of times has been on the edge of a desert, and if things continue to go the way some pretty smart folks think, things will only get worse.

Food for thought, folks.

Lbar, Sat, 03/12/2016 - 18:58

Expat: I have also lived in many different states and cities. I, like many good San Angelo people, would never live anywhere else. This is the best city in the State of Texas. We do live on the edge of the Chihuahuan desert, and it does continues to encroach on us as it moves east. San Angelo leaders will find a water source and solve this problem. It doesn't happen overnight. And many here would do as you say, xeriscape, small yard, grey water, etc.. However, it is very expensive to do those things and many here are on limited budgets. But as I drive around this wonderful town, many people are making the effort. San Angelo will survive as the best city in Texas......BAR NONE!

is not that expensive, and if you add up the total lifetime cost for a xeriscape vs a lawn (mowing, fertilizer, watering, etc.) it is actually a lot less expensive. CA (and this will probably be the only time you see me citing CA as an example for how to do something right) finally figured it out and started paying owners to rip out their lawns and replace them with xeriscapes. Maybe the local spendthrifts should redirect their spending urges in that direction.

I have drunk Wichita Falls and Big Sprig tap water several times this last year and I'm still up and running. In fact, both cities have much better tasting water than Angelo.

About three years ago a friend of mine told me that he had called a member of the city council and asked about holding ponds for capturing runoff from the red arroyo . My friend told me that the council member thought he was crazy . Well i'd sure like the city to try that idea before we resort to drinking sewer water , it may be safe , but it doesn't sound right . Ever since then , when ever it rains i have made it a point to go to the bridge on south Bryant and looked at all the precious water going down stream . It doesn't take much rain to get it going . The city should consider the cost of this before they lay down another gazillion dollars on yet another pipe line to the moon project .

Lbar, Sun, 03/13/2016 - 11:24

The Red Arroyo is a drainage system for municipal storm water runoff. This water would contain untreated raw sewage from manhole overload, pesticides, herbicides, heavy metals like LEAD, garbage and street waste, E. coli, dog feces, and the list goes on and on. When it is allowed to travel down the Concho to Lake Ivie, it receives considerable natural degradation and dilution, so it is not as hazardous as a water source. Straight out of a retention pond would be very, very dangerous.

By some accounts the city is the greatest waster of water. Some reports have stated "lost water" at greater than 25%. These leaks go unnoticed for years. Repairs are made only when there is a gusher! If we "develop" a new water source, it too will be wasted.

SURVEY OF MUNICIPAL WATER LOSS PRACTICES IN
TEXAS
http://www.twdb.texas.gov/publications/reports/contracted_reports/doc/2003483511.pdf

"Economic Level of Leakage (“ELL”):
This is a calculation based on the cost of reducing leakage. It is the theoretical
level at which the cost of leakage reduction meets the cost of the water saved
through leakage reduction. These costs include not only the cost of producing
water but also the avoided cost of replacing the water. "

The telling line here is "These costs include not only the cost of producing
water but also the avoided cost of replacing the water. " in our case its many millions of dollars to replace 25% or about 2 million gallons per day lost.

We are drinking that water any way , with all that good stuff added to enhance the taste . It all comes down to what is less costly .

twr_98, Mon, 03/14/2016 - 13:06

Take the treated water, and send it to Nasworthy where it can dilute. We could be doing that with our current treated water but it goes down the river to be used as water for crops. Otherwise we can pipe it to OC Fisher to just wait until we need it. Just MHO.

“Don’t ever take seriously any piece of literature that you get where they (the authors) don’t care enough about their issue to sign their name,” Darby said. “They should (have) signed their names to it, tell you who is supporting this initiative, and how they’re funded, and what their ultimate purpose is.”

“This is character assassination. I’ve been victimized by it. I know Carmen (Dusek) and Andrew (Graves) have also been victimized by behind-the-back innuendos and references that they don’t have a chance to refute,” Darby said.

Mr. Darby, I present you this definition; character assassination; a slandering attack, especially one intended to damage the reputation of a public or political figure.

I read the image of the card in the article above, and I must have missed the character assassination.

Just my opinion. Have a great day!

Post a comment to this article here:

X Close