Description: It is the purpose and intent of the District's Regulatory Plan to establish policy in the areas of groundwater regulation, permits and enforcement and to establish District regulatory areas and associated regulatory requirements. A Regulatory Area is defined as a geographic subdivision of the District in which goals are established to reduce groundwater withdrawals by specific deadlines.The 2013 Regulatory Plan has been developed for the period through the year 2035 with an overall goal to reduce groundwater withdrawal to no more than 10% of total water demand. This Regulatory Plan may be amended prior to year 2035.
Service Item Id: 10b64240ac4f4bd89c0b57f39790689d
Copyright Text: Harris-Galveston Subsidence District
Description: It is the purpose and intent of the District's Regulatory Plan to establish policy in the areas of groundwater regulation, permits and enforcement and to establish District regulatory areas and associated regulatory requirements. A Regulatory Area is defined as a geographic subdivision of the District in which goals are established to reduce groundwater withdrawals by specific deadlines.The 2013 Regulatory Plan has been developed for the period through the year 2035 with an overall goal to reduce groundwater withdrawal to no more than 20% of total water demand for Regulatory Area 2. This Regulatory Plan may be amended prior to year 2035.
Service Item Id: 10b64240ac4f4bd89c0b57f39790689d
Copyright Text: Harris-Galveston Subsidence District
Description: It is the purpose and intent of the District's Regulatory Plan to establish policy in the areas of groundwater regulation, permits and enforcement and to establish District regulatory areas and associated regulatory requirements. A Regulatory Area is defined as a geographic subdivision of the District in which goals are established to reduce groundwater withdrawals by specific deadlines.The 2013 Regulatory Plan has been developed for the period through the year 2035 with an overall goal to reduce groundwater withdrawal to no more than 20% of total water demand for Regulatory Area 3 unless the permittee is operating under a certified GRP. Beginning with permits issued in 2025, a permittee operating under a certified GRP shall be required to reduce and maintain groundwater withdrawals to comprise no more than 40% of the permittee's annual total water demand. Beginning with permits issued in 2035 and continuing thereafter, a permittee operating under a certified GRP shall be required to reduce and maintain groundwater withdrawals to comprise no more than 20% of the permittee's annual total water demand.This Regulatory Plan may be amended prior to year 2035.
Service Item Id: 10b64240ac4f4bd89c0b57f39790689d
Copyright Text: Harris-Galveston Subsidence District
Description: It is the purpose and intent of the District's Regulatory Plan to establish policy in the areas of groundwater regulation, permits and enforcement and to establish District regulatory areas and associated regulatory requirements. A Regulatory Area is defined as a geographic subdivision of the District in which goals are established to reduce groundwater withdrawals by specific deadlines.The 2013 Regulatory Plan has been developed for the period through the year 2035 with an overall goal to reduce groundwater withdrawal to no more than 70% of total water demand for Regulatory Area A as of January 2014. Beginning in January 2025, a permittee shall be required to reduce and maintain groundwater withdrawals to comprise no more than 40% of the permittee's total water demand.This Regulatory Plan may be amended prior to year 2035.
Description: It is the purpose and intent of the District's Regulatory Plan to establish policy in the areas of groundwater regulation, permits and enforcement and to establish District regulatory areas and associated regulatory requirements. A Regulatory Area is defined as a geographic subdivision of the District in which goals are established to reduce groundwater withdrawals by specific deadlines.The 2013 Regulatory Plan has been developed for the period through the year 2035 with an overall goal to reduce groundwater withdrawal. Permittees within Area B are not subject to groundwater reduction requirements or disincentive fees. The District will continue to evaluate water-level and subsidence conditions within Area B boundaries and may adopt groundwater reduction requirements in the future. This Regulatory Plan may be amended prior to year 2035.
Description: A Certificate of Convenience and Necessity (CCN) is issued by the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT), and authorizes a utility to provide water and/or sewer service to a specific service area. The CCN obligates the water or sewer retail public utility to provide continuous and adequate service to every customer who requests service in that area. The maps and digital data provided in the Water and Sewer CCN Viewer delineate the official CCN service areas and CCN facility lines issued by the PUCT and its predecessor agencies. This dataset is a Texas statewide polygon layer of water CCN service areas. The CCNs were digitized from Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) county mylar maps. The mylar maps were the base maps on which the CCNs were originally drawn and maintained. CCNs are currently created and maintained using digitizing methods, coordinate geography or imported from digital files submitted by the applicant. TxDOT digital county urban road files are used as the base maps on which the CCNs are geo-referenced. It is best to view the water CCN service area data in conjunction with the water CCN facility line data, since these two layers together represent all of the retail public water utilities in Texas.*Important Notes: The CCN spatial dataset and metadata were last updated on: October 1, 2021The official state-wide CCN spatial dataset includes all types of CCN services areas: water and sewer CCN service areas; water and sewer CCN facility lines. This CCN spatial dataset is updated on a quarterly, or as needed basis using Geographic Information System (GIS) software called ArcGIS 10.3.1.The complete state-wide CCN spatial dataset is available for download from the following website: http://www.puc.texas.gov/industry/water/utilities/gis.aspxThe Water and Sewer CCN Viewer may be accessed from the following web site: http://www.puc.texas.gov/industry/water/utilities/map.htmlIf you have questions about this CCN spatial dataset or about CCN mapping requirements, please e-mail CCN Mapping Staff: water@puc.texas.govTYPE - Indicates whether a CCN is considered a water or a sewer system. If the CCN number begins with a '"1", the CCN is considered a water system (utility). If a CCN number begins with a "2", the CCN is considered a sewer system (utility).CCN_NO - A unique five-digit number assigned to each CCN when it is created and approved by the Commission. *CCN number starting with an ‘N’ indicates an exempt utility.UTILITY - The name of the utility which owns the CCN.COUNTY - The name(s) of the county(ies) in which the CCN exist.CCN_TYPE –One of three types:Bounded Service Area: A certificated service area with closed boundaries that often follow identifiable physical and cultural features such as roads, rivers, streams and political boundaries. Facilities +200 Feet: A certificated service area represented by lines. They include a buffer of a specified number of feet (usually 200 feet). The lines normally follow along roads and may or may not correspond to distribution lines or facilities in the ground.Facilities Only: A certificated service area represented by lines. They are granted for a "point of use" that covers only the customer connections at the time the CCN is granted. Facility only service lines normally follow along roads and may or may not correspond to distribution lines or facilities in the ground.STATUS – For pending dockets check the PUC Interchange Filing Search
Service Item Id: 10b64240ac4f4bd89c0b57f39790689d
Copyright Text: This CCN spatial dataset is edited and managed in GIS by Komal Patel, Tracy Montes and Gary Horton, Jr. the Cartographers and CCN Data Custodians for PUCT's Water Utility Regulation Division.
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Description: City limit boundaries are maintained to enable the classification of roadway inventory attributes, satisfy federal and state roadway reporting requirements, and serve as a base layer for TxDOT's cartographic products. The data was created by the Transportation Planning and Programming Division of TxDOT in the Data Analysis, Mapping and Reporting Branch. City governments submit updates to their city limits as changes are made.Update Frequency: PeriodicallySecurity Level: Public
Service Item Id: 10b64240ac4f4bd89c0b57f39790689d
Copyright Text: TxDOT – TPP – Data Management TPP-GIS@txdot.gov
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