Texas 2011 - 82nd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB508

Filed
 
Introduced
2/2/11  
Out of Senate Committee
3/7/11  
Voted on by Senate
3/17/11  
Refer
2/17/11  
Out of House Committee
4/12/11  
Report Pass
3/7/11  
Voted on by House
5/19/11  
Engrossed
3/17/11  
Governor Action
6/17/11  
Refer
4/4/11  
Bill Becomes Law
 
Report Pass
4/11/11  
Enrolled
5/20/11  
Enrolled
5/20/11  
Passed
6/17/11  

Caption

Relating to the extent of extraterritorial jurisdiction of certain less populous municipalities located on a barrier island.

Impact

This legislation's impact is significant for governance in less populous municipalities situated on barrier islands. By expanding their extraterritorial jurisdiction, the bill appears to provide these municipalities greater authority in managing land use and development outside their immediate corporate boundaries, thus potentially fostering local economic growth and improving infrastructure planning. The larger jurisdiction could also allow for better coordination of services and regulatory consistency across these regions, particularly in areas prone to development pressures or environmental concerns.

Summary

SB508 relates to the extraterritorial jurisdiction of certain less populous municipalities located on barrier islands. Specifically, the bill amends the Local Government Code to extend the extraterritorial jurisdiction boundaries for municipalities with a population of 2,000 or more that are entirely located on a barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico and within 30 miles of the international border. The new provisions delineate areas within which these municipalities can exercise jurisdiction, delineating a five-mile area on a barrier island and a half-mile area off it.

Contention

Points of contention surrounding the bill revolve around the balance of local control and the implications of expanding jurisdiction in less populous areas. Concerns may arise regarding potential overreach by municipalities that could inhibit private property rights or lead to conflicts with existing state regulations. Furthermore, there are arguments on whether municipalities can adequately manage this expanded jurisdiction, especially given the unique challenges that barrier islands face, such as environmental vulnerabilities and resource limitations.

Companion Bills

TX HB2081

Identical Relating to the extent of extraterritorial jurisdiction of certain less populous municipalities located on a barrier island.

Previously Filed As

TX HB1279

Relating to the extent of a municipality's extraterritorial jurisdiction.

TX HB443

Relating to the extraterritorial jurisdiction of certain municipalities.

TX HB442

Relating to the extraterritorial jurisdiction of and municipal annexation by certain municipalities.

TX HB4493

Relating to the creation of political subdivisions in the extraterritorial jurisdiction of certain municipalities.

TX SB1794

Relating to conditions imposed on an emergency services district that includes territory in the extraterritorial jurisdiction of certain municipalities.

TX HB2633

Relating to conditions imposed on an emergency services district that includes territory in the extraterritorial jurisdiction of certain municipalities.

TX HB3328

Relating to the authority of certain counties and municipalities to regulate certain subdivisions in a municipality's extraterritorial jurisdiction.

TX HB5217

Relating to release of an area from and limitations on the expansion of a municipality's extraterritorial jurisdiction.

TX SB2038

Relating to release of an area from a municipality's extraterritorial jurisdiction by petition or election.

TX HB1307

Relating to municipal release of extraterritorial jurisdiction and disannexation involving certain areas.

Similar Bills

No similar bills found.