Texas 2021 87th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2350 Engrossed / Bill

Filed 04/21/2021

                    By: Zwiener, Walle, Harris H.B. No. 2350


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to financial assistance provided to political
 subdivisions by the Texas Water Development Board for water
 resource restoration projects.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Section 15.604(b), Water Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  The board shall adopt rules specifying the manner in
 which any additional state revolving fund hereafter established by
 the board, or any capitalization grant under the state water
 pollution control revolving fund, the safe drinking water revolving
 fund, or any additional state revolving fund, may be used to provide
 financial assistance to an eligible applicant for public works.
 Such rules shall require financial assistance to be provided for
 the purpose or purposes and on the terms authorized by the federal
 legislation or federal agency program under which the additional
 state revolving fund was established or the capitalization grant
 was awarded. To the extent not prohibited by board rule or federal
 law or regulation, the state water pollution control revolving fund
 established under this subchapter may be used to provide financial
 assistance for water resource restoration projects described by
 Section 15.619.
 SECTION 2.  Subchapter J, Chapter 15, Water Code, is amended
 by adding Section 15.619 to read as follows:
 Sec. 15.619.  WATER RESOURCE RESTORATION PROJECTS. (a) In
 this section, "water resource restoration project" means
 nature-based infrastructure that will improve water quality in the
 political subdivision where the project is located and may include
 the acquisition of real property and the use of nature-based water
 treatment technologies.
 (b)  Based on demand, the board may provide financial
 assistance to a political subdivision for a locally directed and
 managed water resource restoration project if the political
 subdivision applicant will bear responsibility for implementation,
 stewardship, and maintenance of the project.
 (c)  Subject to Section 15.603(d) of this chapter and Section
 602(b)(11) of the federal act, the board shall establish a process
 by which a political subdivision may combine a project funded
 through the state water pollution control revolving fund that is
 not for a water resource restoration project with a water resource
 restoration project. The board may allocate available principal
 forgiveness for additional subsidization set-asides in the state
 water pollution control revolving fund for green projects, as those
 terms are defined by board rule, to the political subdivision to
 substantially enhance the financial viability of the water resource
 restoration project.
 (d)  A proposed water resource restoration project must
 enhance water quality in the state and include the application of
 best management practices for the primary purpose of water quality
 protection and improvement. To the extent permitted by federal law
 and regulation and United States Environmental Protection Agency
 guidance, a proposed water resource restoration project may
 include:
 (1)  the preservation or restoration of regional scale
 natural landscape features, including forests, floodplains, and
 wetlands;
 (2)  practices that reduce impervious cover in a
 watershed;
 (3)  practices that increase water infiltration and
 retention, including the use of bioretention, trees, green roofs,
 permeable pavements, rain gardens, constructed wetlands, and
 cisterns;
 (4)  the implementation of green streets in public
 rights-of-way;
 (5)  the implementation of a comprehensive street tree
 or urban forestry program to manage stormwater and enhance tree
 health;
 (6)  the expanded use of tree box filters;
 (7)  stormwater collection and distribution systems,
 including cisterns, separate stormwater sewer systems, and
 downspout disconnection systems that use onsite stormwater
 management and remove stormwater from sewer systems;
 (8)  soil quality enhancement activities;
 (9)  the restoration of native grasses and vegetation
 that improve water infiltration;
 (10)  the establishment or restoration of permanent
 riparian buffers, floodplains, wetlands, and other natural
 features including vegetative buffers, grass swales, soft
 bioengineered stream banks, and stream daylighting;
 (11)  the management of wetlands to improve water
 quality and support water infiltration and retention; and
 (12)  sustainable landscaping to improve hydrologic
 processes.
 (e)  A proposed water resource restoration project may not
 include:
 (1)  passive recreation activities and trails
 including bike trails, playgrounds, athletic fields, picnic
 tables, and picnic grounds;
 (2)  non-permeable surface parking lots;
 (3)  stormwater ponds or dirt-lined detention basins
 that serve an extended or filtration function;
 (4)  in-line and end-of-pipe treatment systems that
 only filter or detain stormwater without the use of natural plants
 and trees;
 (5)  underground stormwater control and treatment
 devices, including hydrodynamic separators, baffle systems for
 grit, trash removal, and oil and grease separators;
 (6)  stormwater conveyance systems, including pipes
 and concrete channels, that are not soil or vegetation based;
 (7)  hardening, channelizing, dredging, or
 straightening streams or stream banks;
 (8)  street sweepers, sewer cleaners, and vacuum trucks
 unless they support nature-based infrastructure projects; and
 (9)  supplemental environmental projects required as a
 part of an agreed order or consent decree.
 (f)  A water resource restoration project may not include the
 acquisition of property, an interest in property, or improvements
 to property through the use of eminent domain.
 (g)  The board shall establish a means of prioritizing water
 resource restoration projects.
 (h)  An application for financial assistance for a water
 resource restoration project under this section must include a
 viability assessment that includes:
 (1)  the ability of the applicant to provide proper
 oversight and management through a certified operator; and
 (2)  the financial ability of the users to support the
 long-term maintenance of the water resource restoration project.
 SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2021.