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ECONOTES 2013-05-13: Environmental Headlines for the Houston Region

Featured

  1. Safe passing ordinance passes Houston council (Houston Chronicle, 5/7/13)
    The City Council on Wednesday approved a safe passing ordinance requiring drivers to give cyclists, pedestrians, equestrians and other non-vehicular road users three feet of space at all times. Houston was the only major city in Texas that did not have a safe passing law, though officials have aggressively encouraged cycling in the region. The new law covers anyone not in an automobile or truck, including tow truck drivers.
    http://blog.chron.com/
  2. Grass Roots Residents 12-Year Volunteer Effort Successful in Remapping Cypress Creek Watershed Flood Hazard Areas (CCFCC Look Upstream, 5/13/13)
    The Hurricane Allison flooding disaster in 2001 triggered a 2-year, $30+ million government project to upgrade existing flood maps for all 22 watersheds in Harris County. However, when technical experts reviewed the upgrade in mapping, they identified significant inaccuracies. Appeals seeking corrective action were denied by FEMA. Harris County Flood Control District’s (HCFCD) Planning Department and the Cypress Creek Flood Control Coalition worked together to determine and correct the inaccuracies of the FEMA computer modeling.
    Look Upstream May13
  3. Salty sea yields a fresh drink of water (Matthew Tresaugue – Fuel Fix, 5/7/13)
    Offshore platforms that produce oil also turn seawater into freshwater by filtering it through fine membranes in a complex process called reverse osmosis. While the process is not new, the systems on display at the Offshore Technology Conference are efficient enough to hold the possibility of desalination as a source of water in drought-prone regions across Texas and the U.S. The technology used for offshore oil and gas operations can produce tens of thousands of gallons of water a day.
    http://fuelfix.com/

EcoNotes