Perilous
Times and Climate Change
Drought's Economic Impact Spreading Across Texas
* by Kate Galbraith and Kiah Collier, San Angelo
Standard-Times
ROBERT LEE – A year into the driest stretch in recorded state
history, most Texans are still far from running out of water. But
the devastating economic impact is beginning to extend beyond
rural agriculture and into tourism, real estate and other staples
of more urbanized economies.
The tiny town of Robert Lee, the self-described "Playground of
West Texas,” is already reeling from these problems.
A few miles west of town, the E.V. Spence Reservoir, normally at
least three times the size of downtown, is now 99.55 percent
empty. The lake not only serves as the sole water supply for the
town’s 1,049 residents but is also a highly valued component of
its economy.
When the lake is at healthier levels, Robert Lee Mayor John Jacobs
said, the average wait time at the boat ramps on holidays and
weekends is half an hour. Now, he said, there’s no place to put a
boat, and the steady stream of out-of-towners from Midland and
other West Texas cities has dwindled considerably.
“There’s no doubt that it’s affected the economy,” Jacobs said,
noting the town's sales tax revenue, which has been down for five
months out of the year, has suffered because of a lag in tourism
and, to a smaller extent, agricultural losses. “It’s been
declining, as the level in Spence has come down. The weekenders
and whatnot have pretty well quit coming.”
Elsewhere in Texas, the economic impact of the drought is also
beginning to extend into more urban areas, especially lakeside
communities.
Near Austin, Lake Travis is nearly 40 feet below its normal level,
and lakeside tourism is suffering.
"From what I'm hearing from restaurant owners on lake, from boat
owners, it's almost ground to a stop," said Karen Huber, a Travis
County commissioner whose office initiated a report issued last
month on the economic importance of Lake Travis and its
vulnerability to drought, as rice farmers and cities compete for a
decreasing amount of lake water.
For many Texas communities, drought "interjects this whole
uncertainty," said John Jacob, director of the Coastal Watershed
Program at the Texas A&M University System (not to be confused
with the Robert Lee mayor with a similar name). No one knows if
this drought will prove as bad, or worse, than that of the 1950s —
considered the worst drought in state history — and how future
droughts will shake out as the climate heats up and state's
population continues to grow.
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Businesses do not like uncertainty. "Chamber of commerce types
likely do not want Houston to be seen as vulnerable to droughts —
after all, we are expecting another 4 million folks in the next 30
years," said Jacob, who is based in Houston and argues that Texans
need to start building communities "with not so much lawn."
Jacobs, the Robert Lee mayor, is similarly concerned.
“We’re certainly not going to attract any businesses without a
stable supply of water,” he said, noting that for now, businesses
are holding their own, but things could get worse if the drought
persists. Area ranchers are selling off most or all of theirs
herds. Revenue from water sales is down drastically, as the town
has cut its water use in half.
“If it wasn’t for our oil and gas industry, we’d really be in dire
straits,” Jacobs said, noting the area is experiencing a “mini
boom.”
In San Angelo, 30 miles south of Robert Lee, residents are worried
that Lake Nasworthy, a key draw for tourists and a location for
upscale lake houses, could go the way of other Texas lakes, like
Spence and Travis. The lake, part of the city’s dwindling 22-month
water supply, is a source of last resort. But Angelo officials
have said that, absent any rain or alternate source of water, they
could start pulling water out of Nasworthy by the end of next
year.
Depending on usage, it could then be completely drained sometime
within 12 months.
Nasworthy was drained once before, in the early 1960s, when
another drought left the city with about a month's worth of water.
But that was when the lake was surrounded by fishing cabins — not
high-dollar real estate.
Local realtor Mike Newlin, who has been selling lake houses since
the 1980s, said that if Nasworthy were drained, it would slow down
and eventually “kill” real estate sales — not to mention
lake-based tourism.
“Somebody might buy a property if there wasn’t any water in the
lake knowing that someday it’s going to rain again, but I bet the
prices would go down quite a bit,” said Newlin, who owns two lake
homes. “It’s such a scary situation. People really, I don’t think,
have fully considered what would come about if that happened — if
the lake was drained.”
It's a concern for realtors across Texas.
"Certainly the availability and affordability of clean water in
the area is going to affect people's housing decisions," said Mike
Barnett, an official with the Texas Association of Realtors,
adding, "If there's no water, there aren't going to be any jobs
coming into the area."
Trees are important draws for Texas homeowners, too, and right
now, they're dying, not only in West Texas but also in much wetter
places like Houston.
"Hard to put an economic value on that, but if places aren’t
pretty, fewer people come," said Jacob of Texas A&M.
Andrew Sansom, executive director of the River Systems Institute
at Texas State University, said that his group is doing research
in the Wimberley area on the economic impacts of streams drying
up. He said the research is still under way but that "it's clear
so far that we are definitely finding out that property valuation
takes a dramatic dip in communities that are streamside- or
lakeside-based when those resources are not there." Sales and
property taxes fall, too, he said.
Asked how you keep people and businesses in a place — or attract
them — without a guaranteed water supply, Ron Griffin, a water
resource and environmental economics professor at Texas A&M
University, had a simple answer: “You don’t.”
“It causes changes in business activity, and general livability of
a place and the employability of a place,” Griffin said.
“People move for all kinds of reasons, but certainly, if water
becomes an issue in a particular region due to elevated scarcity,
from a general social perspective they should be moving.”
In San Angelo, Chamber of Commerce President Phil Neighbors said
the city’s economy hasn’t suffered during the current drought yet,
but that could change as early as next year if dry conditions
persist — something climatologists have said is likely because La
Niña, a periodic weather pattern that causes unusually dry winters
in Texas and was present last winter, has returned.
“Overall we haven’t seen the impact we might see in future
months,” Neighbors said. “Would I expect it if La Nina continues
another year? I would be amazed if our sales tax didn’t see an end
to the continued growth we’ve seen over the last 12 months — if
so.”
Kiah Collier is a reporter at the San Angelo Standard-Times.