Court of appeals issues decision in lawsuit against Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority
Following the 2019 Lake Dunlap Dam collapse, legal battles between property owners and the agency who maintains the dams poured in. Author: Troy Kless Updated: 6:06 PM CDT July 15, 2021
NEW BRAUNFELS, Texas Following the Lake Dunlap Dam collapse, some property owners have gotten involved with legal action against the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority.
According to the GBRA, a decision issued in the Williams v. GBRA case claims the plaintiffs lacked legal standing to sue the agency.
Property owners along the other lakes, like Steve Pritchard feel the maintenance and upkeep of the dams is critical.
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More than 150,000 Austin Energy customers are currently without power. The utility says it's dealing with two emergency events: the outages since Monday morning that are occurring statewide and outages caused by Tuesday night's ice storm.
A number of other disaster declarations, cancellations and closures have also been announced to winter weather conditions.
In a Feb. 15 tweet, the city also noted issues with the its water supply due to power loss at the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority.
Please conserve water. Due to a loss of power at GBRA of Texas (our surface water supplier), we are currently running the water system on groundwater wells with limited power supply availability. pic.twitter.com/4i8mRR6ji8 The city also issued guidance on how to protect water pipes from the freezing cold and how to respond to a burst pipe.