Item 5.02 Departure of Directors or Certain Officers; Election of Directors;
Appointment of Certain Officers; Compensatory Arrangements of Certain Officers.
As described under Item 5.07 below, at. | April 28, 2023
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Currently Reading There s a lot of red flags - SAWS board delays project that would put pipelines through protected areas
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John Cradit, an Edwards Aquifer Authority geologist, talks pictures of a sinkhole two hours west of San Antonio as about 500 cubic feet per second of water go down the hole into the Edwards Aquifer in this 2016 photo. The sinkhole is one of the largest single recharge features for the aquifer. Two more people can be seen silhouetted against the sky at the top of the image.William Luther /Staff file photo
After watching development spring around them over the years, Scott Gruendler and his wife purchased 86 acres in far North Bexar County in 2015 with the intent of preserving their natural grandeur.
Texas Public Radio
The San Antonio Water System Board received its first behind-the-scenes report on Tuesday of how the city’s water supply became largely unreliable during February’s winter blitz.
The board mostly approved of how the utility responded to the storm, pointing out power outages beyond their control led to water outages and were compounded by busted frozen pipes across the city as more than 150 hours of below freezing temperatures followed in a week.
While SAWS communicated broadly and frequently with the public through social media and newspaper, radio and television, some trustees criticized some of the public information efforts, like when water service would be restored. Mayor Ron Nirenberg also said residents needed more information on how to deal with the boil water notice.
Buying back-up generators for San Antonio water pumping stations could trigger rate increase
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SAWS works on main break at 452 Mitchell on Saturday, Feb. 20, 2021. Workers were doing repairs throughout the winter weather crisis last week in order to keep water flowing. Despite this, many SAWS pumping stations went offline due to power outages, so officials are considering back-up plans for the future.Ronald Cortes /Contributor /
If the San Antonio Water System were to buy the massive generators needed to back up its water pumping stations, the cost could go as high as $800 million and could mean a rate increase, officials said Wednesday.