F-112 West Harris County Wetlands Mitigation Bank K700-04-00

F-112 West Harris County Wetlands Mitigation Bank K700-04-00
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Recent Action

June 14, 2022– Harris County Commissioners Court authorized an agreement for preliminary environmental engineer services in support of this project./p>

November 9, 2021 – Harris County Commissioners Court has approved the acceptance of a real estate donation of a 6.313-acre access easement for this project.

October 12, 2021 –Harris County Commissioners Court approved a $120,000 agreement with an engineering firm for specialized evaluation and design services in support of this project.  

December 4, 2018– Harris County Commissioners Court authorized negotiations with an environmental firm for specialized evaluation and design services in support of this project

October 9, 2018 – Harris County Commissioners Court authorized negotiations with an environmental firm for specialized evaluation and design services in support of this project

August 28, 2018 – Harris County Commissioners Court authorized and initiated this project

project description

This is a wetland restoration project to create wetland mitigation credits that will be used to offset permitted wetland impacts caused by other Flood Control District projects.

Stage

This project is in the DEVELOPMENT/PRELIMINARY ENGINEERING stage. This stage will involve development of a draft prospectus and an application for a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers permit to conduct wetland restoration.

Location

A 240-acre property located just north of the Katy Hockley Mitigation Bank and south of Cypress Creek off Katy Hockley Road was acquired in 2021 to be used for the site of this mitigation bank.

Bond Project Listing

Bond Project F-112 is categorized as a “Local Only” bond project. This means there is no other funding partner at this time and total project costs would be paid with bond funding. The Bond Project List includes a total allocation for this project of $20 million.

Project ID: K700-04-00-Y001

Project Lifecycle

Every flood damage reduction project is unique. Yet each project begins and ends, with common and predictable milestones along the way. Whether a project moves forward – and how quickly – depends on many factors, including the availability of funding at each milestone, shifting community priorities for flood damage reduction, and other changing circumstances (such as the price of trees or concrete) from year to year.

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