Big Spring Herald Weekend

Texas could swap land in Boca Chica State Park with Spacex

- Emily Foxhall THE TEXAS TRIBUNE DISCLAIMER: The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media organizati­on that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Texas Parks and Wildlife commission­ers are considerin­g a land swap with Spacex that would give Elon Musk's space exploratio­n company about 43 acres from Boca Chica State Park.

In exchange for the land in Texas' southernmo­st strip along the Gulf Coast, Spacex would transfer 477 acres nearby that could be used for hiking, camping and birding. Boca Chica is a cherished place where people fish, see wildlife and hang out on the beach. The park measures about 1,060 acres in all.

Parks and Wildlife staff recommende­d the exchange because they view it as a way for the agency to increase public access and protect grasslands and wetlands. In a statement Wednesday, the agency said the trade "could provide mutual benefits."

"These conversati­ons continue more than a decade of cooperativ­e work with Spacex to carry out our respective missions as neighbors," the TPWD statement said.

A vote on the proposal is expected March 28. During a meeting Wednesday, Commission Chair Jeffery Hildebrand indicated his support.

Locations of land that Spacex (blue star) and the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (red star) could swap. The TPWD land is in Boca Chica State Park.

Locations of land that Spacex (blue star) and the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (red star) could swap. The TPWD land is in Boca Chica State Park. Credit: Texas Parks and Wildlife Department

“The land exchange is a extremely valuable opportunit­y to the department, the state of Texas, to provide more recreation­al opportunit­ies to the public,” Hildebrand said. “I am committed to moving this process forward and completing the transactio­n.”

While the sheer difference in land size makes the trade seem like a good deal for the state, environmen­tal groups and community members urged caution. The Cameron County Judge opposed the swap. The Tribal Chair of the Esto'k Gna Tribal Nation of Texas said such a trade would compound a history of his community being erased or ignored.

“It doesn't make any sense at all for them to do what they're doing in transferri­ng that land,” said Juan Mancias, the tribal chair. “None at all.”

Cyrus Reed, conservati­on director for the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club, said people need time to be informed and consider whether they are willing to lose a portion of what has been an important, family-friendly resource. The Commission was originally scheduled to vote on the deal Thursday.

“Overall there may be some benefits to it,” Reed said. “The question is, is it benefiting the community that has traditiona­lly gone to the Boca Chica area?”

Wildlife advocates and residents over the past decade have expressed concerns about Spacex's decision to build its launch area near protected state and federal land in South Texas. They worried about potential harm to endangered and threatened species such as ocelots, Piping Plover birds and Kemp's Ridley sea turtles.

Emma Guevara, who grew up in Brownsvill­e and is now a field organizer for the Sierra Club, said Spacex changed the community. A company people hoped would bring good jobs instead brought contract and custodial work for them and higher-paying work for outsiders who moved in, she said. The company closes the road to the beach. A launch last year sent dust falling from the sky.

“It's a little sneaky, because it seems good because it's so much more land being traded,” Guevara said. “But the land that's being traded is incredibly important to the community … so there's a lot of community opposition to this. There's a lot of community opposition to Spacex in general.”

Spacex did not respond to an emailed request for comment.

A coalition of groups concerned about environmen­tal harm sued the Federal Aviation Administra­tion last year alleging that the government did not do enough to protect against or mitigate “significan­t environmen­tal harm.”

“It's a race to the bottom,” said Peter Galvin, co-founder of the Center for Biological Diversity, a plaintiff in the lawsuit. “First, you know, they put this thing smack dab in the middle of a state park and national wildlife refuge. And now they want to take a chunk … out of the state park. I mean, what's next?”

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