Houston Chronicle

Judge lets Winnie families’ suit proceed

They say the state knowingly built a concrete median on I-10 that caused homes to flood

- By Nick Powell

A federal lawsuit accusing Texas officials of knowingly constructi­ng a concrete median barrier on Interstate 10 that caused the flooding of homes in the Winnie area can proceed, with a district judge denying the state’s claims of immunity.

U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Brown signed an order last week affirming a magistrate judge’s opinion denying the state’s motion to dismiss the complaint. Families in the Winnie area sued the state in May 2020 over a 32inch high median on I-10 that they say “effectivel­y created a dam,” blocking rainfall from draining south and instead causing it to build up and flood their northside properties after Hurricane Harvey and Tropical Storm Imelda.

In August, the state filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit on grounds that it has sovereign immunity on any Fifth Amendment claims, which guards against private property being taken for public use without compensati­on. U.S. Magistrate Judge Andrew Edison ruled that attorneys for the

Winnie-area families showed that the state’s use of their property was “more than incidental,” and that the state has no immunity from liability.

“Not only have Plaintiffs alleged that the State knew or was substantia­lly certain that the concrete barrier would cause flooding on the north side of IH-10 … but they have also pointed to specific ways in which discovery might help them to prove those allegation­s at trial,” Edison wrote.

Richie DeVillier, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, who has twice watched the concrete median barrier hold back water like a dam while flooding his property, was pleased with the magistrate’s ruling. The lawsuit now moves toward the discovery phase, he said, with a trial date possible in 2022.

“It is a big deal, it's a great step for us,” DeVillier said.

The state attorney general’s office did not immediatel­y respond

to a request for comment.

Attorneys originally filed the suit in Chambers County court on behalf of 46 people — many from the DeVillier family, who have been ranchers in the area for generation­s. The lawsuit was transferre­d to federal court in June.

The state knew that building that 32-inch-high median would flood the homes north of it, the attorneys allege. But building it allowed officials to keep the other side of the roadway open for evacuation­s, according to the lawsuit.

The median was constructe­d when the Texas Department of Transporta­tion raised the elevation of I-10, widening it from four to six lanes, and installing the concrete barrier on the highway’s center line.

The barrier effectivel­y created a dam protecting the south side of the freeway from flooding by barricadin­g all rainfall on the north side. Rainfall that would otherwise have run over the top of the roadway and continue downstream toward the Gulf of Mexico instead stopped at the barrier and caused backwater flooding onto the Devilliers’ properties on the north side of the barrier.

In August, the state transporta­tion department announced it would put in a new barrier with openings at the bottom to allow for drainage. Officials, meanwhile, installed temporary barriers to be removed “should there be a need.”

But DeVillier worries that work is proceeding too slowly. The start of hurricane season is months away and he believes it’s only a matter of time before another storm inundates his land.

“Every day it gets a little bit closer to the next storm, whether it’s this year or next year,” he said.

 ?? Yi-Chin Lee / Staff file photo ?? Vehicles flooded by Tropical Storm Imelda sit in the westbound lanes of Interstate 10 in Winnie on Sept. 20, 2019. Similar flooding had occurred after Hurricane Harvey.
Yi-Chin Lee / Staff file photo Vehicles flooded by Tropical Storm Imelda sit in the westbound lanes of Interstate 10 in Winnie on Sept. 20, 2019. Similar flooding had occurred after Hurricane Harvey.

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