Corpus Christi Water Crisis Spurs Stampede on South Texas Aquifers

posted in: All news | 0

Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared at Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, non-partisan news organization that covers climate, energy, and the environment. Sign up for their newsletter here.

Around Jim Wells County, dwindling levels in main reservoirs have triggered a rush on local aquifers as cities, towns, chemical plants, and ranchers drill for water.

The nearby city of Corpus Christi faces a looming catastrophe from the imminent depletion of water supplies that sustain 500,000 people and one of Texas’s main industrial complexes. Recent emergency groundwater projects have pushed off the timeline to disaster by months, officials said last week. But locals fear they may threaten the water supplies of rural towns and residents who have historically relied on their own small wells. 

“People like me are probably gonna be running out of water,” said Bruce Mumme, a retired chemical plant worker who lives on family land in rural Jim Wells, about 40 miles outside Corpus. “Then this property and house is useless.”

Dust covers the fields where hay for Mumme’s cattle should grow. His catfish are about to die as the last of their pond evaporates. Sand dunes have started to form. He’s roamed this land since he was a boy and he’s never seen sand dunes.

“Without water we can’t even live out here,” he said as he drove dirt roads on the land his grandfather bought. “You can’t feed cows bottled water.”

Last fall, after the city of Corpus Christi first began pumping millions of gallons per day from the Evangeline Aquifer, towns and landowners across this area saw water levels in their wells drop. Mumme lost access to water for three days while he waited for workers to come lower his pump, which he said cost thousands of dollars. After that experience, he paid $30,000 to add another well on his property, for backup. 

He’s not the only one. The region’s largest industrial water users are also drilling wells, according to officials. In Nueces County, where Corpus Christi is located, newly planned pumping projects alone could add up to over 1,000 percent of what the state water plan considers a sustainable rate of withdrawal from aquifers.

In March, Corpus Christi began pumping millions more gallons per day from its wellfield on the western banks of the Nueces River, about 15 miles outside the city, after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott waived permitting processes for the project in a bid to avert a water shortage. Across the river, drill rigs are turning at the city’s eastern wellfield. 

“I’ve done a lot of big projects in my career,” said Rik Allbritton, an operations manager for Weisinger Inc. with 40 years drilling experience, as a rig roared behind him at the eastern wellfield last Tuesday. “This is on the bigger side.”

These two projects, each containing clusters of several large water wells, aim to pump tens of millions of gallons per day in coming months. More than 20 miles away, in San Patricio County, piping has arrived for a third wellfield. A fourth and fifth are also in the queue along the Nueces River. 

The region’s largest water user, a massive, new plastics plant operated by ExxonMobil and the Saudi state oil company, also drilled test wells recently but found water that was too salty to use, according to Corpus Christi city manager Peter Zanoni. 

“They continue to look for alternative water sources,” Zanoni said in an interview. “Several of the big companies are doing that, and the choice is really just groundwater.” 

A spokesperson for Exxon, Kelly Davila, said the company doesn’t comment on operational details. 

“We continue to explore alternative water sources that do not draw on those currently used for public consumption,” she said. 

About five miles away, the tiny town of Taft depends on Corpus Christi water and is looking at rehabilitating its own old wells, according to Mayor Elida Castillo. “Funding is always gonna be the issue,” she said. 

Salty Groundwater

Salty, or brackish, groundwater in this region poses major challenges for the rush to develop its aquifers. Treating brackish groundwater requires complex hardware for reverse osmosis, which is expensive to build and operate. 

Last year the city of Beeville issued a $35 million bond for an emergency brackish groundwater project, which it hopes to have running next year. Corpus Christi also has agreements with a private company, Seven Seas Water Group, for a large reverse osmosis plant to treat brackish groundwater

The tiny town of Orange Grove might need to install reverse osmosis treatment systems for its current groundwater supply, according to city manager Todd Wright. Salinity has risen rapidly in Orange Grove’s wells since Corpus Christi began pumping last summer, Wright said, and soon could exceed safe drinking water standards. 

“We’re closely approaching that threshold,” Wright said in an interview at his office last week. 

Wright, like officials and residents in nearby towns, attributes the falling water levels and rising salinity in local wells to drawdowns and sediment disturbance caused by Corpus Christi’s new large-scale pumping. Officials with Corpus Christi stress that no conclusive link has been made.

A pond on Bruce Mumme’s land is drying up, leaving his catfish to die. (Dylan Baddour / Inside Climate News)

Orange Grove can’t pay for reverse osmosis systems, Wright said, but the city has hired legal counsel to explore other options. It might also be able to buy water from the neighboring town of Alice, where Seven Seas booted up a reverse osmosis treatment facility last year.

Planning for that project started more than a decade ago, according to Alice city manager Michael Esparza, then picked up speed around 2018. Esparza, the son of a local life insurance underwriter, said Alice foresaw this situation. 

“You get life insurance when you don’t need it because when you need it, you can’t get it,” he said last week. “Same thing with our water.”  Alice is also drilling an emergency freshwater well, he said. 

Refineries and Chemical Plants Will Have to Cut 

The city of Corpus Christi supplies more than 100 million gallons per day to 500,000 residents, businesses and industrial complexes across seven counties. If the city’s portfolio of groundwater projects can’t meet most of that demand within months, it will need to implement emergency reductions in water demand.

The city previously projected the emergency could come as soon as May. But following Abbott’s executive orders, that’s been pushed to October, according to officials.

On Tuesday, the city presented plans to achieve 25 percent curtailment in water consumption across all customer classes, including the 23 fuel refineries, chemical plants and other industrial facilities that collectively use about half the region’s water. 

“Industry, everybody will have to cut,” Zanoni told the meeting. “Because there might not be enough to supply if we don’t.” 

Councilmember Gil Hernandez, a national account sales executive at the Coca-Cola Co., which bottles drinks in Corpus Christi, said the city rules didn’t appear to require cutbacks for certain large industrial users. 

“There is no penalty for them not doing curtailment,” Hernandez said. “Are you going to shut off their water? I don’t think so.” 

But Corpus Christi city attorney Miles Risley pointed to a line in the city’s contract with industrial users that said: “This agreement does not prevent the city from allocating water supply in the event of an emergency.”

Risley said, “That provision specifically allows us to sit down with the large water users and directly cut them back, potentially, maybe even going so far as to cut them off.”

It remains unclear exactly how industrial curtailment would unfold, what authority the city could wield and how the surcharge exemption contracts would be regarded during an emergency, according to Michael Miller, a member of the Corpus Christi Planning Commission and a vice president at Teal Construction Co. 

“There’s going to be a lot of legal opinions, possible litigation surrounding that, if and when we go into curtailment,” he said.

Without big rain soon, he said, it appears likely the city will go into emergency curtailment while its well fields gradually come online. This race to tap aquifers comes at a cost.

Today the city is paying more to acquire water rights alone than it would have cost several years ago to buy entire properties, said Miller. 

“The days of inexpensive water projects are long gone,” he said. “The clock is ticking and we have to turn on water sources very quickly.”

“Ready, Shoot, Aim”

Many factors contributed to this situation. Five consecutive years of record heat and drought have dried up the region’s reservoirs, while large-scale pumping of the state’s inland aquifers has killed springs that used to feed local tributaries. 

Miller attributes the predicament primarily to poor planning. In the last 15 years, this region welcomed a spate of downstream industrial projects, including massive petrochemical plants by Exxon and Occidental Chemical, as well as expansions at Valero and Flint Hills refineries. 

While those and other projects came online, the city tried fruitlessly to develop designs for a seawater desalination plant, which Miller considered ill-conceived.  

“We did not simultaneously add new water supply,” Miller said. “We thought everything was going to be OK. But it was not going to be OK. And we should have known better.”

By all accounts, leaders in Texas watched this crisis approach for generations. Now the plight of Corpus Christi might await other parts of the state, according to Larry Soward, a former commissioner of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. 

Soward joined the Texas Water Quality Board as a staff attorney in 1975, became executive director of the Texas Water Commission in the 1980s and served as chief counsel on water for Agriculture Commissioner Rick Perry in the 1990s. All along, he said, everyone knew Texas was on course to outgrow its water supply. 

The state hasn’t been able to build new reservoirs since the 1960s. As water demand crept upwards through the decades, no comprehensive plans to keep up emerged. 

The crisis in Corpus Christi, he said, “seems like a ready-shoot-aim type thing.”

“The reasons this floundered is the same reason that a lot of water issues in Texas have floundered,” Soward said. “There’s been a lack of realistic planning.”

Thirty years ago, Corpus Christi also faced a severe drought. Projections said its Nueces River reservoirs could dry up completely within 18 to 24 months. The city responded with a swift, ambitious project that it still depends on today, running the 64-inch-wide Mary Rhodes Pipeline 101 miles to Lake Texana, then 30 miles farther to the Colorado River. 

The Mary Rhodes Pipeline “was needed to save jobs and avert wrenching economic disruptions that might scar the region for decades to come,” according to a project summary from the time. 

“It’s going to be an economic disaster,” said James Dodson, former director of the Corpus Christi Water department, pictured March 6, 2026, at his home in Fulton, Texas. “It’s the very worst scenario that I’ve ever seen.” (Dylan Baddour / Inside Climate News)

James Dodson, the regional director of Corpus Christi Water who oversaw the Mary Rhodes Pipeline, later went to work as a private consultant, developing a project to pump groundwater from the Evangeline Aquifer in Bee County, on the route of the Mary Rhodes Pipeline, and send it to the city. But the city abruptly canceled its contract with the company in 2008, Dodson said. 

Dodson, a Corpus Christi native and the son of an oilfield worker, later discovered that the city had decided to pursue seawater desalination instead. 

Emergency Groundwater Projects

Late in 2024, as outlooks began to appear dire for Corpus Christi’s water supply, Dodson booked a meeting with the city water department, accompanied by John Michael, vice president of Hanson Professional Services, an engineering firm. The duo brought in a stack of old maps from Dodson’s house showing old city wells that had been forgotten along the Nueces River.

“We educated the staff on what we had done previously,” said Michael, who drilled some of those wells in the 1980s. 

The city issued an emergency authorization for the groundwater project on Dec. 31.

In the summer its wells started pumping water into the Nueces River.

“If we don’t get the rains that we need in our reservoirs, we’re going to have to continue to drill our way through this. That’s really the only source of water,” said Michael, who has spent 44 years with Hanson in Corpus Christi. “I think the city is doing everything it literally can do at this point.”

Until last July, water trickled naturally from the small, domestic well at Chris Cuellar’s house, about two miles from the city’s wellfield. Within six months it had dropped to 15 feet below ground. Luckily, he still received municipal water service from the city of Robstown. 

A retired chemical plant worker who spent 10 years managing wastewater operations at one of the region’s largest industrial complexes, Cuellar began to organize the neighbors. 

Chris Cuellar uses a conductivity meter to measure salinity in the Nueces River and the city of Corpus Christi’s wells that flow into it. (Dylan Baddour / Inside Climate News)

Every day he made rounds and measured the salinity of the outfall from the city’s wells and the river that received their output, seeking to hold the city accountable for limits that would restrict how much it could pump. 

He didn’t think to check his municipal tap water until his mother-in-law began to experience a quick, dramatic rise in blood pressure. Cuellar said his measurement showed that the tap water, which came from the Nueces River, was significantly above safety limits. 

With no well and no safe tap water, his family started drinking bottled water, while Robstown soon struck a deal to pipe in water from Corpus Christi. 

By that time, Corpus Christi was also urgently pursuing plans to pump water from the Evangeline aquifer into the Mary Rhodes Pipeline. But that effort got hung up when the city of Sinton, which depends on Evangeline water, challenged Corpus Christi’s permits before the local groundwater conservation district, which regulates allowable pumping rates. 

A well at Corpus Christi’s western wellfield pumps water into the Nueces River on March 31, 2026. (Dylan Baddour / Inside Climate News)

Nueces County, in contrast, has no groundwater conservation district to regulate pumping, although Cuellar and his neighbors are working to create one. 

The only thing stopping Corpus Christi from running its wells full-blast is limitations on the salinity levels it can create in the Nueces River. The city would need a “bed and banks” permit to authorize such significant changes to the river, which Cuellar and his neighbors, as well as the city of Orange Grove, planned to challenge in administrative court. 

But Abbott issued the permit by directive in March, waiving standard processes for public input, and the city commenced large-scale pumping the next day. 

The city’s temporary permits still contain guidelines for salinity, known as total dissolved solids (TDS), in the river, which city manager Zanoni said continue to limit production from the wells. 

He thanked Abbott for the directives that have bought critical time for Corpus Christi, and he called for further relaxation of the standard in order to help the city continue supplying all its customers with water.

“A little bit of TDS in the river for a short distance is not all that bad,” Zanoni said. “It’s better than having no river and we could be heading there.”

The post Corpus Christi Water Crisis Spurs Stampede on South Texas Aquifers appeared first on The Texas Observer.

‘Gossip and Sleaze’: Dallas Express Smears State Rep’s Son Under Fake Byline

posted in: All news | 0

Though journalism remains an unlicensed profession, and standards do vary across news outlets, some rules are very broadly accepted. The most common reference point is the code of ethics of the Society for Professional Journalists (SPJ), which compiles guidelines that aim to keep practitioners honest, minimize unintended harm, and build trust.

For example, journalists are supposed to write under their real names. They are supposed to verify information before reporting it, and they should take particular care when dealing with juveniles. For a news outlet to report unconfirmed criminal allegations against a minor under a fake name—again, for example—would be atypical at best, if not a blatant violation of journalistic ethics. 

Last month, that is exactly what happened when The Dallas Express published an article about a son of state Representative Gene Wu, a Houston Democrat. 

For those unfamiliar, The Dallas Express is an unusual news outlet in a number of ways. Formed in 2021, the nonprofit repurposed the brand of a historic progressive Black newspaper that went defunct in the 1970s. It purports to produce spin-free, fact-based news, though it has consistently operated as a right-wing outlet. The Express’ own ethics code states that the outlet “does not use anonymous sources,” but it does not specify whether it uses fictitious bylines. Its founder, publisher, and board member, Monty Bennett, is a Republican megadonor and hotelier who lives in the Dallas area, and its current CEO, Chris Putnam, is a former Republican congressional candidate and ex-Tarrant County GOP officer. The Express sometimes discloses Bennett’s ties to local political and business issues in relevant articles and sometimes does not, including in articles about astroturf advocacy groups that Bennett helped seed.

Early on, the Express website was found to share technical infrastructure with a network of partisan pay-to-play websites that purport to produce local news. A 501(c)(3) nonprofit—a tax status that comes with a prohibition on political campaigning—the outlet has run advertisements for Republican candidates.

Last week on @Amuse’s X Space, we broke down the current media landscape and how nearly every outlet today leans left and pushes an agenda.

That’s exactly why @Sarah_Z_Bennett and I started @DallasExpress: to give people a place for honest and real news.

If you missed it:… pic.twitter.com/PqPFdtGcWt

— Monty Bennett (@MontyBennett) July 8, 2025

X post from Bennett criticizing other media (Courtesy/Monty Bennett X)

On March 16, The Dallas Express published an article reporting allegations about one of Wu’s two sons. In addition to being a state rep, Wu is the House’s Democratic caucus leader. 

Titled “Controversial Texas Rep. Gene Wu’s Son’s ‘Concerning’ Behavior At Prominent Private School Reported To DPS After Knife Incident,” the article was quickly spread by Republican politicians and right-wing influencers on social media. “Denaturalize and deport,” wrote Bo French, former chairman of the Tarrant County GOP and current primary runoff candidate for the Texas Railroad Commission (RRC), in a post on X sharing the article. Yahoo News, which has a syndication partnership with The Dallas Express, distributed the article to its readers. 

The article cites unspecified reports and unnamed “law enforcement officials” in reporting that Wu’s son, a minor who attends a private school in the Houston area, allegedly showed an approximately 10-inch plastic knife to classmates after school hours, among other supposed behavioral issues. 

The author of the article is listed as “J Galt,” the only staff member on The Dallas Express organizational chart who lacks a headshot. According to a former Express employee, who worked there when the name “J Galt” began appearing on articles and who requested anonymity for fear of reprisal due to signing a non-disclosure agreement, the byline does not correspond to a real person.

“Galt was a fake name we could use on the byline when we got assigned stories we didn’t want to write,” the staffer told the Texas Observer in late March. “It started when Chris Putnam was CEO, but there wasn’t an announcement or anything about it. It kind of just started happening.”

John Galt is a central character named in the opening line of Atlas Shrugged, the well-known novel by Ayn Rand, a favorite writer of many on the political right.

Bennett and Putnam did not respond to the Observer’s requests for comment for this article. Wu and his wife, journalist Miya Shay, also did not provide comment.

“The Dallas Express ‘news story’ about Texas state Representative and House Democratic Caucus Chairman Gene Wu’s juvenile son does not pass the ethical sniff test, from its newsworthiness to its use of anonymous sources and a fake byline,” Dan Axelrod, a journalist and professor who chairs the SPJ’s ethics committee, told the Observer.

Two other professors echoed Axelrod’s concerns.

“The idea of writing under a pseudonym is really problematic,” said the University of Texas at Austin’s John Schwartz, who described the article as “an incredible hit job” as well as “gossip and sleaze.” 

Schwartz said there are certain exceptions when author pseudonyms might be permitted, such as when journalists live in dangerous places where identifying them could pose imminent security risks, in which cases the reason should be disclosed. No disclosure or justification is present in the Express article.

“This appears to be using a pseudonym because they’re doing something underhanded,” Schwartz said. “For a reader to trust you, they have to know who you are. And to create a fake name, as opposed to a no-byline, adds another level of subterfuge to this.”

Texas A&M journalism professor Mariano Castillo also questioned the article’s reliance on anonymous sources, which is prohibited by the Express’ own code of ethics.

“The best practice when characterizing unnamed and anonymous sources is to always be as specific as possible,” said Castillo, who told the Observer the article is “problematic” and raises serious ethical questions. “In this story … a lot of stuff gets attributed simply to officials.” 

SPJ’s ethics code states that anonymity should only be used when information can be obtained in no other way, the source faces danger, and an explanation is given (as the Observer did above with the former Express employee). In practice, some outlets are more liberal in granting anonymity.

In addition to unnamed law enforcement sources, the Express article cites unspecified “reports” from the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Houston Regional Intelligence Service Center, which consolidates data from local, state, and federal agencies. Neither responded to the Observer’s requests for comment for this story. The Observer has filed related public information requests.

Various laws typically shield minors from the release of educational and criminal records outside exceptional circumstances. Moreover, The Dallas Express did not report that Wu’s son had been charged with any crime.

The Express article effectively identifies the juvenile, who can be one of only two individuals, through circumstantial information. The Express’ own code of ethics states that “Juvenile suspects can only be identified when they have been charged as adults.” 

Axelrod said: “Despite not naming the child or the school, the prominence of the student’s father and The Dallas Express’s mention of the child’s attendance at a Houston-area private school are enough to identify the student relatively easily.”

The Express article also superfluously states, in two separate instances, that both Wu and his wife—a Houston TV reporter—were born in China. Wu, a combative online personality himself, has long been the subject of racist and xenophobic attacks from the political right.

The second half of the article, under the subheading “Other Controversies Surrounding Wu,” features an X post from French, the RRC candidate, accusing the Houstonian lawmaker of being a “puppet” of the Chinese Communist Party.

Mudslinging is common in politics, of course, but “There’s been an unwritten rule forever that if you’re in the middle of a political fight, leave the kids out,” Schwartz said. 

In breaking that rule last month, the Express also seems to have broken with its own purported policies and that of the journalism profession—an industry fighting for its credibility against a rising tide of misinformation—broadly speaking.

“No ethical journalist would mistake the Dallas Express reporting on Rep. Wu’s son as anything even remotely resembling fair, newsworthy journalism,” Axelrod said. “[It] appears to be a hit piece masquerading as journalism … [an] example of a news outlet with a history of distorted and vindictive reportage training its sights on the child of a state representative it opposes.”

The post ‘Gossip and Sleaze’: Dallas Express Smears State Rep’s Son Under Fake Byline appeared first on The Texas Observer.

The Corpus Christi Water Crisis Isn’t Exceptional. It’s Early.

posted in: All news | 0

For years, climate scientists have projected that South Texas would grow hotter and drier—that drought cycles would lengthen, that rainfall would become less reliable, and that the water systems built for a wetter century would eventually face conditions they were never designed to absorb. In Corpus Christi, that projection has become a daily operational reality.

As of early 2026, according to recent monitoring data, Lake Corpus Christi stands at just over 9 percent of capacity, and Choke Canyon Reservoir, the city’s other primary source, is below 8 percent full. City planning scenarios suggest a formal Level 1 water emergency, requiring mandatory cuts across all users, could be declared as early as May. Some city planning models now account for no meaningful rainfall for the remainder of the year—not as a worst case, but as a planning baseline.

What is unfolding here is, at its core, a timing failure. This is not a failure of prediction; the science has been consistent for decades. It is a failure of alignment. The climate is changing faster than the infrastructure built to manage it. South Texas is drying. The reservoirs that supply the city were structured around conditions that are no longer stable. The industrial demand layered on top of that system—formed under hydrological conditions that have since shifted and reflect the water availability of a wetter decade— has no mechanism to recalibrate when the rainfall those commitments assumed stops arriving. This is a synchronization failure between climate systems and human systems. The reservoirs are where that gap becomes measurable.

Choke Canyon fell from 47 percent to 11 percent capacity between October 2021 and October 2025 alone. That four-year decline is the physical signature of a five-year drought that has kept the Corpus Christi area in persistent moderate to severe drought conditions, with year-to-date rainfall running at less than 60 percent of normal, according to regional climate data. This is what climate-driven aridification looks like at the reservoir level—slow, cumulative, and indifferent to development patterns established in wetter years.

The drought did not create the industrial water demand, it exposed its limits. Since 2015, petrochemical plants, steel mills, and liquefied natural gas export facilities came to the region with assurances that enough water would be available. Those assurances were made against a rainfall baseline that the drought has since revised, and under hydrological conditions that climate projections had already suggested would not hold. What was promised as an abundant water supply was, in effect, water that depended on hydrological conditions that did not persist, and now, under drought conditions that climate science had long flagged as likely, the gap between promise and supply has become a crisis.

Industrial facilities now account for 50 to 60 percent of the city’s total water consumption. Individual facilities can consume several billion gallons annually—reflecting the scale at which industrial demand now operates within a system that was never sized for prolonged drought at this level of consumption.

The deferred solution has a name and a cost. The proposed Inner Harbor desalination plant has been discussed for more than a decade. As cost estimates ballooned from around $750 million to $1.3 billion, the city voted to cancel it in September 2025. The worsening water emergency has since put it back on the table, with a vote on a revived proposal from a new contractor expected this month. But current timelines suggest the plant is unlikely to come online before 2028, a solution measurable in years for a crisis measurable in months.

Emergency measures are now underway. The city is drilling a wellfield and pursuing groundwater purchases. The largest remaining reservoir, Lake Texana, located about 100 miles away, is currently 55 percent full but could fall to around 30 percent by summer. Each of these measures buys time. None of them resolves the underlying mismatch between what the climate is delivering and what the infrastructure assumes.

What makes Corpus Christi significant as a case is not that the drought was unpredictable. It is that the drought was predicted, and that the planning systems in place were calibrated to conditions that are no longer stable. Research led by Texas State Climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon projects that Texas could face conditions drier than those any megadrought of the last thousand years by the latter half of this century. The state water plan, researchers noted, does not explicitly account for climate change in its supply or demand projections—and the probability of exceeding the 1950s “drought of record,” still the benchmark for state planning, is increasing year by year.

State projections suggest an 18 percent decline in water supply combined with a 9 percent increase in demand by 2070. Those numbers describe a structural imbalance that has no analog in the planning frameworks under which the current industrial commitments were made.

According to regional climate records, the volatility itself is a signal: Last year ranked among the driest on record for the region, while 2021 was the wettest in 30 years. Planning systems built around averages fail when the distribution of wet and dry years shifts this dramatically. The 2021 wet year likely generated the false comfort that allowed another round of industrial commitments to proceed on optimistic water assumptions.

The lesson Corpus Christi offers is not primarily about desalination financing, or any particular vote, or which companies consume how many gallons. It is about synchronization. As Shannon Marquez, a professor at the Columbia Water Center, has noted: This is not an isolated crisis. It is consistent with how things will unfold in water-stressed regions that have not yet begun to plan.

The Texas Water Development Board’s own analysis estimates a severe drought could cause $153 billion in annual economic damages by 2070 if new water sources are not developed. Yet the state water plan was built against a hydrological baseline that climate science says is already receding. Industrial water contracts were negotiated against rainfall averages that the drought cycle is now revising in real time.

Corpus Christi is not exceptional; it is early. The same existing development patterns, the same infrastructure deferral, the same gap between industrial water commitments and actual climate-adjusted supply—these conditions are present across South and West Texas, wherever reservoirs are falling and drought projections are sharpening. What the city’s crisis demands is not a post-mortem. It demands a planning architecture built around the climate variables that were once projections and are now operational realities.

The climate does not negotiate with infrastructure timelines. In Corpus Christi, the forecast arrived before the infrastructure did. Other Texas cities are likely to encounter the same alignment problem as their reservoirs decline.

The post The Corpus Christi Water Crisis Isn’t Exceptional. It’s Early. appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Foster Care Repeats Rejection for LGBTQ+ Texans

posted in: All news | 0

When a teenager in Texas is pushed out of their home because of their sexual orientation or gender identity, foster care is supposed to help. It is meant to offer safety, stability, healing, and the chance to begin again. But for many LGBTQ+ youth, rejection does not end when the state steps in. It simply assumes new forms.

I have spent much of my life working and researching within Texas’s foster care system. Over the years, I have interviewed LGBTQ+ young people who entered care after being exposed, outed, or treated as something to be fixed. Some were forced out of their homes. Others endured other forms of rejection: parents who stopped speaking to them, churches that condemned them, relatives who framed their identity as shameful. By the time they entered foster care, many had absorbed a traumatic message: Something is wrong with me. I do not belong.

Rejection is not just an event. It is a trauma. It reshapes how young people understand safety, attachment, and worth.

What troubled me most in those conversations was how rarely that trauma was addressed by the child welfare system charged with protecting them.

Instead, they were rejected again and again. Many youth moved through multiple placements in quick succession. They were labeled difficult. They were misgendered. They were disciplined for behavior related to grief, fear, or stress. When foster homes fell through, they were routed into group homes and congregate care facilities, usually hours from their schools, siblings, and friends.

Group homes tend to be framed as temporary solutions—a last resort used only when family placements are unavailable. But for LGBTQ+ youth, who entered care because they were punished for their identity, such settings can reinforce negative feedback they received at home: You do not belong in a family. You are better managed than loved.

The young people I spoke with described strict schedules, constant surveillance, and staff turnover that made attachment nearly impossible. Care felt transactional. One young adult told me, “People were paid to take care of me my whole life, so it just started to feel normal that everything had a price.” When all caregiving seems temporary and professionalized, belonging can feel conditional.

Such instability compounds trauma. And for some LGBTQ+ youth in Texas foster care, it sets the stage for other consequences. For many youth, the search for connection does not end in a foster home. It ends with someone else who seems to offer what the system never did.

Many youth I interviewed became victims of trafficking and exploitation. Yet they did not describe these experiences as a sudden fall into danger, but rather a gradual slide toward someone who promised stability, protection, or affection. After multiple placements, after being told they were difficult, after living under constant supervision, even small gestures became attractive. A ride. A place to stay. Someone who used the right name and pronouns. Someone who said, I’ve got you.

Instability makes young people mobile. Trauma makes them hungry for belonging. When placements collapse and group homes feel more institutional than familial, some youth run. They leave not because they are delinquent, but because they are searching for connection on their own terms.

Traffickers understand this. They do not begin with force. They begin with belonging.

Again and again, the same patterns surfaced. Many former foster youth who later experienced exploitation had histories of placement disruption and time in congregate care. When someone offered a couch, a meal, or the promise of partnership, it did not feel like danger. It felt like relief.

Group homes do not cause trafficking. But instability, isolation, and repeated rejection create predictable vulnerabilities. National research has found that LGBTQ+ youth are overrepresented in foster care and significantly more likely to be placed in congregate care settings. Youth with histories of foster care involvement are overrepresented among trafficking survivors. In Texas, where placement shortages and years of system strain have led to heavy reliance on congregate care, this sequence repeats itself. 

Rejection at home. Instability in care. Group placements that normalize conditional belonging. Running. Grooming. Exploitation. These are not isolated failures. They are all linked.

Texas has the power to interrupt that sequence. For years, the state’s foster care system has struggled with placement shortages, workforce instability, and an overreliance on congregate care. But safety of vulnerable kids should take priority over institutional convenience.

When youth enter care after identity-based rejection, the central focus should be healing. The system should offer something radically different from what they experienced at home. Instead , the state often confirms the very story it should be helping young people to rewrite.

For LGBTQ+ youth, community  typically includes more than the traditional nuclear family. Many create their own support networks. They form chosen families. They rely on mentors, neighbors, teachers, coaches, and friends’ parents who affirm them when others will not. Yet child welfare systems often overlook these relationships because they do not fit neatly into legal categories. Recognizing and supporting those connections, rather than defaulting to group placements, could improve stability and shift the trajectory of care.

The child welfare system cannot undo the trauma of family rejection overnight. But at a minimum, it should refuse to repeat it. It can choose stability over convenience. It can invest in the relationships youth are already building. It can recognize that for LGBTQ+ young people, safety may come less from institutional placement and more from people who affirm and choose them.

If we continue to route LGBTQ+ youth into settings that confirm they do not belong in families, we should expect them to seek alternative connections—sometimes with those who wish to exploit them. If we instead support the families they create and the caregivers who already affirm them, we might finally offer what foster care should provide: not just safety, but home.

The post Foster Care Repeats Rejection for LGBTQ+ Texans appeared first on The Texas Observer.