Katy Edition | March 2022

TRANSPORTATIONUPDATES

COMPILED BY ASIA ARMOUR & SHAWN ARRAJJ

Texas Supreme Court begins hearing high-speed rail eminent domain case as bill led in Congress

UPCOMING PROJECTS

The Texas Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the rehearing of a petition against the construction of a high-speed rail line Jan. 11. The case centers on a 236-mile high-speed rail line between Houston and Dallas being planned by the company Texas Central. Filed by landowner JimMiles in 2016, the lawsuit argues Texas Central does not qualify as a railroad company under state law and therefore cannot use eminent domain to acquire land needed to construct the line. The Supreme Court initially declined to hear the case in June after an appeals court ruled Texas Central could be dened as a railroad company. Miles petitioned for a rehearing, and the court reversed course Oct. 15 to grant a rehearing. Attorney Jerey Levinger of Dallas-based Levinger PC, represent- ing Miles, focused his arguments on whether Texas Central needed to be operating railroads to be considered a railroad company. Levinger also noted Texas Central had not applied for a permit from the Surface Trans- portation Board, a federal regulatory agency. The STB rejected a Texas Central petition for an exemption from construction approval require- ments in July 2020. Levinger argued construction approval would require the company to disclose its nances. Texas Central declined to comment on its available funds or whether it would receive federal funds from the recently passed bipartisan infrastruc- ture deal. However Marie Yeates of

Legislative U P D A T E S

KATY FLEWELLEN RD.

A new bill led in the U.S. Congress could thwart Texas Central’s eorts to build high-speed rail in Texas.

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Pin Oak Road turn lane Fort Bend County opened bids in February to start the Pin Oak Road project. The county is looking for ways to increase trac ow, so it is implementing a southbound dedicated right-turn lane onto Katy Flewellen Road, said Ike Akinwande, assistant county engineer for Fort Bend County. Timeline: May-Summer 2022 Cost: $290,000 Funding source: 2017 Fort Bend Coun- ty mobility bond

House Resolution 6365

What it does: bars construction from starting on a high-speed rail project until the operator has acquired all land needed

Status: referred to the subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous Materials on Jan. 11

SOURCE: U.S CONGRESSCOMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER

PRAIRIE PKWY.

Vinson and Elkins LLC, representing the railroad, said the company had received federal funds as part of her argument that Texas Central is “not a sham.” “The question is whether we’re going to allow [landowners who do not allow property surveys] to pre- vent Texas from getting the benet of this train,” Yeates said. Newbill led U.S. Reps. Jake Ellzey, RWaxa- hachie, and Kevin Brady, RThe Woodlands, on Jan. 10 led a bill in the U.S. Congress requiring high- speed rail projects to acquire all land necessary to construct the line before beginning construction. The bill directs the STB to reject construction authorization for

high-speed rail projects longer than 10 miles that have not acquired all necessary land. In a press release, Brady said the bill would protect the rights of land- owners along planned railroads. “Many questions remain about Texas Central’s plans to build and nance this controversial high-speed rail project, and I support any nec- essary reforms that will protect the rights of landowners whose farms, ranches, and homes sit along their proposed route,” Brady said. Texas Central declined to comment on the bill. “They’ve got serious nancial issues demonstrating where they’re going to get the $18 [billion]-$30 billion needed to nish this project,” Levinger said.

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ALL INFORMATION ON THIS PAGE WAS UPDATED AS OF MARCH 4. NEWS OR QUESTIONS ABOUT THESE OR OTHER LOCAL TRANSPORTATION PROJECTS? EMAIL US AT KTYNEWSCOMMUNITYIMPACT.COM. Transit Authority of Harris County in an amount up to $823,777 for the Prairie Parkway extension project, which extends Prairie Parkway to Boardwalk Drive from Kingsland Boulevard. Timeline: May-December Cost: $823,777 Funding source: Katy Development Authority Prairie Parkway extension On Feb. 28, Katy City Council autho- rized the Katy Development Authority to use funds from the Metropolitan

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KATY EDITION • MARCH 2022

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