Lake Houston - Humble - Kingwood Edition | January 2023

CITY & COUNTY

Top city & county stories to watch in 2023

2023 ANNUAL COMMUNITY GUIDE

FEMA ood map, MAAPnext release expected in 2023

Harris County to initiate work on projects for $1.2B bond package

City of Humble eyes downtown revitalization

OTHER STORIES TO FOLLOW IN 2023

FLOOD MAPS: FROM MODELING TO ADOPTION The Federal Emergency Management Agency and Harris County Flood Control District have been working on concurrent ›ood mapping projects for Harris County. MAAPNEXT PROJECT (completed) Work on HCFCD's Modeling, Assessment and Awareness Project begins. 2019 The HCFCD reports being 70% done with ood plain maps, projecting FEMA will release preliminary maps in spring or summer 2022. May 2021 Jan. 25, 2022 The HCFCD reports being 96% done with its work and shifts its projection for FEMA’s map release to summer or fall 2022. Feb. 22, 2022 The HCFCD says it has sent mapping data to FEMA. FEMA expects to release preliminary ood insurance rate maps, or FIRMs, in 2023, at which point the MAAPnext dashboard goes live. HCFCD and FEMA will hold open houses. 2023 RELEASE OF PRELIMINARY MAPS 18-24-month period after release: • Residents have 90 days to provide feedback on the FIRMs, which may be revised before being ƒnalized. • Communities have six months to adopt or amend ood plain ordinances based on the new FIRMs. SOURCES: HARRIS COUNTY FLOOD CONTROL DISTRICT, FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY”COMMUNITY IMPACT

THE 2022 BOND PACKAGE

Although commissioners split the vote to put the bond on the ballot 3-2, voters signaled their approval for all three propositions during the Nov. 8 election. More details on individual projects are expected in 2023.

BY HANNAH BROL & RACHEL CARLTON

BY RACHEL CARLTON

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Carl Apple, director of communications for the county’s engineering department, said his department is working with the Ošce of County Administration to develop an implementation strategy for bond projects, and he anticipates a “busy year” with the process of bidding and assigning projects beginning in 2023. “We’re preparing for that to begin to happen in the coming months; within the next few months we’ll all know more about the process, including opportunities for public engagement,” Apple said. Projects will eventually be presented to Commissioners Court for approval. As of press

HARRIS COUNTY The Federal Emergency Management Agency will release Harris County’s preliminary ¢ood insurance rate maps sometime in 2023, according to Harris County Flood Control District ošcials. The HCFCD projected in a May 2021 update that FEMA would release the maps in the spring or summer of 2022, but has continually pushed back its estimate. FEMA ošcials could not conŒrm a speciŒc release date. Local ¢ood control entities partner with FEMA to provide information for those maps, which show ¢ood risk and mandate ¢ood insurance in high-risk areas. HCFCD Planning Division Director Ataul Hannan said FEMA’s maps have not been updated countywide since 2007. Work on the countywide update began in 2019 with the advent of the Modeling, Assessment and Awareness Project, or MAAPnext, which uses updated rainfall and topographic data to create comprehensive maps and ¢ood risk tools that residents will be able to access with an online dashboard. Ošcials said MAAPnext’s dashboard will complement the release of FEMA’s maps. A process will then begin to revise the maps before they become ošcial in late 2024 or 2025. Early in that process, residents will have 90 days to comment on the maps, and communities will have to adopt or amend their ¢ood plain management ordinances.

Proposition B

Proposition C

Proposition A

BY WESLEY GARDNER

HARRIS COUNTY Voters gave the go-ahead Nov. 8 on three Harris County bond propositions totaling $1.2 billion for public safety facilities, roads and parks. As previously reported by Community Impact , Proposition A allocated $100 million for public safety facilities; Proposition B allotted $900 million for roads, drainage and multimodal transportation; and Proposition C designated $200 million for parks. Each of the three propositions were approved by voters with 55.55%, 69.08% and 63.33% of all votes in favor, respectively.

$100M for public safety facilities

$900M for roads, drainage and multimodal transportation

HUMBLE The city of Humble will begin work on its long- planned downtown revitalization project in 2023. In January 2020, the city held the Œrst of several workshops to discuss revitalizing the downtown area, but those eŽorts were put on hold due to the pandemic. In November, Humble City Council members approved an agreement with the Texas Downtown Association to assess the city’s downtown area. City Manager Jason Stuebe said the assessment will likely begin in the Œrst quarter of 2023. “We’re in the queue right now,” Stuebe said. “It does take time to do these things.” City ošcials hope to receive assessment results by spring 2023.

N

Construction on Humble Fire Station No. 2 set to begin in early 2023 Construction on the $6.13 million replacement of Humble Fire Station No. 2 is set to begin following a groundbreaking ceremony Jan. 20. The 12,000-square-foot facility will be located at 1401 S. Houston Ave. and is expected take one year to complete. According to Humble Fire Department Chief David Langenberg, the existing Fire Station No. 2 on Wilson Road poses several challenges for the department as it was designed as a storage garage for ‰re engines when it was originally built in 1974. The facility has since been adapted into a station. While the Wilson facility only houses an EMS unit, the new station will house both ‰re and EMS units, and feature a training component.

$1.2B TOTAL

$200M for parks

VOTER APPROVAL

55.55% 69.08% 63.33%

SOURCES: HARRIS COUNTY OFFICE OF COUNTY ADMINISTRATION, HARRIS COUNTY OFFICE OF THE ELECTIONS ADMINISTRATOR–COMMUNITY IMPACT

time Jan. 18, speciŒc bond projects slated for the Lake Houston, Humble and Kingwood communities had not been announced. The Œrst Commissioners

Court meeting of the year was Jan. 10, when newly elected Precinct 4 Commissioner Lesley Briones began her four- year term.

PORTER 23611 Hwy 59 (281) 354-0733 HUMBLE 19322 US-59 (281) 540-7202

KINGWOOD 1420 Kingwood Dr (281) 359-7115 ATASCOCITA 7034 FM 1960 E (281) 812-3100

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