10/24/2024
Just in. Hays residents have sued over Proposition A.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Hays County Voters Challenge County Road Bond Election
As Called in Violation of the Texas Open Meetings Act
Late Monday four Hays County property owners and voters, Les Carnes, Cathy Ramsey, Jim Camp, and Gabrielle Moore filed a lawsuit in Hays County District Court claiming that the County placed its Proposition A $439 million road bond on the November ballot in violation of the Texas Open Meetings Act. Wimberley attorney Bill Gammon serves as the lead attorney in the case.
The lawsuit seeks to stop Hays County from taking further actions to pursue the $439 million package of 31 road projects whether or not voters approve the proposed bond. The only choice given to voters is to vote for or against the entire bond package.
Plaintiffs’ goal is to force the County Commissioners to appoint a bond advisory committee to shape a county bond package, as was done with previous bond packages, and to bring back a better bond proposal supported by public input for a vote in May or November of 2025.
“County Commissioners hatched this bond package in secret, ordering it onto the ballot at the last minute and in blatant violation of the Texas Open Meetings Act,” said lead plaintiff Les Carnes, a Driftwood property owner and voter since 1995. “Hays County residents were deprived of both the required public
notice that a bond proposal was being considered and the right to participate in determining what should be included or excluded, what the total price should be, and what it will mean for our taxes,” Carnes added. “If voters feel like they know little or nothing about the bond package, that was intentional,” Carnes said.
“Many of the proposed road projects will harm springs and creeks, providing free roads for Hill Country developers at taxpayer expense, while failing to make our roads safer and fixing existing bottlenecks,” said plaintiff and long-time Dripping Springs homeowner Cathy Ramsey. Commissioners failed to include the public in shaping the bond package, unlike previous bond proposals that were shaped by citizen bond advisory committees. As a result the bond package includes projects over and upstream of the Edwards Aquifer recharge zone – the source of most of Hays County’s water supplies and of San Marcos Springs. Several of the projects have been actively opposed by residents, including a proposed extension of FM 150 past its current terminus at RM 12 into the upper Onion Creek valley and an extension of Yarrington Road on the northwest side of San Marcos near the Blanco River.
The Hays Coalition for a Better Bond Special Political Action Committee (S**C) is actively campaigning against Proposition A. The S**C is not a party to the lawsuit but supports its goals and its claims that the Commissioners Court hatched the bond package in secret in violation of state law. For more information and to read a copy of the lawsuit go to HaysPropAWrongWay.com.