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Lennar is actively clearing land for its residential developments, including the 1,100-acre Guajolote Ranch subdivision in northwest Bexar County, Texas.
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The Municipal Utility District, or MUD, would create a taxing district to finance a water treatment plant on the proposed Guajolote Ranch Subdivision.
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One of the authors of a 2020 Southwest Research Institute study showing that a development like Guajolote Ranch would degrade the Edwards Aquifer is refuting claims by San Antonio Water System.
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An alliance is fighting against Lennar Homes' development over alleged environmental and wildlife impacts.
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The utility district requested by Lennar for the Guajolote Ranch subdivision would create a taxing entity to recoup costs of a water treatment plant and other improvements.
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More than 150 opponents of the controversial planned subdivision in northwest Bexar County showed up at a planning commission meeting on Friday.
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A nearly six-acre proposed retail center would include a gas station, two fast food outlets, and a two-story storage facility at Scenic Loop and Babcock roads.
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The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality has declined to reconsider a wastewater permit for the proposed Guajolote Ranch housing development in northwest Bexar County, leaving the permit in place.
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Florida-based Lennar Homes withdrew the application for the PID, only to file for a Municipal Utility District, or MUD, for the development.
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San Antonio Water System President and CEO Robert Puente is defending the utility’s handling of two high-profile issues: the Guajolote Ranch wastewater treatment plant controversy and the potential relocation of the SAWS downtown water chiller as part of Project Marvel, the city’s planned downtown redevelopment and sports-entertainment district.