
State Representatives Donna Howard and Valinda Bolton (seated at left) were among the officials at the first Lake Travis Coalition meeting. Photo by MACY HURWITZ
Elected officials and representatives of communities on Lake Travis got together Tuesday to begin hatching a strategy to protect the lake that touches their communities. The attendees discussed long-term goals and short-term goals for the group they’ve named the Lake Travis Community Coalition.
The short-term goal the group was most concerned with was ensuring surrounding communities are not able to dump effluent into the lake. This was the motivation for the Village of Volente to hire lobbyist Sandra Haverlah, who headed the meeting and has been in charge of forming the coalition. State Rep. Donna Howard said she was happy to see all the communities that had come together to try and protect the lake.
“Rather than a voice here and a voice there, hopefully you can have critical mass and have a greater voice in coming to the legislature and asking for those things that will help protect water in our area,” Howard said.
Haverlah said the group’s immediate goals were to keep an eye on what comes out of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality meeting June 30 when the commissioners announce the revisions to water quality standards. She said before the next meeting she would like to see the coalition launch a website and create an e-mail list to get more organized.
Rep. Valinda Bolton emphasized that while these issues can be politically charged, groups in the region can band together to protect the lake without partisanship haunting their efforts.
“If you get the mayor of Austin and the mayor of Lakeway agreeing on anything, then that’s pretty significant and I think that speaks to people realize that this is an issue much broader than partisanship,” Bolton said.

Howdy , i feel like a lone ranger over here in Trails End end of the lake , i dont get wanting to dump sewer effluen in to your drinking water , why dont they just trap it like Lakeway , sell it back to the residents of that comunity , let them drink it or water there grass with it , why subject others to swim , drink or bathe there waste ? is that too simple ?
We need to stick together we are having our property rights taken away and destroying our water all in the name of money. The citizens ask for and elect people to protect us and do our will not that of a developer. We have too many chemicals in our waters now this must stop. My family has lived on this river since the 1800’s and they would be in shock, I know I am! We need common sense making decisions and stop the back door deals. I do not care how much money you have you cannot drink it. We do not need anymore marinas on this lake, we do not need anymore dumping in the lake. Texas has a lot of land but not much water, so we must be conservative with what we do have. Someone needs to enforce the laws that we already have and stop making excuses why you can’t. Respectfully, Diane Crumley Dee
Did the LTCC think to include the BCRUA board on their invitation list? (You won’t have a lake to protect if you let others drain it…) L.