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Soil and Water Conservation District Directors to Elect State District III TSSWCB Board Member

TEMPLE — Soil and Water Conservation Districts (SWCD) in State District III will elect a member to the Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board (TSSWCB) on Tuesday, May 2, 2017. The election will be held at 5 p.m. in the Victoria Community Center Annex in Victoria, Texas.
 
State District III consists of 50 counties where there are 46 Soil and Water Conservation Districts in the Gulf Coast and South Texas Plains region of the State.
 
The current TSSWCB member for State District III is José Dodier Jr. of Zapata, Texas. Dodier, who has been a member of the TSSWCB since May, 2005, is also partner in the Don José Land & Cattle Company in Zapata County. 
 
Since its beginning, the TSSWCB has been governed by five board members. Each respective board member is elected in a convention type election by delegates from soil and water conservation district directors within the state district that the member resides. However, with the enactment of S.B. 1828 by the 78th Legislature, two Governor appointees also serve on the TSSWCB to create a seven-member board,
 
“Elections occur annually to comply with the soil conservation laws of Texas. The elections are held in state district conventions and TSSWCB members serve two-year staggered terms. Since this is an even numbered year, TSSWCB member elections are being held in State Districts I, III and V,” said Rex Isom, Executive Director of TSSWCB.
 
Elected State Board members must be 18 years of age or older, hold title to farmland or ranchland, and be actively engaged in farming or ranching. The Governor appointees must be actively engaged in the business of farming, animal husbandry, or other business related to agriculture as well as wholly or partly owns or leases land used in connection with that business.
 
The TSSWCB administers Texas’ soil and water conservation law and delivers coordinated natural resource conservation programs through the State’s 216 soil and water conservation districts.  Additionally, the TSSWCB is the lead agency for planning, implementing, and managing programs for preventing and abating agricultural and silvicultural nonpoint sources of water pollution.

The agency administers a water supply enhancement program through the targeted control of water-depleting brush.  In addition the TSSWCB works to ensure that the State’s network of 2,000 flood control dams are protecting lives and property by providing operation, maintenance, and structural repair grants to local government sponsors.
 
“In short, the services and programs provided by the TSSWCB target rural Texas farmers and ranchers through soil and water conservation districts, but the results of these services benefit all Texans. For example, soil and water conservation districts provide technical assistance in cooperation with the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to assist agricultural producers implement voluntary conservation plans that best address the capabilities of the land they operate,” said Isom.
 
For more information, please visit: https://www.tsswcb.texas.gov/en/aboutus/board.

"Protecting and Enhancing Natural Resources since 1939."

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