EL ag said:
I agree that Park Hudson has been ruined with all the bulldozing etc. The original purpose of this park was developed to provide residents who live in the community with a tranquil, densely wooded, natural habitat with abundant wildlife and established nature trail for walking, jogging, and biking for the past 15 years and the majority of the folks I see are walkers and joggers. An environmental impact statement would be necessary per TCEQ. It looks like the City of Bryan did not do their homework and furthermore ignored the residents that live around that area. Not sure where anyone will park when there are large tournaments. It seems like the City Council did not know what their own departments were doing.....
Maybe I misunderstand the scope of work done at Park Hudson, but installing a disc golf course (clearing some trees, installing some footpaths, and putting some poles in the ground), doesn't seem like it would require an EIA.
From a SWPPP perspective, under an acre of soil disturbance is de minimus. Between 1-5 acres of soil disturbance requires simply notifying to TCEQ of an intent to proceed. 5+ acres of soil disturbance would be a major project with project review at which point you may need a EIA.
Keep in mind, that is the amount of soil disturbed and not the size of the entire property. Also, if the dog park was installed and then the disc golf course installed at a different time, they may be considered separate projects.
One last thing, if an EIA was previously done (say when the park was initially built) it would not necessarily have to be repeated for future projects on the property.