The history of natural resource protection by the State of Texas
is one of gradual evolution from protecting the right of access to
natural resources (principally surface water) to a broader role in
protecting public health and conserving natural resources for
future generations of Texans. Natural resource programs were
established in Texas at the turn of the 20th century, motivated
initially by concerns over the management of water resources and
water rights. In parallel with developments in the rest of the
nation, and at the federal level, state natural resource efforts
broadened at mid-century to include the protection of air and water
resources, and later to the regulation of hazardous and
non-hazardous waste generation.
During the 1990s, the Texas Legislature moved to make natural
resource protection more efficient by consolidating programs. This
trend culminated in the creation of the Texas Natural Resource
Conservation Commission in the fall of 1993 as a comprehensive
environmental protection agency. Sunset legislation passed by
the Texas Legislature in 2000 directed that the agency
change its name to Texas Commission on Environmental Quality on
Sept. 1, 2002.
Time Line
1900s | 1910s | 1920s | 1930s | 1940s | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s | 1990s | 2000s |
See a flowchart
of predecessor agencies.
The following time line reflects the highlights of state laws,
federal laws, and agency initiatives that have affected the scope
of agency operations. Federal items of importance are in
bold.
1905
- The Legislature authorizes the creation of the first drainage
districts.
1913
- The Irrigation Act creates the Texas Board of Water Engineers
to establish procedures for determining surface water rights.
1914
- The Texas Board of Water Engineers publishes their first rules
and regulations.
1917
- A constitutional amendment authorizes the creation of
conservation and reclamation districts as needed.
1919
- The Legislature provides for the creation of freshwater supply
districts.
1925
- The Legislature provides for the organization of water control
and improvement districts.
1929
- The Legislature creates the first river authority (Brazos River
Authority).
1933
- The Legislature creates water supply districts.
1945
- Legislation authorizes the Texas Department of Health to
enforce drinking water standards for public water supply
systems.
1949
- State legislation declares that groundwater is private
property.
- The Legislature creates underground water conservation
districts.
1952
- The Department conducts the first air study in Texas.
1953
- The Legislature creates the Texas Water Pollution Control
Advisory Council, in the Department of Health, as the first state
body charged with dealing with pollution related issues.
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1956
- Congress passes the Federal Water Pollution Control
Act.
- Texas' first air quality initiative is established when the
State Department of Health begins air sampling in the state.
1957
- The Legislature creates the Texas Water Development Board to
forecast water supply needs and provide funding for water supply
and conservation projects.
1961
- The Texas Pollution Control Act establishes the Texas Water
Pollution Board, and eliminates the Water Pollution Advisory
Council, creating the state's first true pollution control
agency.
- A water well drillers advisory group is established.
- The Injection Well Act is passed authorizing the Texas Board of
Water Engineers to regulate waste disposal (other than that from
the oil and gas industry) into the subsurface through injection
wells.
1962
- The Texas Board of Water Engineers becomes the Texas Water
Commission, with additional responsibilities for water conservation
and pollution control.
- The Texas Water Pollution Board adopts its first rules and
regulations.
1963
- Congress enacts the Federal Clean Air
Act.
1965
- Congress passes the Federal Water Resources Planning
Act.
- The Texas Clean Air Act establishes the Texas Air Control
Board, in the Department of Health, to monitor and regulate air
pollution in the state.
- The Texas Water Commission becomes the Texas Water Rights
Commission and functions not related to water rights are
transferred to the Texas Water Development Board.
- The Water Well Drillers Act establishes the Water Well Drillers
Board.
1966
- The first Texas Air Control Board members are appointed.
1967
- The Texas Water Quality Act establishes the Texas Water Quality
Board (TWQB), assuming all functions of the Water Pollution Control
Board. TWQB adopts its first rules.
- The Texas Air Control Board adopts first air regulations.
1969
- Texas takes over most federal air monitoring.
- The Texas Solid Waste Disposal Act authorizes the Texas Water
Quality Board to regulate industrial solid waste, and the Texas
Department of Health to regulate municipal solid waste.
- A presidential order creates the Federal Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA).
1970
- The Federal Clean Air Act is amended requiring states
to develop State Implementation Plans (SIP).
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1971
- EPA adopts National Ambient Air Quality
Standards.
- The legislature first authorizes municipal utility
districts.
- The Texas Air Control Board establishes air permits
program.
1972
- Congress passes the Federal Clean Water
Act.
- The Texas Air Control Board submits the first State
Implementation Plan to the EPA. It also deploys the first
continuous air monitoring station.
1973
- The Legislature removes the Texas Air Control Board from the
Department of Health, making it an independent state agency.
1974
- Texas et al vs. the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
challenges EPA's plan for controlling ozone in Texas.
- The Texas Air Control Board completes deployment of first
continuous monitoring network.
- Congress enacts the Safe Drinking Water
Act.
1975
- Texas Air Control Board proposes Texas' Five-Point Plan
amendment to the Federal Clean Air Act.
1976 (-1979)
- Congress passes the Federal Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act (RCRA), to govern the disposal of all types of solid
and hazardous wastes.
1977
- Federal Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act are
amended.
- The Legislature creates the Texas Department of Water Resources
(TDWR) by combining the three existing water agencies in an effort
to consolidate the state's water programs. A six-member board is
set up as a policymaking body for the new agency. The TWDB is
retained as the legislative, or policy-making body. The Water
Rights Commission is renamed the Texas Water Commission and sits as
a quasi-judicial body that rules on permits. The Water Quality
Board is abolished.
1978
- The EPA establishes National Ambient Air Quality
Standards for lead.
1979
- The Texas Air Control Board submits revisions of the State
Implementation Plan to the EPA.
1980
- Congress enacts the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), better known as
Superfund, to provide funding for the cleanup of contaminated
sites.
- The Texas Air Control Board submits plan to address lead
pollution to the EPA.
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1981
- The Legislature creates the Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Disposal Authority, with responsibility for siting, operating, and
decommissioning a disposal facility for commercial low-level
radioactive waste.
1982
- The Texas Air Control Board submits Harris County ozone plan to
the EPA. It also reorganizes monitoring network and relocates
continuous air monitoring stations.
- Texas receives primary Underground Injection Control (UIC)
authorization from the EPA.
1984
- Congress passes the Federal Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendments (HSWA) to RCRA.
- Texas receives final Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA) authorization.
1985
- The Legislature dissolves the Department of Water Resources and
transfers regulatory enforcement to the recreated Texas Water
Commission, and planning and finance responsibilities to the
recreated Water Development Board.
- The Legislature moves the Water Rates and Utilities Services
Program from the Public Utility Commission of Texas to the newly
created Texas Water Commission.
- The Texas Air Control Board mobile sampling laboratory is first
deployed.
1986
- Congress passes the Federal Superfund Amendments and
Reauthorization Act (SARA), re-authorizes CERCLA, and creates the
Toxic Release Inventory (TRI).
- Congress amends the Federal Safe Drinking Water
Act.
1987
- Congress passes the Federal Water Quality Act of
1987.
- Texas establishes a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA)-approved state wellhead protection program.
1989
- The Legislature expands and funds Petroleum Storage Tank (PST)
Program.
- The Texas Radiation Control Act authorizes the Texas Department
of Health to license the disposal of radioactive waste.
1990
- Texas Water Commission receives initial federal Hazardous and
Solid Waste Amendments (HSWA) authorization.
1991
- Federal Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 are
implemented and expansion of Texas Air Control Board staff
begins in support of the act.
- The Legislature, in special session, creates the Texas Natural
Resource Conservation Commission to be effective Sept.1,
1993. Preparation begins for the consolidation of the Texas
Water Commission and the Texas Air Control Board into the
TNRCC.
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1992
- Texas Water Commission acquires responsibility for drinking
water, municipal solid waste, and the licensing of radioactive
substances from the Texas Department of Health.
- The Water Well Drillers Board and the Board of Irrigators are
merged into the the Texas Water Commission.
1993
- The Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission begins
operation, bringing together for the first time regulatory programs
for air, water, and waste.
1996
- Congress adopts the Federal Safe Drinking Water Act
re-authorization.
1997
- The Legislature transfers water well drillers regulation from
the TNRCC to the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.
- The Legislature returns uranium mining, processing and
by-product disposal oversight functions to the Texas Department of
Health.
- TNRCC concludes a Performance Partnership Agreement with the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, allowing limited flexibility
in federally funded program organization and funding. Aim of
agreement is to allocate resources most appropriately throughout
Texas on a regional basis.
- The Legislature adopts Senate Bill 1, mandating water
conservation planning for large water users and requiring
development of drought contingency plans by public water
suppliers.
1998
- The state of Texas assumes the authority to administer the
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program in
Texas on Sept 14, becoming the
Texas Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (TPDES)
administered by the TNRCC.
1999
- The Legislature transfers the functions of the Texas Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Disposal Authority to the TNRCC.
2001
- The Legislature transfers responsibility for environmental
laboratory accreditation, and certification of residential water
treatment specialists from the Texas Department of Health to the
TNRCC.
- The Texas Environmental Health Institute is created by joint
agreement between the TNRCC and the Texas Department of Health to
identify health conditions related to living near a federal or
state Superfund site.
- Texas Emissions Reduction Plan (TERP) established by the
Legislature to be administered by the TNRCC, the Comptroller, the
Public Utility Commission of Texas, and the Texas Council on
Environmental Technology.
- The 77th Legislature passes HB 2912 adopting the Sept. 2000
recommendation of the Sunset Advisory Committee to continue the
agency for 12 years. It includes a provision to change the TNRCC's
name to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) by
Jan. 1, 2004.
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2002
- The agency formally changes its name on September 1 from the
TNRCC to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
2003
- The Legislature establishes a dry cleaning regulation and
remediation program at TCEQ.
- Technology research and development program transferred by the
Legislature from the Texas Council on Environmental Technology to
the TCEQ.
- Texas Emissions Reduction Plan (TERP) is fully funded by the
Legislature.
- The Legislature authorizes the licensing of a low-level
radioactive waste (LLRW) disposal facility and establishes
procedures for the TCEQ to accept and assess license
applications.
- TCEQ implements the Permit Time-Frame Reduction Project to
shorten the review period for major uncontested permits.
2004
- TCEQ initiates the Environmental Monitoring and Response System
(EMRS).
2006
- The TCEQ adopts major revision, streamlining, and improvement
in state municipal solid waste regulations.
2007
- The Legislature expands the Low Income Vehicle Repair
Assistance, Retrofit, and Accelerated Vehicle Retirement Program
(LIRAP) by increasing the number of eligible individuals and grant
amounts for the purchase of a new vehicle.
- The Texas Emissions Reduction Plan (TERP) is increased in scope
allowing the TCEQ to designate certain highways and roadways to
count towards the eligibility requirement for grant funded
vehicles.
- The TCEQ adopts the Texas BART (Best Available Retrofit
Technology) Rule that requires emission controls for certain
industrial facilities emitting air pollutants that contribute to
regional haze.
- The Legislature extends the reimbursement program for leaking
underground storage tanks (LUST) from 2008 to 2012 and requires
insurance companies to notify the TCEQ if a petroleum storage tank
(PST) has cancelled or failed to renew insurance coverage.
- The Legislature passes HB 2714 that requires computer
manufacturers to establish recycling programs for their own
computer brands.
- The Legislature grants property owners the right to register
and participate in the Dry Cleaner Remediation Fund and imposes
additional fees and restrictions on the use of
perchloroethylene.
- The TCEQ Watermaster announces the receipt of more than 224,000
acre feet of water from Mexico at the Amistad reservoir near Del
Rio, effectively eliminating Mexico's water debt to the United
States.
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