TCEQ to hear public comment on proposed Missouri City concrete plant
Fort Bend Some local residents and environmental advocates have expressed concerns about the proposed facility, which would be located near a neighborhood and a high school. Concrete batch plants produce particulate matter that has been linked to health problems. Katie Watkins/Houston Public MediaConcrete batch plants are where materials like cement, water, sand and rocks are combined and mixed together. It's then poured into trucks and transported to nearby construction projects.The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) will hear public comments Thursday on a proposed specialty concrete batch facility in Missouri City. Verti-Crete Houston, LLC is seeking a permit to build the plant at 953 Pheasant Valley Dr., just off U.S. 90. Some local residents and environmental advocates are concerned as the pollution-producing facility would share a border with a neighborhood. The plant would also be located near Fort Bend ISD’s Marshall High School and a city park. "This is not remotely in any sort of industrial area that they're planning to put this plant,” said Anthony D’Souza, a senior research and policy coordinator for local nonprofit Air Alliance Houston. “It's right in the middle of a neighborhood – and quite a densely populated neighborhood. Just within one mile, there's already over 1,300 residences." RELATED: Harris County sues concrete batch plant, alleging multiple environmental violations over three-year period Since the facility is a specialty plant, it has a lower limit on how much concrete it processes, in theory producing less pollution than a traditional concrete batch plant. It will also have an enclosure to help reduce pollution. Still, D'Souza said Harris County Pollution Control has visited specialty plants and found that the enclosures did not significantly prevent pollution. Concrete plants produce PM2.5, tiny airborne particles that have been linked to asthma, heart disease and low birth weights. One analysis estimated that PM2.5 caused 8,405 deaths in Texas in 2016. "Because of just how small and invisible it is, it penetrates deep into the human respiratory system, even passing from the lungs into the bloodstream," D'Souza said. RELATED: TCEQ strengthens pollution-limiting requirements for concrete batch plants, particularly in Greater Houston Verti-Crete Houston could not be reached for comment before publication. Thursday’s meeting is scheduled to start at 6 p.m. at Houston Community College's Missouri City campus, located at 1600 Texas Parkway. The first half of the meeting will include an opportunity for residents to ask questions. The second half of the meeting will involve a public comment period. Residents' remarks during public comment will be taken into consideration during the permitting process, according to the TCEQ.
Some local residents and environmental advocates have expressed concerns about the proposed facility, which would be located near a neighborhood and a high school. Concrete batch plants produce particulate matter that has been linked to health problems.
Fort Bend
Some local residents and environmental advocates have expressed concerns about the proposed facility, which would be located near a neighborhood and a high school. Concrete batch plants produce particulate matter that has been linked to health problems.
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) will hear public comments Thursday on a proposed specialty concrete batch facility in Missouri City.
Verti-Crete Houston, LLC is seeking a permit to build the plant at 953 Pheasant Valley Dr., just off U.S. 90.
Some local residents and environmental advocates are concerned as the pollution-producing facility would share a border with a neighborhood. The plant would also be located near Fort Bend ISD’s Marshall High School and a city park.
"This is not remotely in any sort of industrial area that they're planning to put this plant,” said Anthony D’Souza, a senior research and policy coordinator for local nonprofit Air Alliance Houston. “It's right in the middle of a neighborhood – and quite a densely populated neighborhood. Just within one mile, there's already over 1,300 residences."
Since the facility is a specialty plant, it has a lower limit on how much concrete it processes, in theory producing less pollution than a traditional concrete batch plant.
It will also have an enclosure to help reduce pollution. Still, D'Souza said Harris County Pollution Control has visited specialty plants and found that the enclosures did not significantly prevent pollution.
Concrete plants produce PM2.5, tiny airborne particles that have been linked to asthma, heart disease and low birth weights. One analysis estimated that PM2.5 caused 8,405 deaths in Texas in 2016.
"Because of just how small and invisible it is, it penetrates deep into the human respiratory system, even passing from the lungs into the bloodstream," D'Souza said.
Verti-Crete Houston could not be reached for comment before publication.
Thursday’s meeting is scheduled to start at 6 p.m. at Houston Community College's Missouri City campus, located at 1600 Texas Parkway.
The first half of the meeting will include an opportunity for residents to ask questions. The second half of the meeting will involve a public comment period. Residents' remarks during public comment will be taken into consideration during the permitting process, according to the TCEQ.