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Texas senator proposes bill to limit environmental complaints



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Lisa Hunter walks along the fence separating her property and land owned by the concrete batch plants next-door in Gunter, TX on March 21, 2023. Wastewater and air pollution from the plants have made its way onto Hunter’s land over the years, affecting her ability to raise cattle or produce anything on the land.

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A truck transporting reinforced concrete boxes drives past Linda Hunter’s home in Gunter, TX on March 21, 2023. She says the trucks going in and out of the concrete batch plants nearby drive by her house at hazardous speeds and loudly.

Linda Hunter spreads out photos taken of her land over the years and letters from TCEQ, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, in response to complaints made by Hunter and advocacy group Gunter Clean Air in her home in Gunter, TX on March 21, 2023.

Slow response to complaints could lead to missed violations, critics say

Bill clashes with Sunset review recommendations

Deirdre Diamond, a respiratory therapist and mother of six children, is photographed in the backyard of her home in Gunter, TX on March 21, 2023. After moving her family to Gunter to achieve a better quality of life for her kids, Diamond learned of residents’ environmental concerns over local concrete batch plants and became a lead advocate for Gunter Clean Air, a local group working to limit the pollution in their town.

Gunter residents prepare for fight 

A concrete truck is washed at a concrete batch plant in Gunter, TX on March 21, 2023.

Lisa Hunter drive along a creek on her land that’s been carved by wastewater coming in from the neighboring concrete batch plant in Gunter, TX on March 21, 2023.



This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune

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