• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association

Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association

To Honor and Protect the Ranching Way of Life

  • Home
  • Who We Are
    • Why Join
    • Leadership
    • Staff
    • Partners
    • FAQs
    • Newsroom
    • Sponsorships
    • Employment
  • What We Do
    • Theft and Law
    • Issues and Policy
    • Education
    • Students and Young Professionals
    • The Cattleman Magazine
    • Disaster Relief Fund
    • Cattle Raisers Insurance
    • Cattle Raisers Trading Co
  • Events
    • Cattle Raisers Convention
    • Summer Meeting
    • Policy Conference
    • Ranch Gatherings
    • Ranching 101
  • Join
  • Member Center
  • TSCRA Store
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Bill to better protect landowners during eminent domain passes Texas House

Source: The Texas Tribune | May 22, 2019

By Carlos Anchando, The Texas Tribune

The Texas House approved its version of a Senate bill Wednesday that aims to better protect landowners and local officials throughout the eminent domain process.

The House substitute for Senate Bill 421 keeps fundamental provisions requiring public meetings when a company plans to seize 25 or more tracts of land — as well as protections against low-ball offers — but it reduces the number of conditions companies would need to meet when acquiring property. The measure would also require companies seeking to condemn land to use “standard easement forms” that include basic protections for landowners about issues they might not otherwise know to bring up.

The bill still requires a vote on third reading before being sent back to the Senate. On Wednesday, a spokesman for state Sen. Lois Kolkhorst, R-Brenham, who filed the Senate version, said she was still reviewing the House substitute. If it receives final House approval, the Senate could either accept the changes or send the bill to a conference committee to work out the differences.

Sponsored by state Rep. Tom Craddick, a Midland Republican who chairs the House Land and Resource Management Committee, the House version still would require companies that condemn land for pipelines to define the maximum number of pipelines that can be installed in an easement and what substances can be transported through pipelines. But it removed a provision from the Senate bill that would require companies to restore the condemned land to as close to its original condition as possible.

The House version also prohibits private entities from altering the terms of a deed, easement or agreement without first providing an amended copy to the property owner before it files a condemnation petition — a document filed in court when negotiations between parties have not been successful.

This is the third consecutive session that Kolkhorst has filed legislation on eminent domain. At a Senate State Affairs Committee hearing in March, Kolkhorst said the legislation is designed not to diminish eminent domain authority but to encourage greater transparency and more equitable offers to landowners.

“I would never be against fossil fuels, but what I am saying to y’all is that we have a process that seemingly isn’t fair to the people that don’t want to sell their land,” Kolkhorst said at the time.

Kolkhorst’s bill — which cleared the Senate on a 28-3 vote in April — drew contentious debate when it came up for a House committee hearing last month.

The legislation comes as a pipeline building spree across Texas continues to drive tensions between oil and gas companies and private landowners. A controversial plan to build a bullet train route between Houston and Dallas has also stoked the debate, with some landowners adamantly opposed to the project. Both versions of the legislation would omit railroads from the new eminent domain requirements.

After Wednesday’s vote, Robert McKnight Jr., president ofthe Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, said that despite “significant concerns” with the House version, he was pleased to see the legislation advance.

“We look forward to continued negotiations in the conference committee to implement substantial and necessary changes to the legislation to avoid adverse impacts and provide Texans with the fairness, transparency and accountability they deserve when their property is taken through eminent domain,” McKnight said.

The Texas Tribune is a nonpartisan, nonprofit media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them – about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Written by:
kristin
Published on:
May 23, 2019

Categories: Eminent Domain, Issues & Policy, The Cattleman Now, The Cattleman Now - App

Recent Posts

TSCRA Talk Episode 64 – National Grazing Lands Coalition 411

May 9, 2025

Bill Fox, central region program manager for National Grazing Lands Coalition, joins TSCRA …

Continue Reading about TSCRA Talk Episode 64 – National Grazing Lands Coalition 411

Crime watch: Cattle missing in Guadalupe County

May 8, 2025

Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association Special Ranger Robert Fields, District 25 in …

Continue Reading about Crime watch: Cattle missing in Guadalupe County

Crime watch: Cattle missing in Lampasas County

May 6, 2025

Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association Special Ranger Marvin Wills, District 15 in …

Continue Reading about Crime watch: Cattle missing in Lampasas County

Footer

Who We Are

Why Join
Leadership
Staff
Partners
FAQs
Newsroom
Sponsorships
Employment

What We Do

Theft and Law
Issues and Policy
Education
Students and Young Professionals
The Cattleman Magazine
Cattle Raisers Insurance
Cattle Raisers Trading Co.
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association

Information

Cattle Raisers Blog
News Releases
Bereavements
Events
Sponsorships & Advertisement
Tip Hotline
Get Involved
Links

Membership

Membership Center
Membership Center Instructions
Join
Renew
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

PO BOX 101988
FORT WORTH, TX 76185

1-800-242-7820

© 2023 Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association; All Rights Reserved.

COPYRIGHT | PRIVACY POLICY | TERMS OF USE