The Austin area lies above one of the most productive aquifers in the country,
the Edwards Aquifer. However, the aquifer is also very vulnerable to pollution that can quickly travel through porous limestone
layers from activities on the surface. The Barton Springs segment of the Edwards Aquifer, the middle
of three hydrologically distinct segments, stores and moves water from just north of the town of Kyle,
Texas, north to its major discharge, Barton Springs, located in the heart of Austin, Texas. The City
of Austin proposed bonds in 1998 that were approved to purchase and manage land in this segment's
watershed for water quality protection.
The mission of the Water Quality Protection Land (WQPL) program is to acquire land in fee title and conservation easement in
the Barton Springs contributing and recharge zone to provide for the conservation |
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and maintain the safety of part
of the City's water supply. The objective is to produce the optimum level of clean, high quality water from project
lands to recharge the Barton Springs segment of the Edwards Aquifer.
Currently, the WQPL program manages a total of 23,577 acres - 9,050 acres (38%) as
fee simple and 14,527 acres (62%) as conservation easements.
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