(a) With the approval of the General Land Office, a state agency or eligible political subdivision may take any necessary and reasonable action to comply with a federal requirement to establish or maintain a mitigation bank. An action under this section may include:
- (1) authorizing or making a continuing study of wetland areas and wetland mitigation programs;
- (2) consistent with federal requirements, engaging in a wetland mitigation program and adopting and enforcing permanent land use and control measures on land the agency or subdivision owns in a mitigation bank;
- (3) consulting with, providing information to, and entering into an agreement with a federal agency to identify and publish information about wetland areas;
- (4) cooperating with a federal or state agency in connection with a study or investigation regarding the adequacy of a local measure with respect to a federal or state wetland program;
- (5) improving the long-range management or use of wetland or a wetland mitigation bank;
- (6) purchasing, leasing, condemning, or otherwise acquiring property inside or outside the eligible political subdivision that is necessary for a wetland mitigation bank or buffer zone and, as necessary, improving the land or other property as a wetland mitigation bank, including any adjacent buffer zone, to comply with a federal requirement;
- (7) requesting or receiving aid from a federal or state agency or an eligible political subdivision;
- (8) purchasing, selling, or contracting to purchase or sell a mitigation credit in a mitigation bank;
- (9) incurring a liability or borrowing money on terms approved by the governing body of the subdivision;
- (10) acquiring, holding, using, selling, leasing, or disposing of real or personal property, including a license, patent, right, or interest, that is necessary, convenient, or useful for the full exercise of a power under this chapter;
- (11) contracting with any operator to use or operate any part of a mitigation bank; and
- (12) procuring any type of insurance and paying an insurance premium in an amount the governing body of the eligible political subdivision considers necessary or advisable.
- (b) The power of eminent domain granted by this section does not enable a state agency or eligible political subdivision to acquire by condemnation an interest in land that is owned or used by a public utility. In this subsection, "public utility" has the meaning assigned by the Public Utility Regulatory Act of 1995 (Article 1446c-0, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes).
Added by Acts 1997, 75th Leg., ch. 165, Sec. 24.01(a), eff. Sept. 1, 1997.