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Description: This Corridor follows the description written in the City of San Marcos Land Development Code. South of the confluence of the San Marcos and Blanco rivers, the Corridor tracks, generally, East, along the floodplain of the San Marcos River while trying to exclude the floodplain of the Blanco River to a point 4000 feet East of the confluence. The Corridor turns Northeast for a distance of 2000 feet, before turning East once more following the floodplain defined by the 1982 FEMA FIRM Map Panel 4800940155B Insert, up to US Hwy 80, then along US 80 to the San Marcos ETJ. The Corridor follows the ETJ South until the floodplain, as defined by the 1978 FEMA FIRM Map Panel 4803210010A, where the Corridor turns west, following the floodplain for a distance of approximately 2800 feet, where the Corridor then turns South, determined by a 200 feet buffer from the riverbank, which exceeds the limits of the floodplain. The Corridor continues to follow this 200 feet buffer from the river bank (initially Southwest, then West; a distance of approximately 3400 feet) until the floodpain, as defined by 1978 FEMA FIRM Map Panel 4803210010A, exceeds the 200 feet buffer. The Corridor follows the floodplain until it meets an area of highly erodible soil, as defined by NRCS Soil Map for Hays County, where the buffer increase to 1000 feet from the centerline of the San Marcos River. The Corridor tracks generally west, for approximately 9900 feet, where the Corridor is then generally bounded by the floodplain, as defined by the 1978 FEMA FIRM Map Panel 4803210010A, tracking Northwest. At a few points, where the river bends farther Southwest, the Corridor is bound by an offset of 200 feet from the river bank, instead of the floodplain. The Corridor turns Southwest, along the floodplain, as defined by the 1978 FEMA FIRM Map Panel 4803210010A, then follows Luciano Flores Blvd, Northwest to IH-35. The Corridor then follows as stated in the City of San Marcos Land Development Code.
Copyright Text: City of San Marcos, Departments of Engineering, Planning and Developments Services
David Perez-Guerra
Aaron Garcia
Phillicia Phillips
Greg Schwartz
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Description: The Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (ETJ) is the unincorporated land within three and one half (3.5) miles of San Marcos’s boundary that is not within the city limits or ETJ of another city. It is the territory where San Marcos alone is authorized to annex land. In accordance to the Texas Local Government Code Title 2 Subtitle C Chapter 42, interlocal agreements between the City of San Marcos and the City of Kyle created (Res 1987-072) and updated (Res 2013-034) an ETJ Agreement line where ETJ overlap occurred. Additional agreement lines with the City of New Braunfels (Res 1987-76R) and Uhland (2013-076) are also reflected in this feature. In 2016, a map error was discovered in the northwest area of the ETJ. This error has perpetuated in the data since 2007, when the city declared a population of 50,000 which extended the ETJ to 3.5 miles (Resolution 2007-146-R). After discussion with the City of Kyle the adjustment was made to correct this error in February 2017. The area consisted of 103 parcels northwest of Owl Hollow Rd and northeast of Hilliard Road.
Copyright Text: City of San Marcos Planning and Development Services
Description: Last available download from the Texas Legislative council, edited to reflect the district mergers that took place in 2013 and to correct geometry errors (self-intersection) in two districts