Pescadito Dump Project will Threaten Our Health and Safety! Make the CALL!
In a move that threatens the health, safety, and environment of South Texans, the state’s environmental policemen, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), granted preliminary approval for a toxic waste dump to Rancho Viejo Waste Management, which is owned and spearheaded by failed toll road developer Carlos ‘C.Y.’ Benavides III, whose last deal in South Texas, theCamino Colombia toll road in Laredo, went bankrupt. According to the San Antonio Express-News, the facility known as the Pescadito Environmental Resource Center is designed to accept waste across an 800-mile perimeter. Yet the region has excess landfill capacity — 138-year capacity according to the South Texas Council of Governments — making this landfill clearly binational aimed at accepting toxic, maquiladora waste from deep inside Mexico.
Benavides’ last big venture, the 21.8-mile Camino Colombia toll road, connected Laredo, Texas, with the Mexican state of Nuevo Leon. It quickly failed to live up to traffic expectations and the $90 million private toll road landed in bankruptcy court where the state paid $12 million for it. However, Texas taxpayers, national banks, and other companies still lost $75 million in unpaid project debt.
With such a financial flop on his last public-private project, it raises concerns about the viability of this landfill and who will actually benefit from it. South Texas residents do not need another landfill, yet they’ll bear the brunt of this industrial toxic waste from Mexican oil fields. The facility could bring up to two million tons of waste per year into Texas. The 800-mile perimeter would also include eleven other U.S. states, including Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Tennessee.
The TCEQ issued a draft permit for the dump last week, despite vehement public opposition. The public may get a chance to officially weigh-in at another public hearing now that the dump appears on track for final approval. The last public hearing on the project was in 2013. TCEQ tends to approve most permits for landfills, with very few ever denied.
“This toxic waste dump developer has a record fo business failures, including a private toll road that went bankrupt…We urge state leaders and environmental regulators to stop this failed toll road developer from building a massive waste dump…,” voiced Arturo Benavides, Jr., a local rancher who’s property borders the site.
Adjacent landowners naturally object to the dump, but the fact it will harm the community so a foreign company can import Mexican and out-of-state toxic waste into South Texas strikes a nerve beyond just immediate neighbors. At least one state legislator, Senator Judith Zaffirini, has called for more public hearings, which will likely trigger at least one.
The facility would be located near Highway 359 in Webb County. The plan is to accept waste via truck and rail. KGNS-TV indicates it would be located near Kansas City Southern’s (KCS) rail line, making it an ideal epicenter for Gulf states as well as Mexico. KCS has transnational ownership operating in Mexico as Kansas City Southern de Mexico.
Kansas City is already on the radar for its centrally located KC SmartPort, which is an inland port well inside the interior of the United States that is a hub for KCS. Inland ports, also called dry ports or intermodal hubs, have direct connections to seaports via rail and have the same functions as a seaport, like customs clearance, maintenance and storage of containers, and centralized transportation connections for those containers throughout North America.
The Mexican customs office within the KC SmartPort is considered sovereign Mexican territory within the United States’ borders. The port was established to boost international trade by moving cargo and customs inspections into what are known as Foreign Trade Zones (FTZs) with tremendous tax and duty benefits that domestic companies do not enjoy. Inland ports facilitate the further economic integration of the U.S. with Canada and Mexico. KC SmartPort boasts its rail lines are part of the NAFTA superhighway for freight movement. Given that Missouri is one of the states that the Pescadito Environmental Resource Center will accept waste from, Benavides’ facility could well import industrial waste from Canada via its KC SmartPort and KCS rail lines in particular.
There are eleven inland ports in the United States with three in Texas: Beeville, Dallas, and San Antonio. Huntsville, Alabama also has an inland port and is one of the states Pescadito Environmental Resource Center will accept waste from. Benavides is just the latest player in the march to ship goods, in this case toxic waste, into and throughout the U.S. for the benefit of international interests. But he’s sure to encounter a Texas-sized revolt.

You are headed for failure. The good news is that this problem will be solved by some good old fashioned political pressure and a political type of campaign. You need:
1. A public gathering to get volunteers, and organize a campaign.
2. Put public pressure on City Council.
3. Put public pressure on the County Commissioners.
4. Put pressure on our State Senators.
5. Put pressure on our State Representatives.
6. Put pressure on our U.S. Congress representatives.
7. Put pressure (ads in their cities) on places that want to send their trash here.
8. You need to better inform our city on what kind of trash is coming here.
9. You need a slogan.
10. You also need a national campaign.
Thank you EMZ.
We are doing just that! Have you signed our petition yet?
I am a cancer survivor and totally oppose a toxic waste landfill anywhere in Texas, much less in Laredo. My neighborhood, Vista Hermosa, is dealing with the lead and other toxins issue and its connection to the possibility of cancer among the residents. The government findings have been that the levels of toxins are not threatening. Now, someone wants to bring a landfill to our area trying to shove it down our throats saying there will not be toxic waste! We are not ignorant!
Thank you, County Commissioners for opposing the landfill!