South Texas School Districts Become Robinhood Targets

It's a nice problem to have. Tax appraised values are rising by hundreds of millions of dollars across South Texas. Our schools will be getting better, but the state's "Robinhood" provision means they'll also be sending money elsewhere.

Robstown ISD saw an almost 20 percent increase in values from 2011, from $375.4 million to about $450 million, and London ISD's preliminary estimate came in 23 percent above 2011, rising from about $233 million to about $287 million.

Those numbers pale in comparison to districts in the heart of the Eagle Ford Shale. Karnes City ISD has seen valuations increase nearly sixfold in the past two years.

Read more at Caller.com

Eagle Ford Shale - Texas' Single Largest Economic Development

We're just a few years into development, but the Eagle Ford Shale is looking the part of the single largest economic boom in the history of the state of Texas. UTSA estimates total revenue from the Eagle Ford in 2011 was almost $14 billion and that revenue could grow to almost $50 billion by 2020. In addition to revenue, almost 30,000 jobs related to the play were created in 2011 alone.

Reserve estimates also paint a rosy picture. If there are 20 billion barrels of liquids to be recovered in the Eagle Ford, revenue from oil, condensate, and NGL sales will reach somewhere in the neigborhood of $1-2 TRILLION over the life of the play (at $100/bbl oil and current NGL prices). Add the 100+ tcf of gas that could be recovered and revenue from hydrocarbon sales could easily reach 2 trillion dollars. Our country's deficit is the only other topic where I use the word trillion.

For reference, the caller.com provided a few interesting statistics.

The Eagle Ford will have a larger impact than the entire Corpus Christi Metro Area in 2012.

  • GDP for the area was $15 billion in 2011, compared to estimates of $14 billion in Eagle Ford revenue during that same time

Eagle Ford jobs are coming by the thousands.

  • There area 184,000 jobs (total) in the Corpus Christi Metro Area and on its current path the Eagle Ford might created over 75,000 jobs in 2020 alone

Does it feel like the 1980s again?

Oil booms have a way of creating stories that will be told for generations. We're still talking about the 1980s boom that changed the lives of so many. We're experiencing it again with the Eagle Ford. It feels different this time, but that in itself is a scary phrase. This Caller article brought back some fond boom time memories and some not so fond memories of the recession. 

In the 1980s, when the price of oil had collapsed and the good times of the oil patch seemed like history, a bumper sticker adorned many autos. "Dear God, just give me one more oil boom. I promise not to blow it next time." Well, the good Lord seems to have answered that prayer with the Eagle Ford Shale formation.

On a map of Texas, the Eagle Ford Shale formation looks like a slice of cantaloupe, about 50 miles wide and 400 miles long, stretching from the Mexican border around Webb and Maverick counties with the slice curving northeast. It covers 24 counties, including Live Oak, McMullen and Bee. The Eagle Ford could potentially be one of the most productive oil and gas formations in Texas and thus one of the richest.

Two years ago, there were fewer than 100 permits issued to drill in the Eagle Ford area; now there are more than a thousand. The Texas Railroad Commission says that since 2009 when the first well was drilled in the Eagle Ford, jobs associated with it have produced some $500 million in salaries. There has been $3 billion in total revenue. By 2020, the drilling bonanza could produce up to 70,000 jobs.

The key to the opening of the Eagle Ford and other shale deposits has been a technological drilling breakthrough for extracting oil and gas which was previously not thought possible.

No doubt about it, the Eagle Ford could be one of the area's blessings. How will we deal with this second chance at widespread prosperity?

Share your comments below - We'd love to hear stories you have from the 1980s and how they compare to today.