Last month the Texas Supreme Court decided three cases involving Texas’ Open Beaches Act. The Court issued one opinion in all three cases: No. 24-0237, Texas General Land Office and Dawn Buckingham, in her official capacity as the Texas Land Commissioner, v. SaveRGV, Sierra Club, and Carrizo/Comecrudo Nation of Texas, Inc.; No 24-0407, Cameron County v. SaveRGV, Sierra Club, and Carrizo/Comecrudo Nation of Texas Inc; and No. 24-0457, Ken Paxton, in his official capacity as Attorney General of Texas, v. Save RGV, Sierra Club, and Carrizo/Comecrudo Nation of Texas, Inc. The cases reminded me of a little Texas history.
The three plaintiffs filed suit because in 2013 the Legislature passed HB 2623, amending the Open Beaches Act, Tex. Nat. Res. Code Chapter 61, to authorize the General Land Office and Cameron County to adopt rules allowing them to temporarily close beaches “for space flight activities.” The bill passed at the request of SpaceX, which maintains a launch site on Boca Chica Beach on the coast in Cameron County (now incorporated as the town of Starbase. The GLO and the county have at restricted access to Boca Chica beach when SpaceX launches take place.

Plaintiffs claimed that HB 2623 violates Article I, Section 33 of the Texas Constitution, approved by voters in 2009, which states:


