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SpaceX Could Give Struggling Texas City A Boost

SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft atop rocket Falcon 9 lifts off from Cape Canaveral in Florida in May 2012. The launch made SpaceX the first commercial company to send a spacecraft to the International Space Station.
Roberto Gonzalez
/
Getty Images
SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft atop rocket Falcon 9 lifts off from Cape Canaveral in Florida in May 2012. The launch made SpaceX the first commercial company to send a spacecraft to the International Space Station.

The space company SpaceX has identified a remote spot on the southern tip of Texas as its finalist for construction of the world's newest commercial orbital launch site.

The 50-acre site really is at the end of the road. Texas Highway 4 abruptly ends at the warm waves of the Gulf surrounded by cactus, Spanish dagger and sand dunes.

"Welcome to Boca Chica beach, Brownsville, Texas. It's where the U.S. really begins," says Gilberto Salinas, executive vice president of the Brownsville Economic Development Council. He's spent three years toiling to get SpaceX to build its first launch facility out here. The complex would include a hangar, fuel storage, payload processing facility, and launch control center.

"Right there," Salinas continues, gesturing to open coastal prairie, "you would have the actual launchpad itself where [they would erect the rocket] — and then off into space it goes."

SpaceX has been sending up its rockets at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California and Cape Canaveral in Florida. Now they want a place to call their own, and it turns out that this lonely patch of coastland only three miles north of Mexico is a sweet spot for orbital spacecraft launches.

"We need to be able to launch eastward, and we want to be close to the equator," SpaceX CEO Elon Musk told South by Southwest in Austin last year. "If things go as expected, it's likely we'll have a launch site in Texas, which would be really cool."

Eager to make this deal work, Texas has offered SpaceX a $15 million incentive package, and the Legislature passed a special law that would close the public beach during launches. The FAA is now in its final fact-finding and public-comment phase to decide whether or not to grant a launch license to SpaceX (the company's full name is Space Exploration Technologies Corp.).

Other federal agencies have weighed in. The National Park Service is concerned that rocket launches will disturb the "viewshed" of nearby Palmito Ranch Battlefield, the site of the last land battle of the Civil War. And the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service owns a wildlife refuge on the fence line of the proposed launch site.

Fish & Wildlife spokesperson Lesli Gray says the tidal flats, thorn scrub and adjacent Gulf waters are home to 10 endangered species, "including the ocelot and the aplomado falcon and Kemp's Ridley sea turtle. We obviously are looking at what the potential impacts are, and we've been working with SpaceX to minimize any impact from the SpaceX facility being there."

The agency is concerned that increased noise, traffic, light, stormwater runoff and human activity will disturb the wild things in the neighborhood. But in an environmental impact report completed last month, the agency concludes that SpaceX is "not likely to threaten their continued existence."

Other curious species down here that will be affected by the nighttime launches can speak for themselves.

"We bought here because it's a nice, peaceful place," says Jim Workman, a retired truck driver who lives in a subdivision across the road from the SpaceX site. "But now it's going to be a lot busier, a lot more loud, a lot more, you know, congestion. I guess it's something that Texas wants and Brownsville wants, so we'll have to go along with it."

Boca Chica Village, where he lives, is home to winter Texans who flee subzero weather for these small brick homes in balmy Boca Chica, which is about 20 miles from Brownsville. His neighbor, Ed Schumann, is also a retired Minnesota trucker, but he is of a different opinion.

"I like rockets," he says from under the hood of his dune buggy. "I watch 'em on TV when they shoot off and go to the moon and wherever." He concludes with an approving grin, "That'd be fine with me, I mean, I got nothing against that. That's good."

The lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas is known for sprawling citrus orchards, car parts factories across the river in Mexico, and farmworkers living in substandard housing. SpaceX could represent hundreds of good-paying full- and part-time jobs, says local business booster Salinas.

Gilbert Salinas, executive vice president of the Brownsville Economic Development Council, stands in the area  where SpaceX might build its first commercial orbital launch site.
John Burnett / NPR
/
NPR
Gilbert Salinas, executive vice president of the Brownsville Economic Development Council, stands in the area where SpaceX might build its first commercial orbital launch site.

"A project of this magnitude and of this significance is a game changer for — especially for a region like ours," Salinas continues. "Brownsville, Texas, is one of the poorest regions in the U.S."

The SpaceX project has raised hopes for young people like Louis Dartez, a 22-year-old physics graduate student at the University of Texas, Brownsville. Dartez says growing up in the tip of Texas, ambitious students like him learn a hard lesson.

"And that's quite simply put as, 'Get the heck out of Brownsville.' Whatever you do, if you don't leave the first time an opportunity presents itself, you never will. All of this and much more could change with SpaceX having a presence down here."

Dartez, for one, has already submitted his resume to SpaceX. The FAA's final decision on the company's proposed launch site is expected later this year.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

As NPR's Southwest correspondent based in Austin, Texas, John Burnett covers immigration, border affairs, Texas news and other national assignments. In 2018, 2019 and again in 2020, he won national Edward R. Murrow Awards from the Radio-Television News Directors Association for continuing coverage of the immigration beat. In 2020, Burnett along with other NPR journalists, were finalists for a duPont-Columbia Award for their coverage of the Trump Administration's Remain in Mexico program. In December 2018, Burnett was invited to participate in a workshop on Refugees, Immigration and Border Security in Western Europe, sponsored by the RIAS Berlin Commission.