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Harris County breaks ground on $32.7 million flood project

Project aims to protect 500 homes in West University Place and Southside Place

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) officials and Commissioner Rodney Ellis will announce the EPA’s soil test results for the Julia C. Hester House/ Solo Street Greenspace in the Greater Fifth Ward area on Tuesday. (Copyright 2025 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

Harris County is taking a major step forward in the fight against flooding. Commissioner Rodney Ellis joined federal, state and local leaders Monday morning to break ground on the Poor Farm Ditch Project — a $32.7 million investment aimed at protecting roughly 500 homes in West University Place and Southside Place.

The groundbreaking ceremony took place at 9 a.m. July 13 at the Southside Place Police Department, located at 6309 Edloe St. in Houston.

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What the project will do

The Poor Farm Ditch Project will modernize approximately 3,100 linear feet of an aging drainage channel within the Brays Bayou watershed. Plans call for widening the channel from about 30 feet to 40 feet and deepening it from 7.5 feet to 10 feet — increasing its effective flow area by more than 60%.

The result: significantly reduced flood risk for hundreds of families in two of Houston’s inner-loop communities.

Who is behind it

The project brings together a broad coalition of government partners. Joining Commissioner Ellis at the groundbreaking were U.S. Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, Texas State Rep. Ann Johnson, Southside Place Mayor Andy Chan, West University Place Mayor Susan Sample and Harris County Flood Control District Executive Director Marcus Y. Stuckett.

How it’s funded

The $32.7 million project is funded through a local, state and federal partnership. Funding sources include federal Community Project Funding, Texas legislative appropriations, Harris County’s 2018 Flood Bond, and direct contributions from the cities of West University Place and Southside Place.

The collaboration highlights how multiple levels of government can come together to address one of the Houston area’s most persistent challenges: flooding.

What’s next

With the groundbreaking now complete, construction work on the channel modernization is set to move forward. Residents in West University Place and Southside Place can expect meaningful improvements to flood resilience in their neighborhoods as the project progresses.