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Polar Bear Splash Is Almost Here!

12/30/2025

 
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New Year’s Day is this Thursday, which means it’s almost time for one of Austin’s great traditions: the SOS Polar Bear Splash at Barton Springs Pool. For decades, this has been our way of washing off the old year and starting the new one grounded and reinvigorated. It’s joyful, it’s refreshing, and this year, it’s exactly what we all need. 
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WHO Everyone is welcome!
WHERE Barton Springs Pool
WHEN Thursday, January 1st. SOS staff & volunteers on site: 8:30 a.m.–2:30 p.m. (front and back gates). Community group jump: 9:30 a.m.
WHAT Celebrate the New Year and the Soul of Our City. Free coffee & donuts from local legends Epoch and Barrett’s, plus find out ways to get involved with SOS. Flavor on Wheels food truck at the back gate. Cool 2026 commemorative SOS t-shirts available for $30 supports our work (both gates)
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The Polar Bear Splash is about showing up for the springs and for one another. We are fortunate to live in a city where a spring-fed pool still flows through the heart of town, and that doesn’t happen by chance. The soul of Austin endures because we choose again and again to protect it. On New Year’s Day, we come together not only to celebrate, but to recommit -- to organizing, to stewardship, and to keeping our home waters safe and clean. 
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A quick and important note: the Polar Bear Splash will not have lifeguards on duty. It is swim at your own risk. Barton Springs is 70 degrees year-round with a natural (slippery) bottom, and we expect the air temperature to be about the same. If you have health concerns or limited swimming ability, please proceed with caution, or come be part of the fun hillside. There are plenty of ways to participate without getting in the water. This is a chance to reconnect with neighbors, with the springs, and with the work ahead. We’ll be sharing updates on how to get involved with Save Our Springs Alliance in 2026.

If you do take the plunge, we recommend bringing a warm robe and beanie, and of course grabbing a screen-printed commemorative shirt to throw on after your New Year's dip.

We can't wait to see you there!
SOS Alliance

Year-End Match for Save Our Springs

12/27/2025

 
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As this year comes to a close, we want to take a moment and thank you. Your generous support this year has helped keep our home waters clean and flowing.
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If you are able, please include Save Our Springs Alliance in your end-of-year charitable giving. Your tax-deductible donation -- whether $5, $500, $5000 or other -- will be matched $1 for every $2 you donate by one of our major supporters. As a water protector, you know that our small team of scientists, lawyers, and community organizers work hard every day standing up to polluters, pumpers, pavers, and lawbreakers. We can do this because we know that you and others like you stand with us.  ​
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EVERY DOLLAR MAKES A DIFFERENCE
Having clean, fresh and flowing water is a right for humans and for nature. Together we can save our springs.   
We hope to see you at Barton Springs on New Year's Day for coffee, donuts, and a plunge into the best swimming hole in Texas!

With gratitude,
Bill Bunch, Executive Director, Save Our Springs Alliance
P.S. Be sure to check out our newly wrapped SalaVander at the Springs, and watch for our 2026 schedule of eco-tours, classes, and community events.
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You Protect the Water That Makes Central Texas Home

12/19/2025

 
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Whether you made a gift this year, volunteered your time, raised your voice when we called for action, or have been standing with Save Our Springs from the beginning, you’re part of a community that shows up for Central Texas waters.
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At a time when our water, our public lands, and even our democratic institutions face unprecedented pressure, you choose to stay engaged, and that choice matters. Your support matters, too. Please consider including Save Our Springs Alliance in your end-of-year giving.

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This year, in the face of relentless development pressure and our increasingly strained aquifer levels, your support delivered real, measurable protection for the Texas Hill Country.
Here is some of what we accomplished together in 2025:

Education at the Heart of Lasting Change

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We inspire the next generation of water protectors. Barton Springs University Day is our biggest education event of the year, offering immersive, place-based learning that connects students directly to the Edwards Aquifer and Barton Springs. ➔ In 2025, SOS organized 20+ hands-on activities, brought in over 45 expert presenters, collaborating with dozens of organizations across Texas to reach thousands of students.
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We create transformative experiences at Barton Springs year round. Discovering the hidden world of the Springs deepens our understanding of the aquifer and long-term stewardship. ➔ This year, SOS expanded our eco-tour curriculum and access, offering more free tours and bringing in over 2 dozen subject matter experts to enrich guided learning in one of the most ecologically and culturally significant sites in Central Texas.

Advocacy That Lifts Community Voices

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We fight harmful highway projects. Highways over the Edwards Aquifer Recharge zone increase impervious cover, pollution, and long-term risks to Barton Springs and downstream waterways, and SOS intervenes when projects ignore water impacts or voters’ will. ➔ This year, SOS successfully blocked illegal funding for the SH45 expansion in Hays County and is actively preparing to challenge the MoPac South expansion over the Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone.
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We challenge unsustainable water use. Large industrial water users pose serious risks in drought-stricken areas, and SOS works to ensure growth does not come at the expense of groundwater or local communities.➔ In 2025, SOS and Data Center Action Coalition (alongside many of you) challenged water-guzzling data center proposals in Hays County, pushing back against projects that threaten already limited water supplies.

Legal Action That Protects Water, Wildlife, and People

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We keep wastewater out of creeks. Municipal and industrial wastewater can harm water quality and wildlife, and SOS steps in when permits threaten sensitive ecosystems. ➔ This year, SOS secured stronger treatment standards and increased monitoring for the Mirasol Springs wastewater permit near Hamilton Pool Preserve and Reimer’s Ranch, preventing pollution from entering this fragile Hill Country ecosystem.
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We protect endangered species. We are lucky to share our home with many unique endangered species including the Golden-cheeked Warbler, the Barton Springs Salamander, and the Austin Blind Salamander. ➔ Beyond the broader protective impact of our projects, this year SOS filed a petition to list the Lipan Salamander as endangered and advocated against removing protections for the Golden-cheeked Warbler.
Thanks to supporters like you, 2025 was one of the most ambitious years in SOS’s 33-year history. As 2025 comes to a close, an end-of-year, tax-deductible gift to Save Our Springs Alliance helps ensure we enter 2026 prepared to protect our home waters, precious wildlife, and access to direct democracy. 

Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Happy Kwanzaa, and Best Wishes for the New Year! We can’t wait to celebrate with you at the Polar Bear Splash on New Year’s Day at Barton Springs Pool :)

With gratitude and hope for the year ahead, 
Save Our Springs Alliance 
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Speak Up Now to Defend the Endangered Species Act!

12/16/2025

 
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Speak Up Now to Defend the Endangered Species Act!

The federal Endangered Species Act (ESA) was passed in 1973 with broad bipartisan support to protect the ecosystems that endangered and threatened species depend on and to conserve these species. Despite surveys showing that nearly 84% of Americans continue to express support for the ESA, political plans to weaken the landmark environmental statute are underway by changing several of the rules that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) uses to implement the ESA by limiting protections for species listed in the future and infusing political bias into the agency’s processes.

You have the power to stand with SOS and the endangered species we share our home with by submitting comments at the links below by 11PM on December 22nd and reminding the FWS that the ESA mandates that decisions be made on the “best scientific information,” not politics.

Below are brief summaries of the proposed rule changes and instructions on how to comment for each one.

Updated Regulation on Listing Species as Threatened
Currently under the ESA, with a few exceptions, species that are listed as threatened rather than endangered automatically receive almost all of the same protections that endangered species do. Such an approach gives threatened species immediate and important protections that will hopefully allow their populations to recover.
However, the proposed regulation seeks to make the exception the rule and under the new regulation, every newly listed threatened species would need the FWS to take additional action to set out any prohibitions designed to protect the species; threatened species will no longer automatically receive many of the same protections as endangered species, and under the new rule it would be up to FWS to decide what those protections would be. Unfortunately, these species specific rules are unlikely to be adequate, will leave threatened species unprotected from harassment and other forms of harm, and will take a long time to develop and finalize.

This rule’s proposals related to threatened species could impact SOS’s work in getting new salamander species listed if the FWS decides to list the Pedernales River springs salamander or Lipan salamander as threatened instead of endangered. If that happened, it would no longer be a guarantee that the salamanders would quickly receive adequate protections. 

To comment on this rule and tell the FWS that threatened species need to be protected just as much as endangered species, go to this link and fill out the form.

Updated Regulation for Designating Critical Habitat
When listing a species as endangered, the FWS often designates critical habitat for a species (critical habitat is habitat areas that are especially important for conserving a species) and any area designated as critical habitat receives special protections under the ESA. While the FWS is allowed to take into account the economic and national security impacts of a critical habitat designation, the critical habitat designation is supposed to be based on the best available science and prioritize the conservation of species in line with the purpose of the ESA.

But the new proposed critical habitat designation rule directs FWS to give more weight to the opinions of industry when deciding whether to exclude areas from a new critical habitat designation and encourages the FWS to rely on unreliable sources of information to find that the economic impact of a critical habitat designation outweighs the benefits. 

Since habitat loss is one of the main causes of extinction, regulations that limits or make habitat protection more difficult under the ESA are untenable.

This rule could impact SOS’s work by making it more difficult to get a critical habitat designation for the salamander species that will be listed under the ESA in the future, like the Pedernales River springs salamander and the Lipan salamander.

To comment on this rule and urge the FWS to keep politics out of endangered species conservation, go to this link and fill out the form.

Updated Regulation on Unoccupied Critical Habitat
This proposed rule will also impact how FWS designates critical habitat moving forward by directing the agency to no longer consider designating any currently unoccupied but historic range as critical habitat. This change represents a missed opportunity to protect historic habitat and give species a chance to recover during a time of rapid habitat loss. The proposed rule also invites the agency to make findings that the designation of critical habitat is not prudent on a more frequent basis, a move that leaves endangered species without important habitat protections.

This same rule also makes changes to the regulations on listing and delisting species by proposing to limit the phrase “foreseeable future” as it is used in the definition of endangered and threatened species. This could limit how impacts like climate change and resultant shifting species distributions are taken into account when listing a species. The proposed rule also will remove the regulatory language prohibiting the consideration of economic impacts when deciding whether to list a species.

To comment on this rule and remind the FWS that protecting habitat is key to protecting endangered species, go to this link and fill out the form.

Updated Rules on Section 7 Consultations
A key protection under the ESA happens under section 7 of the statute which requires federal agencies to consult with the FWS for any federal actions that may affect an endangered or threatened species to ensure that federal actions do not harm listed species or critical habitat. The proposed rule would limit which impacts are considered and how the impacts are considered during the course of a section 7 consultation. The changes would direct FWS to not consider many indirect, cumulative, or climate-driven effects from being considered.

This change could impact SOS’s work by making it more difficult to get TXDOT, CTRMA, and the FWS to take impacts from highway expansion on the Bartons Springs and Austin Blind salamanders into account and provide adequate protections for the species.

To comment on this rule and demand that FWS continue to take the impacts to endangered species from federal projects seriously, go to this link and fill out the form.

Thank you for submitting comments on these important issues! Our voices matter and can help to ensure continued protections for endangered and threatened species.
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Please also consider donating to SOS to support our work protecting threatened and endangered species in the Texas Hill Country.

Dive Into 2026 with Save Our Springs Alliance at the Annual Polar Bear Splash!

12/10/2025

 
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PBS 2024 photo by Carli Rene @inkedfingers
Austin, TX — Start your New Year with a splash—and a celebration of clean water! Join Save Our Springs Alliance on New Year’s Day, January 1, 2026, at Barton Springs Pool for the annual SOS Polar Bear Splash, a cherished Austin tradition that has brought the community together for over 30 years.

From 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., SOS staff and volunteers will greet guests at both the front gate near the Philosopher’s Rock and the back parking lot entrance. Don’t miss the community group jump at 9:30 a.m., the perfect way to wash off the old year and dive into 2026 with energy, fun, and purpose.

For more than three decades, Save Our Springs Alliance has been at the forefront of protecting Barton Springs, the Edwards Aquifer, and Central Texas waterways. This iconic event is a joyous celebration of the community resilience, environmental stewardship, and clean water advocacy that SOS has championed since 1992. As Travis County Commissioner Brigid Shea says, “SOS is the reason we can still swim in Barton Springs today.”


Participants can warm up with coffee and donuts, grab a 2026 commemorative t-shirt, and connect with the people and programs that keep Austin’s waters safe. Special appearances will include Commissioner Brigid Shea at 10:00 a.m. and local artist and muralist Fabian Rey at 12:00 noon at the north gate.

Whether you’re a longtime supporter, a first-time jumper, or just looking for a unique way to kick off the year, the SOS Polar Bear Splash is the perfect way to celebrate Austin’s natural treasures and the people who protect them. Come make a splash, meet your community, learn how to get involved, and greet 2026 with Save Our Springs Alliance.

Mark your calendar:
  • Date: Thursday, January 1, 2026
  • Time: 8:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. (Group jump at 9:30 a.m.)
  • Location: Barton Springs Pool, front and back entrances
We can’t wait to see you there! Bring your friends, your family, and your spirit of adventure!

GIVING TUESDAY! If we don’t fight for the Springs, who will?

12/2/2025

 
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Barton Creek defenders, photograph by Alan Pogue, 1991
Today, Giving Tuesday, help SOS continue to protect the places we love. For more than thirty years, Save Our Springs Alliance has served as a steadfast watchdog for Barton Springs and the Edwards Aquifer. We educate, we mobilize, and when necessary, we go to court to make sure the laws that voters passed are upheld.

The Springs can’t protect themselves. We're up against relentless pressure from rapid development, shortsighted water policies, and government shortcuts. Taking legal action to protect our water and our direct democracy is essential work for our drought-stricken region and many times, we are the only ones to do it.  If you’re able, will you make a gift today to help keep the Springs flowing and your rights protected?
MAKE MY GIFT
Part of what truly sets Save Our Springs apart —and what keeps Barton Springs flowing— is our stellar legal team. We are the only local nonprofit with full-time staff of attorneys dedicated to water quality. On a day built around radical generosity, it’s worth reflecting on what our community makes possible. Here are just a few examples of how SOS defends the aquifer and the public’s right to know:
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We defend the SOS Ordinance. The Save Our Springs Ordinance was passed by Austin voters in 1992 to protect water quality in the Edwards Aquifer and Barton Springs. When developers or the City try to carve their way around it, SOS takes action in court. ➔ Just this year, SOS won a lawsuit invalidating an illegal contract entered into by the Austin City Council that would have allowed a development to bypass the SOS ordinance.
We demand transparency from government. Access to information and proper public engagement about the environmental impacts of proposed projects is critical to protecting water quality. SOS defends this right under the Texas Public Information Act (TPIA) and the Texas Open Meetings Act (TOMA). ➔This spring, our lawsuit forced CTRMA to release withheld documents about the environmental impacts of the MoPac South expansion.
We fight harmful highways. Highways increase impervious cover, runoff pollution, and threats to endangered species, including the Barton Springs and Austin Blind Salamanders.➔SOS successfully blocked illegal funding for the SH45 expansion in Hays County and is actively preparing to challenge the MoPac South expansion over the Edwards Aquifer recharge zone.
We keep wastewater out of streams and aquifers. Municipal wastewater contains nutrient pollution and emerging contaminants, like PFAS, that harm water quality and wildlife. SOS participates in contested case hearings and regulatory processes to prevent pollution. ➔This year, we helped force the withdrawal of a wastewater permit along Barton Creek and negotiated stronger treatment and monitoring standards for a proposed Pedernales River development.
We protect endangered species. We are lucky to share our home with many unique endangered species including the Golden-cheeked Warbler, the Barton Springs Salamander, and the Austin Blind Salamander. ➔Beyond the broader protective impact of our projects, this year SOS filed a petition to list the Lipan Salamander as endangered and advocated against removing protections for the Golden-cheeked Warbler.
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Golden-cheeked warbler photo by Sergio Flores
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Barton Springs photograph by Scott Bauer
GIVE BACK TO THE SPRINGS
These are just a few of the numerous cases and projects that require painstaking expertise from our legal team. Often, it means returning to court again and again, making sure the laws voters passed are honored and the Springs remain protected.

If Barton Springs has touched your life, if you swim here, hike nearby, or simply care about access to clean water and accountable government, your Giving Tuesday gift matters. 

Give today. Keep the Springs flowing. Keep Austin leaders accountable.
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For the love of clean water,
Save Our Springs Alliance Legal Team

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p: 512-477-2320 |  f: 512-477-6410
​​[email protected]
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201 Menchaca Rd. Austin TX 78704

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SOS is a 501 c3 non profit and  your donation is tax deductible ​
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