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  • Exploring the Marvin Nichols Reservoir Proposal: Yay or Nay?

    Exploring the Marvin Nichols Reservoir Proposal: Yay or Nay?

    By Bela Koganti

    ~ 6 minutes


    The proposed Marvin Nichols Reservoir, which would occupy over 72,000 acres in Northeast Texas, has been in the works since 1968. However, with Texas’ more-imminent-than-ever water crisis, it’s recently gained more and more traction— and just as much controversy.

    What is it?

    The proposed Marvin Nichols Reservoir would occupy the Sulphur River Basin and supply drinking water to the Dallas-Fort Worth area. With a plethora of available water from the basin and a low estimated water cost, the reservoir first appeared in Texas’ 1968 State Water Plan as the Naples Reservoir; then, it was proposed in the 1984, 1990, and 1997 state water plans as the Marvin Nichols Reservoir. In 1997, the 75th Texas Legislature passed Senate Bill 1, which divided Texas into 16 regions with local representatives to develop  water plans. 

    Since then, renditions of the reservoir have been recommended in eleven regional and state water plans. While the Texas Legislature designated the reservoir site as a

    “Site of unique value for the construction of a reservoir.”

    In 2007, the Region D Regional Water Planning Group voted against it due to predicted negative impacts on agricultural, timber, and natural resources, as well as on local economies.

    Why’s it taking so long?

    First of all, it can take at least 15-20 years to receive a permit for a new lake or reservoir. The reservoir didn’t make it into the State Water Plan (under the name Marvin Nichols) until 1984, and, by 2001 (17 years later), the project was facing strong pushback from northeast Texans. 

    While the 2021 Region C Regional Water Plan and the 2022 State Water Plan believe  the reservoir should be ready by 2050, the Bois d’Arc Lake reservoir, another controversial and large project, took just 18 years to implement. Well, we already passed the 18 year mark—24 years ago! Regional Texas water planners stress that these projects must be operational in a timely manner. In other words, they need to happen before shortages occur- not after a drought is already underway.

    So, we can expect a 2050 completion unless a future water plan indicates otherwise.

    What’s happening with Texas’ water crisis?

    But why do we even need the reservoir in the first place? I mean, we’re obviously running out of water, but here’s why. Texas’ Region C, made up of Arlington, Carrollton, Dallas, Denton, Fort Worth, Frisco, Garland, Irving, Mckinney, Plano, Richardson, and Frisco, is rapidly growing in population. It’s predicted to grow by nearly 6,000,000 people from 2030 to 2080, and with more people comes more water demand, which would increase by around 1,000,000 acre-feet by 2080. Even with conservation tactics outlined in the Region C Water Plan, Region C would still lack around 1,000,000 acre-feet per year. 

    For example, Fort Worth plans to use more wastewater, so it needs to expand its water treatment plants to treat nearly 830,000,000 gallons of water per day by 2080. However, around ⅓ of the water would have to come from new reservoirs, and that’s where Marvin Nichols comes in. Of course, it would not only supply water to Fort Worth—many cities in region C likely have similar plans for Marvin Nichols.

    How will Texans be affected? What’s the controversy?

    Alright, let’s get to the downsides. Although the reservoir would help some of Texas’ most populous cities, the Region C crew, it would destroy around 72,000 acres of rural land in northeast Texas through flooding. And that means wetlands destroyed, jobs gone, and history killed.

     Bottomland hardwood forests are Texas’ most biologically diverse ecosystems; however, from the nineteenth century to now, only ¼ of East Texas’ bottomland hardwood forests still stand. But guess what—they make up 30,000 of the 72,000 acres that Marvin Nichols plans to destroy. Plus, because the forests house so many different animal species, the reservoir would endanger wildlife already threatened in Texas, like black bears.

    And since Marvin Nichols’ construction would flood so much working land, local farmers, loggers, ranchers, and livestock ranchers would very-likely lose their jobs. School districts would be wiped, Native American historical sites and family cemeteries would be destroyed, and families who’ve lived on the land for centuries would be kicked out. 

    Although the aforementioned Region C Water Plan tactics aren’t quite enough, if Region C goes above the conservation levels it outlines, then it could save the entirety of the water that Marvin Nichols would provide.

    So, the reservoir’s proposal raises a debate of the merits of destroying livelihoods, habitats, and history to supply even more water to some of Texas’ most populated and water-consuming cities.

    Is the reservoir really the best solution?

    Although water costs are estimated to be relatively low once the reservoir is built, the construction of Marvin Nichols has been estimated to cost seven-billion dollars. Yup, $7,000,000,000. That’s around $97,222 per acre. To revisit our earlier comparison, the Bois d’Arc Lake reservoir cost around $1,600,000,000 for 16,640 acres—that’s about $96,154 per acre. Both reservoirs are incredibly expensive, but one has passed and the other hasn’t. 

    Let’s look at the cost of the Region C Water Plan’s conservation tactics. (Table from Bryan McMath’s Marvin Nichols Reservoir Project Feasibility Review)

    Bryan McMath / Marvin Nichols Reservoir Project Feasibility Review / Page 22

    For Region C, every tactic costs immensely less than Marvin Nichols. Even by using all the tactics together, water for Region C would cost just $3,666 per acre-foot, a sharp decrease from Marvin Nichols’ construction asking for $97,222 per acre. And although only doing these tactics would leave Region C deficient of 1,000,000 acre-feet of water per year, citizens could use the strategies more aggressively with the surplus of money to fix the lack. 

    Marvin Nichols is not the only solution to Region C’s drinking water shortage, and it’s certainly not the best one. Let’s save the people, animals, habitats, homes, jobs, and history living in northeast Texas, and let’s do so by speaking up. If the project hadn’t received so much pushback in the early 2000s, it very well could have already been implemented or be even closer to implementation. So, we must continue to push back because our voices—Region C’s and Regions A through Z’s alike—are the most powerful tools we have to stop Marvin Nichols.


    References

    Bois d’Arc Lake. (n.d.). About the lake. Bois d’Arc Lake. https://boisdarclake.org/about-the-lake/ 
    Hovland, A. (2024, October 31). East Texas water group considers controversial Marvin Nichols Reservoir project. Texas Scorecard. https://texasscorecard.com/local/east-texas-water-group-considers-controversial-marvin-nichols-reservoir-project/ 
    Lopez, N. (2025, May 20). North Texas needs new reservoirs, water planners say. But plan faces stiff opposition. Kera News. https://www.keranews.org/environment-nature/2025-05-20/north-texas-needs-new-reservoirs-water-planners-say-but-plan-faces-stiff-opposition 
    Marvin Nichols Reservoir Project Feasibility Review [PDF]. (2025). https://www.twdb.texas.gov/publications/reports/special_legislative_reports/doc/Marvin-Nichols-Reservoir-Project-Feasibility-Review.pdf 
    Satija, N. (2015, January 8). Controversial Marvin Nichols Reservoir stays in state plan. The Texas Tribune. https://www.texastribune.org/2015/01/08/twdb-marvin-nichols-decision/
    Texas Living Waters. (n.d.). Case study: Proposed Marvin Nichols Reservoir. Texas Living Waters. https://texaslivingwaters.org/state-and-regional-water-plan/case-study-proposed-marvin-nichols-reservoir/ 


  • Straight to the Point: The Chemistry Behind Permanent Hair Straightening 

    Straight to the Point: The Chemistry Behind Permanent Hair Straightening 

    By Aravli Paliwal

    ~8 minutes


    Growing up with thick, unruly curls, I rarely felt comfortable wearing my hair down at events without straightening it completely. The frizz felt impossible to tame, the ends felt rough and bushy, and even up in a ponytail, my hair still looked like it had survived a whirlwind.

    Now, I’m writing this all in the past-tense, because just this week I decided to undergo a permanent Japanese hair straightening treatment. Usually, when I mention this, people fixate on the word “permanent,” followed by “but your natural hair was so pretty” or “why would you do that?” These comments don’t bother me too much because my hair looks and feels 100x better than it did previously. But what really gets under my skin is just how much time and research it took to find the right treatment option, thanks to the internet’s endless muddle of conflicting information about hair straightening.

    There are a bajillion different options- Which one is right for me?

    As soon as I clicked “enter” after searching “permanent hair straightening,” I was introduced to 3 different treatments that all sounded, well, exactly the same. To the untrained reader, a Japanese hair straightening treatment, Brazilian blowout, and Korean Keratin treatment sound like different countries each decided to stick their name in front of the exact same thing, but after doing a couple hours of research, it wasn’t the pros that stuck out to me- it was the cons.

    Brazilian Blowout

    Uterine cancer. Ovarian cancer. Leukemia. Well, it sounds like I should be showing up to the hair salon in a hazmat suit if these are the side effects- so is this actually true? Short answer- yes. 

    Everyone’s hair is composed primarily of Keratin, a protein structure held together by disulfide bonds (S-S) → (this determines if your hair is curly or straight to begin with) and weaker hydrogen bonds (easily broken down by water).

    Diagram 1

    Unlike Japanese hair straightening treatments, Brazilian blowouts do NOT permanently break down and restructure these S-S bonds, so the straightening effect is more temporary. The straightened results typically last around 3-4 months; though, the thicker and healthier your hair is, the longer the treatment lasts. However, after treatment at the salon, the hair is never pin-straight, and throughout this 3-4 month period, your hair gradually gains its natural curl pattern back.

    After thoroughly washing the hair and exposing its cuticle, Brazilian blowout stylists begin to apply a solution that includes aldehydes like methylene glycol. This is where the cancer sirens go off. When brands claim that their treatment is formaldehyde-free, what they don’t understand is that this methylene glycol releases formaldehyde when heated, and formaldehyde exposure is known to increase the risk of all the nasty cancers that Google warns you about from the beginning. The following chemical equation explains exactly how formaldehyde gas fumes are produced during Brazilian blowouts.

    Diagram 2

    This heat is introduced when the stylist flat-irons hair at ~450°F. Instead of breaking the preexisting disulfide bonds and reforming them, the treatment adds new chemical S-S bridges that hold the hair in a straighter shape temporarily, with a carcinogenic formaldehyde byproduct.

    Keratin Treatment

    When researching different straightening treatments, Keratin treatments are often the most difficult to understand because there are two different techniques. In both treatments, a Keratin-based solution (primarily peptides and protein because “keratin” is literally just the protein that makes up your hair) is applied to the hair. Now after this, the stylist has two options:

    1. They can continue by essentially replicating the Brazilian blowout and reintroducing the carcinogenic formaldehyde after flat-ironing the hair (same 3-4 month results, never achieve pin-straight hair).
    2. They can go the formaldehyde-free route and only coat the hair’s cuticle in the Keratin-solution without taking further steps. This results in smoother, shinier hair with less frizz; however, this process does not chemically alter any disulfide bonds, and has practically no permanent straightening effect.

    Japanese Hair Straightening

    Websites like to scare people by framing Japanese straightening treatments as the “nuclear option,” with “straight hair for life” and “no room for regrets.” While it is more of a commitment than the other straightening treatments because it actually lasts no matter what hair texture you have, it is by no means “lifelong.” Furthermore, Japanese straightening is the only treatment that doesn’t produce carcinogenic formaldehyde as a byproduct, and instead uses a safer ammonium thioglycolate.

    The strongly alkaline ammonium thioglycolate directly attacks disulfide bonds and completely restructures them:

    Josh Bloom / American Council on Science and Health

    This “weaker” hair is easily manipulated into the straightened shape you want, and after the solution has set, the hair is rinsed with a 0.5% hydrogen peroxide neutralizer (drugstore hydrogen peroxide used to treat cuts and wounds is around 3%). The hydrogen peroxide forms new disulfide bonds that naturally fall straight.

    From this point on, many stylists begin to take “creative liberties” and begin to dump all sorts of expensive shampoos and conditioners on your hair while also warning you that the next 48 hours you cannot wash, put it in clips or ponytail holders, eat, sleep, or breathe around your hair- basically saying “if anything goes wrong in the next 48 hours, the blame is 100% on YOU.” This is why it is extremely important to have a professional stylist who is familiar with their product and takes accountability when necessary. It’s also why I am so grateful for Bijin Salon’s Michelle, who has 22 years of experience under her belt. 

    “With the amount of information that stylists now have readily available online, there should be no excuses for professionals not to know their products.” -Michelle

    She told me straight-up that this 48-hour policy is completely made up to strip stylists of accountability: Scientifically, after the neutralizer has been introduced, there is no reason why you cannot go home and wash/put up your hair immediately. Bijin Japanese Permanent Hair Straightening is located in Farmers Branch, Texas, and you can find their website here.

    While Japanese straightening sounds great, there are still a couple of things to keep in mind. As I mentioned earlier, this is definitely a commitment. Not lifelong, but if you want your natural hair back, you’re going to have to grow it out- completely. This includes the awkward stage where your roots are curly while the ends are pin straight.

    Better and Worse Case Scenarios / Straight at Roots and End Curls / TikTok ©

    Additionally, Japanese straightening requires regular maintenance. Depending on how fast your hair grows and what your curl pattern is, root touch-ups are typically needed at least once a year. 

    Quick Recap:

    → If you are committed to getting a hair straightening treatment, the safest and longest-lasting option is by far the Japanese treatment. 

    → If you are not interested in changing your curl pattern but want softer, less frizzy hair, the formaldehyde-free keratin treatment is for you.

    General Things to Check for:

    1. Watch out for sodium hydroxide (the main chemical in drain cleaner) → it’s a strong base commonly used to raise pH levels in popular haircare. When overused, it can force the hair’s cuticle open and permanently damage keratin structure. Brands rely on it because if a product’s pH drops too low, preservatives fail, and the product’s shelf life is severely compromised. So while sodium hydroxide is often necessary, because concentrations are not disclosed, it’s important to pay attention to how your hair feels after using products that contain it.
    2. The word “straightener” is often used too loosely when describing a wide array of retexturing treatments, leading many people to conflate straighteners with smoothers and relaxers. In reality, the difference is quite simple. Straighteners use a thioglycolate solution, while smoothers either coat the hair with chemical (like a Brazilian Blowout), or use glyoxylic acid after a sodium hydroxide shampoo. Relaxers, on the other hand, and purely sodium hydroxide.
    3. “Keratin” products are largely a scam → theoretically, any hair product could be labeled “keratin” because keratin is simply what hair is made of; adding trace amounts of keratin to a product does not rebuild or restructure hair, it just temporarily coats it and doesn’t really do anything at all. Claims that keratin products are “so good for your hair’s health” are usually marketing schemes.
    3 Must-Have Hair Products for the New Year / KeratinComplex ©

    References

    American Council on Science and Health. (2018, April 21). What do perm chemicals and cystic fibrosis drugs have in common? Retrieved from https://www.acsh.org/news/2018/04/21/what-do-perm-chemicals-and-cystic-fibrosis-drugs-have-common-12844
    Color Wow. (n.d.). What is a hair cuticle? Retrieved from https://colorwowhair.com/blogs/all/what-is-a-hair-cuticle?srsltid=AfmBOopre5yB2FbyrucIX1A8_PbEIOOv2a6kudPZy7hQXLzsh-_6QXL9
    Gavazzoni Dias, M. F., de Almeida, A. M., Cecato, P. M., Adriano, A. R., & Pichler, J. (2014). The Shampoo pH can Affect the Hair: Myth or Reality?. International journal of trichology, 6(3), 95–99. https://doi.org/10.4103/0974-7753.139078
    Keratin Complex. (n.d.). 3 must-have hair products for the new year. Retrieved from https://keratincomplex.com/blogs/post/3-must-have-hair-products-for-the-new-year?srsltid=AfmBOoqDHCEha9yxfLvtUsxkvIr6Ys7J_-UcCwugTrzZRUZ6qnSPLDJu
    National Center for Biotechnology Information. (2021). Straight to the point: What do we know so far on hair straightening? International Journal of Cosmetic Science. Retrieved from https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8280444/
    Occupational Safety and Health Administration. (n.d.). Hair salons and stylists: background on hair smoothing products that could release formaldehyde. Retrieved from https://www.osha.gov/hair-salons/background
    The Times of Israel. (n.d.). 17-year-old girl hospitalized for kidney failure after hair-straightening treatment. Retrieved from https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/17-year-old-girl-hospitalized-for-kidney-failure-after-hair-straightening-treatment/

    Also, a special thank you to Michelle Moore at Bijin Salon, whose expertise offered valuable insight into the realities behind modern haircare!