On a quiet stretch of McGuffin Way in East Fort Worth, neighbors say their weekdays now come with a soundtrack of grinding rock, rumbling trucks and drifting dust, and they want it stopped. Residents are pressing the city to halt a rock-crushing operation they argue is running without the proper zoning permit, even as the property owner pursues a broader industrial rezoning in the surrounding area. They say dust, diesel truck traffic and the constant clatter of heavy equipment have become daily disruptions in neighborhoods already wary of industrial encroachment.
Neighbors Say Crusher Ran Without Permit
Observers reported seeing at least one front-end loader dropping crushed rock into trucks while a mobile rock crusher worked beside a large rock pile at the McGuffin Way site. Neighbors contend that this kind of activity requires a conditional-use permit under city zoning rules and that the work has been moving ahead without it.
Records show that Crushtex secured an air-quality registration from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in early December. That state-level signoff has not calmed local concerns. Neighborhood leaders argue that paperwork in Austin does little for people living next door to the operation. “I’m not sure residents were given enough notice before the rezoning hearing to influence decision makers,” Neighborhoods of East Fort Worth Alliance leader Linda Fulmer told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Owner Seeks Rezoning For Light-Industrial Uses
The property at 153 McGuffin Way is owned by Wallace Hall Jr., who has filed both for a conditional-use permit and for rezoning nearly 50 acres between East First Street and Elliott Reeder Road to a light-industrial designation, according to City of Fort Worth permit records. Right now, the tracts are zoned for multifamily and commercial uses.
Neighbors say that if the area is reclassified, it would effectively lock in rock-crushing and batch operations as an ongoing feature of the landscape rather than a short-term annoyance. What they see today as an overreach, they worry, could become fully sanctioned industrial activity tomorrow.
State Air Permits Don’t Overrule Local Zoning
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality issues standard permits for rock and concrete crushers that focus on emissions limits and technical screening criteria, not on whether a particular site fits local land-use rules. The agency’s guidance lays out setbacks, throughput caps and the typical 440-yard buffer between crushers and nearby homes, schools or places of worship, according to TCEQ…