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Monday, August 31, 2015 by Elizabeth Pagano
Bastrop talks transportation
This fall, Bastrop County will hold three workshops to help develop the Bastrop County Transportation Plan, which is scheduled to be completed in June 2016. According to a press release, “The plan will serve as a roadmap for creating a safe and efficient county transportation system that serves the mobility needs of area residents and allows the county to remain economically competitive in Central Texas now and in the future.” Workshops will be held on Sept. 29, Sept. 30 and Oct. 7. The invested public is also invited to weigh in by email, at BastropCountyTransportationPlan@emailatg.com, or via Facebook. More information can also be found on the Bastrop County website.
Monday, August 31, 2015 by Elizabeth Pagano
More cars for Austin
Over the weekend, Google announced that it is expanding its self-driving car program in Austin. Information about the program is available on the project’s website, which promises a monthly report on the cars and a feedback form for “neighbors.”
Friday, August 28, 2015 by Elizabeth Pagano
Music BBB coming up
As part of the ongoing “Beers, Brains and Betterment” forum, the Austin Monitor will be taking on the state of Austin’s music industry. On Oct. 6, City Council Member Greg Casar, Austin Music People’s Jennifer Houlihan, local artist Tee-Double, Transmission Events General Manager Bobby Garza and South by Southwest brand development honcho/former city of Austin Music Commission Chair Brad Spies will join Monitor Publisher Mike Kanin to talk about what’s up with the city’s music industry, festivals and all of that good stuff. As usual, the event is free and open to the public, but RSVPs to ensure your space are available here.
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Friday, August 28, 2015 by Nora Ankrum
Metric Boulevard construction will cause delays
North Austin drivers and cyclists can expect traffic delays over the next few weeks along the stretch of Metric Boulevard that extends from Kramer Lane to Parmer Lane. The Public Works Department will begin repaving the road next week, and the project will require reducing traffic to one lane and restricting bike lane access. Driveways and sidewalks in the area will remain open, and Austin Police Department officers will be on hand to direct vehicles. Most of the work will take place at night, between 8 p.m. and 6:30 a.m. However, some daytime construction is scheduled for Tuesday through Friday, Sept. 1-4, between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. Completion of the project is expected by the end of September.
Friday, August 28, 2015 by Nora Ankrum
Community forum will address economic development in East Austin
The Travis County Commissioners Court, City Council and City Manager Marc Ott are teaming up to host the Spirit of East Austin community forum on Sept. 12. The public is invited to participate in small problem-solving groups, share ideas for equitable economic development and learn about current economic development efforts underway. Participants are also encouraged to share their own experiences and to bring photos, artwork or other objects relevant to their stories. Children will be welcome to join in supervised youth activities, and services for participants requiring assistance or language interpretation can be arranged beforehand. (Email barbara.shack@austintexas.gov or call 512-978-2100 by Sept. 9.) The event will take place at the Travis County Expo Center, 7311 Decker Lane, 9 a.m.-noon (doors open at 8:15 a.m.). To RSVP, go here.
Thursday, August 27, 2015 by Elizabeth Pagano
City’s tax roll certified
On Wednesday afternoon, the city’s tax rolls came out. They showed $4.9 billion more in property tax values than previously estimated ($111.1 billion compared to the estimated $106.2 billion). What does that mean? For one, it means that the tax rate needed for the proposed budget has fallen to 45.98 cents for every $100 of property valuation (from 48.14 cents). It also means the median homestead taxable value is now $217,367, not $218,336. According to a memo from Deputy Chief Financial Officer Ed Van Eenoo, based upon the certified tax roll data, “The annual tax bill for the owner of a median valued homestead in fiscal year 2015-16 is projected to decline $12 relative to the current year’s median tax bill. It is noteworthy that but for (City) Council’s action to enact a 6% general homestead exemption, the projected tax bill for the median valued homestead would have been $40 higher and an increase of $28 over its fiscal year 2014-15 level.” Of course, the proposed budget remains theoretical for the time being and has yet to be determined. Today, Council members will continue to discuss their priorities, take public testimony and hammer out the details of the $3.5 billion budget with an eye toward finalizing it next month.
Thursday, August 27, 2015 by Elizabeth Pagano
Council members to announce new rental enforcement project
This morning at 8:30 a.m., City Council Members Greg Casar, Leslie Pool and Ann Kitchen will hold a press conference to announce a new budget proposal. The Residents’ Advocacy Project is designed to improve how the city handles dangerous rental properties and short-term rental enforcement. According to a press release about the new program, “This initiative would utilize $350,000 from the proposed budget of the Austin Code Department for a contract to fund outreach positions and legal support to address major violations of substandard and dangerous conditions in rental properties. Furthermore the proposal will empower the City’s Law Department and Code Department to pursue litigation to provide relief for tenants and neighborhoods from dangerous rental properties and persistently non-compliant STR operators.” The press release goes on to explain that the city would contract with a nonprofit legal organization that would perform outreach and education about tenants’ rights and bring forward complaints about unsafe building conditions. Though the proposal is budget-neutral, it will be discussed during the budget process, which will continue today with a public hearing and is set to conclude Sept. 10.
Thursday, August 27, 2015 by Nora Ankrum
City seeks input on Seaholm redevelopment
The Parks and Recreation Department announced on Wednesday that it is seeking public input on two redevelopment proposals for the Seaholm Intake Facility. The facility once served as the pump house for the now decommissioned Seaholm Power Plant and remains a prominent feature of the downtown landscape given its signature Art Deco design. Indeed, the final proposal, according to the city’s announcement, “should incorporate the design sensibility of the overall existing space” and “maintain the historic façade” while also allowing for design improvements. Ultimately, the hope is that the space – which consists of three buildings on a 3.4-acre parcel of land – will be multifunctional and “engage the trail, park users and lake front” nearby. The search for a design team to redevelop the site began in October 2014, when the city released a Request for Qualifications. Now the city has launched an online survey, available until Sept. 13, soliciting feedback on the top two proposals. For more information, visit the city’s website.
Thursday, August 27, 2015 by Elizabeth Pagano
Correction
In a story published earlier this week, the Austin Monitor incorrectly reported that Trinity Street would be closed to cars and maintained as a pedestrian-only street if plans to expand the Convention Center move forward. In fact, closures of Trinity Street would be event-driven and temporary, and not dictated by the convention center expansion.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015 by Jo Clifton
Mayor to announce Housing Our Heroes campaign
It’s a tall order, but Mayor Steve Adler will be announcing a plan to end veteran homelessness in Austin by Veterans Day this year. Adler, along with Sen. Kirk Watson and representatives from the Austin Board of Realtors, the Austin Apartment Association and the Real Estate Council of Austin, among others, will be hosting a press conference at 11 a.m. today at at 2903 Burning Oak Drive, the home of a recently housed veteran. “Housing Our Heroes” is Austin’s effort to answer the national Mayors Challenge to End Veteran Homelessness and features a coalition of coordinated community partners. The coalition includes representatives from government, nonprofit, for-profit and real estate sectors working together to house over 200 veterans in the next 12 weeks. Landlords participating in the program will receive HUD vouchers through the Veterans Administration. On Oct. 15, 2014, then-Mayor Lee Leffingwell and his colleagues announced that by pooling resources with various local organizations, the city would aim to end veteran homelessness by the end of 2015. On May 1, 2015, Adler reaffirmed the commitment at the annual meeting of the Ending Community Homelessness Coalition. Today’s press conference will describe efforts by the city, the real estate community, the Austin Community Foundation, Caritas, Front Steps, the Salvation Army, Watson’s office and federal agencies to ensure that Austin meets that goal and all local veterans have homes by Veterans Day.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015 by Elizabeth Pagano
64 Rainey St. deal brokered
City Council unanimously approved a deal to turn 64 and 58 Rainey St. into parkland yesterday, after years of battle over the land closest to the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center. As part of the deal, developer Sackman Enterprises will be allowed to use 64 Rainey St. as a construction staging area for two years, while construction of a luxury condominium complex at 70 Rainey St. is underway. In return, the developer will pay $400,000 toward a master plan rewrite for the MACC. As the vote neared, Council Member Greg Casar sought – and found – assurance that the parkland could not be revoked by a future City Council.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015 by Caleb Pritchard
Drunk tank proposal chugs along
An intergovernmental working group is gradually bringing more clarity to the once-blurry proposal for Austin’s first drunk tank. On Tuesday, Roger Jefferies, county executive for the Travis County Justice & Public Safety Department, gave the Commissioners Court an update on the group’s progress. Jefferies said that the consensus is leaning toward the idea of recommending that a special local government corporation be created to run the joint operation between Travis County and the city of Austin. Jefferies also suggested that a so-called sobriety center could be set up inside a county-owned building in downtown Austin at 1213 Sabine St. That space is expected to become free when its current occupant, the Medical Examiner’s Office, moves into new digs in Northeast Austin as early as January 2017. Among the features at the ME’s building that make it “perfect” for a drunk tank, according to Jefferies, are its “drains on the floor, a sally port for drop-off (and) separate space for women.” The question of funding the construction and operation of the sobriety center is still up in the air, and Commissioner Gerald Daugherty, who sits on the working group, warned his colleagues that it won’t be cheap. However, County Judge Sarah Eckhardt added that savings could be reaped over time by reducing recidivism of chronic alcoholics. Jefferies told the Austin Monitor that he expects to give the commissioners another update sometime in the fall, if not earlier.