Austin, TX
Austin honors Black-led groups after yearlong training to tackle homelessness crisis
AUSTIN, Texas — Austin city leaders recognized nine Black-led grassroots organizations on Tuesday after the groups completed a yearlong training initiative designed to strengthen their work serving people experiencing homelessness.
Mayor Kirk Watson called homelessness a true humanitarian crisis in the city of Austin, telling attendees, “I want to say I’m proud to live in a city that cares as much about this issue as we do.” He later added, “We have to do better in Austin, Texas.”
The participating organizations work on the front lines of Austin’s homelessness crisis, including groups like The Pfaith House. Founder Kimberly Holiday said her organization focuses on supporting women and children facing some of the most difficult circumstances. “We have transitional housing in Pflugerville for women and children who are actively fleeing domestic violence and or experiencing chronic homelessness,” she said.
Other honored groups include
- Black Men’s Health Clinic
- Change 1
- The Healing Project
- Hungry Hill Foundation
- Indeed Transitional Outreach Ministry
- My Sister’s Keeper ATX
- Walking by Faith Prison Ministry
- We Can Now
The groups completed a yearlong capacity-building initiative led by the Ending Community Homelessness Coalition, funded by the City of Austin and Indeed, to expand the organizations’ impact. Holiday said the initiative has strengthened collaboration among providers. “I believe strongly that with the cohort we have created an ecosystem to be able to support one another and also an ecosystem for those that we serve,” she said.
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David Gray, director of Austin’s Homeless Strategies and Operations Department, said the city wanted to invest in the organizations’ growth. “We wanted to invest in them, cultivate their growth and professional development, and help their organizations continue to deliver extremely high impact in our Austin community,” he said.
Gray said the cohort received professional development training from Austin Community College, one-on-one coaching from local business leaders, and lessons on mental health and wellness. “When you have a diversity of providers who are out there each and every day engaging with people, that creates more entry points for folks to come into our homeless response system,” he said.
Holiday said the training helped her turn long-term goals into a reality. “I feel very strongly that it created the infrastructure that I needed to take my vision to action, and we are changing lives.”
City officials say the organizations are now better equipped to reach more people and deliver more support where it’s needed most.
Austin, TX
Suspect arrested after East Austin shooting leaves six injured
AUSTIN, Texas — Austin police have arrested a suspect in connection with a shooting in East Austin that left half a dozen people injured Sunday night.
According to the Austin Police Department, the shooting happened around 8:26 p.m. on Sunday, April 26, in the 2000 block of East 12th Street.
Investigators said two men were involved in a physical altercation that escalated into an exchange of gunfire, striking several bystanders.
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Six people were treated at local hospitals for non-life-threatening gunshot injuries. Two were transported by Austin-Travis County EMS, while four others arrived at hospitals on their own. All victims are reported to be in stable condition.
Police said 24-year-old Wesley Earl Brown was later arrested in connection with the shooting. He has been charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and booked into the Travis County Jail.
Police said 24-year-old Wesley Earl Brown was later arrested in connection with the shooting. He has been charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and booked into the Travis County Jail. (Photo: APD)
Despite the arrest, detectives are continuing to investigate and are asking anyone who may have information, photos or video of the incident to come forward.
Anyone with information is encouraged to contact APD’s Aggravated Assault Unit at 512-974-4429 or submit an anonymous tip through Capital Area Crime Stoppers at 512-472-8477. A reward of up to $1,000 may be available for information leading to an arrest.
The investigation remains ongoing.
Austin, TX
East Austin Shooting: Several Casualties Reported, Suspect Still at Large | Chilling Video Surfaces
The incident took place late Sunday evening at the 2000 block of East 12th Street, near the intersection of 12th and Chicon Streets, in front of Sam’s BBQ, a popular local restaurant, triggering panic in the area after reports of gunfire at a gathering in a residential neighbourhood.
Austin, TX
Texas Governor Threatens Austin, Dallas and Houston’s World Cup Funding Over ICE Fight
Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office turned preparations for the 2026 World Cup into the latest front in the U.S. battle over immigration enforcement, with the threat of pulling or withholding public safety grants from Houston, Dallas, and Austin unless the cities changed policies that state officials said limited police cooperation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
According to The Texas Tribune, the funding at risk totaled about $200 million across the three cities, including World Cup-related public safety money for Dallas and grants tied to Houston’s role as one of the tournament’s host cities. The 2026 World Cup is scheduled to begin June 11 and will be played across the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
Houston, the largest city in Texas, moved first. Its City Council voted 13-4 to amend an ordinance that had restricted police from detaining people solely on ICE administrative warrants. Mayor John Whitmire’s office said the change would protect $114 million in state funding while preserving protections against unreasonable detention, Reuters reported.
The original Houston ordinance had removed a requirement that police wait up to 30 minutes for ICE agents to pick up people named in civil immigration warrants. The amendment dropped language that explicitly barred that practice and removed a description of ICE administrative warrants as not having been reviewed by a judge.
Abbott’s office called the Houston change “a step in the right direction.” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton had already sued Houston officials over the policy, arguing that it violated Senate Bill 4, the state law that bars local governments from adopting measures that “materially limit” immigration enforcement.
Dallas also revised its police policy after Abbott’s office warned that the city could lose more than $32 million in public safety grants and more than $55 million in World Cup public safety funding. The new policy says officers may ask about immigration status when a person is lawfully detained or arrested, share that information with federal authorities, and assist ICE agents when “reasonable or necessary.”
Dallas Police Chief Daniel Comeaux said the department’s mission had not changed. “Our officers will follow the law, and our updated policy will affirm that we will cooperate with federal authorities when required,” Comeaux said, according to FOX Dallas-Fort Worth. “DPD exists to protect the safety of everyone in Dallas, and we will not stop individuals only to determine their immigration status.”
Civil rights groups criticized the pressure campaign. “Houston city council caved to the governor’s threats and intimidation,” Caro Rivera Nelson, an attorney with the ACLU of Texas, told Reuters. “The effective repeal of Proposition A is a stain on our state.”
Abbott’s office said the state expects cities to comply with Texas law. “Governor Abbott has been clear: cities in Texas must fully comply with state law and cooperate with federal immigration authorities to keep dangerous criminals off our streets,” spokesperson Andrew Mahaleris said.
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