Austin, TX
Texas' capital city visitors get parking headache under new order
Sixth Street in Austin.
Cristela JonesFinding parking in downtown Austin is not easy. Whether you pay $20+ to park in a garage or get lucky and find a spot on a metered street, this year you may not need to do either. Ride sharing may become visitors and residents’ best bet since Austin is doing away with parking restrictions for new developments in 2024.
The City of Austin has now become the biggest city in the country to eliminate its parking mandates citywide, according to an NPR report. The effort is part of several ways to make neighborhoods more walkable, ease housing costs, and combat congestion in the city.
Council member Zo Qadri, who represents Central Austin, was part of spearheading the initiative, saying,”I was proud to lead the way on eliminating parking mandates citywide here in Austin. It’s a significant step toward a more affordable, climate-friendly, and transit-oriented city.”
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Getting rid of parking requirements for the city means that developers will not have to make parking lots for buildings anymore in certain parts of the city. Before this, Austin required residential and commercial builders to include parking in their developments since the 1950s, but the amount of spots varied depending on what was being built, according to KUT. For example, usually the city required that every one-bedroom apartment be allotted 1.5 parking spots while a building for a three-bedroom home was required to build at least two parking spots.
Since 2013, Austin began to slowly minimize these requirements for new developments downtown and in 2023, the city council voted to remove parking requirements for bars. The city’s rules will still require builders to provide parking spots for those who are disabled under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Special zoning districts within the city will still be under the city’s former parking minimum rules in neighborhoods like Hyde Park.
Austin is following the trend of dozens of other cities across the nation that have eliminated parking mandates, including Portland, Oregon, San Jose, California, and Richmond, Virginia. Although the move is meant to target parking, advocates of the decision say it may impact the city’s housing troubles as throwing out parking requirements will allow developers to build more housing.
“Downtown Austin hasn’t had parking minimums for ten years and yet developments still provide more parking than is currently needed,” Qadri said.
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In addition to making more room for housing, disgarding parking eliminates the cost of having to build spaces, which can cost a developer anywhere from $5,000 to $60,000 for one parking spot, depending on whether they’re building a surface parking lot or a concrete garage, according to the Austin city department. KUT reported that staff estimate these costs to a developer building apartments can add up to $200 a month to a tenant’s eventual rent.
Tony Jordan, President of the Parking Reform Network, a non-profit organization based in Oregon that educates the public about the impact of parking policy on climate change, equity, housing, and traffic told MySA, “The bottom line is that nothing changes immediately, but over time our cities can actually become better and do a lot better at providing equitable access to people who can’t drive.”
Despite a majority support for the elimination, some Austinites have mixed feelings about it, especially in a city that has been built around cars.
Reddit user, geezer_red, commented in the Austin subreddit about the NPR report, “What will happen is there will be a limited number of parking spots built, much lower than the units and not allocated to specific units. Then people have to separately purchase parking spots or rent from others. It’s how Brooklyn is and it sucks.”
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Another Redditor, Ecstatic-Profit8139, wrote, “we’re not getting rid of parking, we’re removing an unreasonable mandate that forces builders and business owners to provide more parking than anyone needs. there’s a sh**load of parking in this city. it’s always gonna be a chicken and egg situation, but forcing car infrastructure on every development in the city isn’t helping build a better city.”
Census data reveals that 60% of Austin workers drive alone to work, and supporters hope this new initiative will encourage drivers to make more environmentally-friendly transit decisions and if parking is harder, people will choose to take public transportation, bike or walk to their destinations.
“Getting rid of these parking mandates just removes the arbitrary hurdle to having some percentage of our cities be accommodating for people who’d rather not drive which actually is most people [who] say they want a walkable experience,” Jordan said.
Qadri added that he along with council members are working with the Urban Land Institute and local stakeholders to study what more the city can do to better utilize space in developments for uses other than parking.
Austin, TX
Records in Texas AG Ken Paxton’s divorce case are unsealed
AUSTIN (The Texas Tribune) — The records in Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s divorce case have been unsealed.
Judge Robert Brotherton, who is presiding over the case, signed an order Friday morning allowing the records to be made public. The decision came after Paxton and his wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton, announced that they had come to an agreement late Thursday to unseal the documents.
Tyler Bexley, an attorney for a group of media organizations fighting for the records to be released, celebrated the decision as a win for transparency.
“We’re certainly pleased with the result,” Bexley said after the hearing.
The move was an abrupt about-face for the couple, who had fought to keep the records secret. It’s unclear exactly what brought on the change.
The records were released before noon. They show the Paxtons have entered mediation, and their blind trust had doled out $20,000 to each of them to pay for their attorneys. The documents also show that earlier this month, Angela Paxton asked her husband to produce records pertinent to the case. They also show multiple judges recused themselves from the case before it was given to Brotherton, a visiting judge based in Wichita Falls.
The Texas Newsroom previously published copies of several records — including Paxton’s general denial of his wife’s divorce petition — before they were sealed.
The records did not shed more light on the couple’s financial situation, division of assets or the alleged affair that led to the divorce — but additional filings will be made as the case continues. Bexley said the media organizations agreed to redactions only of personal information like Social Security numbers and home addresses.
State Sen. Angela Paxton filed for divorce in July alleging adultery. Soon after, she asked for the court record to be sealed. A previous judge handling the case agreed and put all of the records under seal. Ken Paxton initially supported the decision, filing a court document that accused the press of attempting to unfairly invade his personal life.
Eight media organizations and a nonpartisan nonprofit opposed the sealing. The media group argued Paxton’s divorce records should be public because he is an elected official running for office who has faced repeated allegations of corruption. The attorney general’s finances, which are a subject of the divorce case, have been central to the misconduct allegations against him. While he has been charged with multiple crimes during his decade in statewide office, Paxton has never been convicted.
Paxton is now challenging John Cornyn in the Republican primary for U.S. Senate.
Laura Roach, one of Ken Paxton’s lawyers, said after the Friday hearing that the attorney general had always wanted the record to be unsealed.
“Mr. Paxton has always wanted us to actually unseal it,” she said. “Attorneys get on a path and we think that that’s the right way to go and we were finally able to get everybody on the same page.”
When asked why he initially opposed it so strongly, she added, “that’s just legal stuff. … His attorneys said that.”
Angela Paxton had asked the records be sealed because doing so would “not have an adverse affect on the public health or safety.” Her representatives declined to respond on Friday.
Michael Clauw, the communications director for the nonprofit Campaign for Accountability that also sought the release of the records, said he does not believe Ken Paxton actually wanted them to be made public.
“It’s ridiculous to believe that Ken Paxton ‘always wanted’ his divorce record to be unsealed,” he said. “Only when it became apparent he likely would lose in court did he change his tune.”
Roach said she expects the case to be resolved amicably soon. Neither Ken Paxton nor Angela Paxton appeared at the court.
This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at www.texastribune.org. The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans – and engages with them – about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.
Austin, TX
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Austin, TX
Australia mass shooting: Brother of Texas rabbi injured in attack speaks at Austin ceremony
AUSTIN, Texas – In the wake of the Australia attack on Bondi Beach, Jewish community members flocked to join Governor Greg Abbott in the annual Hanukkah tradition, which looked different this year.
The traditional lighting of the menorah at the Capitol is typically held outside. However, with the recent attack, everyone piled into the Governor’s reception room for security reasons.
The backstory:
There was a weight in the air you could almost feel as members of the Jewish community gathered for the annual Texas Capitol Menorah Lighting Ceremony.
The celebration comes only days after two gunmen killed 15 people and injured about 40 others at a Hanukkah event in Sydney, Australia.
“We have enhanced security, making sure celebrations will take place peacefully and respectfully,” said Governor Greg Abbott.
The terror attack hits home for many. One of the victims is a fellow Texan, Rabbi Liebel Lazaroff, who remains in the ICU fighting for his life.
“An attack on Jews anywhere is an attack on us.”
Rabbi Liebel Lazaroff and his father.
Liebel’s siblings drove in from College Station, and his brother, Rabbi Menachem Lazaroff, spoke about his brother’s heroic actions on Bondi Beach.
“[Liebel] saw, close by, an Australian police officer who was injured and critically bleeding,” said Rabbi Menachem Lazaroff. “He ran over to him, took the shirt off his back, and applied a tourniquet and saved the man’s life.”
Liebel was shot twice while trying to save the Australian police officer. All of this unfolded as Liebel’s boss and mentor died right next to him. He was identified as Rabbi Eli Schlanger.
“[Liebel] said, ‘I could’ve saved the rabbi,’” said Rabbi Menachem Lazaroff. “[Liebel] said ‘Rabbi Schlanger has a family, a wife and children. I’m just a young boy. I could have done something, and I wish I would’ve done more.’”
The 20-year-old rabbi has undergone several surgeries and has more ahead of him before he can begin what will be a long road to recovery.
“He’s a good man, and he’s tough, but it definitely made me emotional for sure, and I’m proud of him,” said Rabbi Menachem Lazaroff. “I’m proud of who he is and what he represents.”
During the eight days of Hanukkah, one candle is lit each night until all eight are burning. On Thursday night, the fifth candle was lit, the symbolic transition of there being more light than darkness.
The Lazaroff family is seeking donations to cover Liebel’s medical bills. Here’s a link if you would like to help.
The Source: Information from statements at the Texas Capitol Menorah Lighting Ceremony and previous FOX 7 Austin coverage
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