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Incumbent Craig Morgan, challenger Kelly Hall file for Round Rock mayor

The Round Rock mayor seat will be up for election this May, as the filing period for candidates to enter the race ended Feb. 13.

Overview: Incumbent Craig Morgan and challenger Kelly Hall each filed for the open mayoral seat.

Round Rock City Council Place 1 member Michelle Ly filed for re-election and will run unopposed. Similarly, Place 4 council member Frank Ortega will also run unopposed.

Each member elected to council will serve a three-year term, from May 2026-2029. All places on the council are at-large and can be held by any qualified candidate.

 
Mark Your Calendar
Check out these 13 events happening in Round Rock

A variety of events will take place in Round Rock in the coming weeks, including a concert and a festival celebrating the start of the Round Rock Express season. Check out this list of upcoming events. 

Hops for Houses: The craft beer festival will feature craft brewers from across Central Texas and also include live music, a silent auction, games and food trucks. The fundraising event will raise money for Habitat for Humanity of Williamson County to provide affordable housing to people in need.

  • Feb. 21, 1 p.m.

Cameron Allbright concert: Country music singer Cameron Allbright will perform at Backporch Social as part of the ongoing KOKE Live Music Series. The downtown Round Rock restaurant offers food and drinks.
  • March 12, 8-10 p.m.

Fire Jam: The Jungle Movement Academy will host an evening of fire spinning and more at its gym. Guests are invited to bring their own props to join in on the Fire Jam or to just enjoy the fire spinners.
  • March 15, 6:30-9 p.m.

 
transportation tuesday
Road extensions, safety improvements: 6 Austin metro transportation updates

Check out six upcoming, ongoing or completed transportation projects across the Austin metro.

Ongoing projects
Bell District to 183A Toll shared-use path
Project: Construction is underway on a shared-use path that will connect 183A Toll to Bell Park in Cedar Park. It will be a 10-foot-wide concrete path following along Brushy Creek Road.
Update: According to city officials, crews have begun building the path itself, as well as working on utility relocations and drainage infrastructure.

  • Timeline: expected completion fall 2026
  • Cost: $3.3 million
  • Funding source: 2022 transportation bond

Gattis School Road Segment 6
Project: The project will expand the Round Rock corridor to a six-lane divided arterial between Via Sonoma Trail and Red Bud Lane. Planned improvements include a raised median, intersection upgrades, additional turn lanes, and new pedestrian and bicycle facilities.
Update: Work on the segment began Feb. 2. The initial phase of construction will temporarily reduce the roadway from four lanes to two. 
  • Timeline: 2026-27
  • Cost: $23 million
  • Funding source: Type B sales tax revenue

 
Stay In The Know
Austin readies for launch of teledriving technology

Austin is readying for the arrival of teledriving vehicles, or cars remotely controlled by humans, that'd join several autonomous vehicle operations as emerging mobility technologies that have become commonplace on city roadways.

The details: The city is currently in negotiations with a company seeking to bring its teleoperations to Austin in the coming months. The cars would be controlled via the cellular network and could face local oversight, unlike AVs.

City staff are actively working to establish basic operating standards for the new vehicles once they arrive. Due to competitive issues and proprietary information, the company now under consideration can't be revealed as of mid-February.

Teledriving could officially launch in town this spring or summer once an initial civic agreement with the business is finalized, likely with a smaller fleet in a small footprint like downtown. Staff are also planning to develop a new city ordinance for City Council consideration covering basic rules and guidelines for the technology.

 
CI Texas
Early voting begins Feb. 17: Here’s what Texans should know

Early in-person voting in Texas’ primary elections begins Feb. 17 and lasts until Feb. 27.

How it works: Texas has an open primary system, where voters decide at the polling place whether to cast ballots in the Democratic or Republican primary. Voters may not participate in both primaries.

What to expect: Voters will be given a ballot with a slate of statewide seats and other races determined by the voting precinct they live in. During early voting, registered voters can visit any polling location in their county.

Candidates who win their primaries will advance to the Nov. 3 midterm election.

Why it matters: Early voting gives registered voters the opportunity to cast their ballots before primary election day March 3.

Voter advocacy groups and experts told Community Impact that a vote in the March primaries is “the most impactful vote” Texans can cast, due to consistently low voter turnout and competition in certain races. Over 18 million Texans are registered to vote, although about one-fifth of registered voters participated in recent primary elections.

 

Your local team

Grant Crawford
Editor

Amy Leonard Bryant
General Manager

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