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Budget reductions, city spending audit: What's next for Austin after Proposition Q defeat

Austin leaders are readying to adopt a downsized budget with potentially cuts to city services, after voters rejected a 20% tax rate increase to fund various public programs.

The impact: The failure of Proposition Q automatically lowers Austin's tax rate to $0.524017 per $100 property valuation—5 cents below the higher tax rate that was on the ballot, but still a nearly 10% increase over last year's $0.4776 rate. The owner of a median-valued home in Austin can now expect to pay just over $100 more in property taxes.

What's next: With less revenue coming in, City Council will now be tasked with reducing a budget they expanded by about $110 million this summer. Austin's final spending plan will now likely resemble the original fiscal year 2025-26 budget proposed by City Manager T.C. Broadnax in July, although changes are possible.

One more thing: The taxing proposition's defeat also prompted calls for a broad audit of city spending and service outcomes from both sides of the election debate.

 
On The Transportation Beat
5 updates to know this November on Southwest Austin area roads

Wondering what’s behind recent lane changes or detours? Several major road and pedestrian projects across Austin and Dripping Springs are reshaping local traffic and improving safety.

The details: In Dripping Springs, design work is underway for a southwest connection, a 2.4-mile, four-lane divided roadway that will link Mt. Gainor Road to RM 12—offering drivers an alternative route to Hwy. 290. The $1.4 million design phase is funded through Hays County certificates of obligation.

Along Slaughter Lane, construction continues between MoPac and Brodie Lane to expand the corridor to six lanes and add safety features for pedestrians and cyclists. The $23 million project, funded by 2016 Mobility Bonds and the Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization, is expected to wrap up in summer 2025.

Meanwhile, TxDOT’s Oak Hill Parkway overhaul continues transforming Hwy. 290 into a six-lane divided highway. Crews recently smoothed pavement near Circle Drive and raised Patton Ranch Road for flood prevention. The $677 million project is slated for completion in 2026.

 
On The Business Beat
Austin's Birdhouse Books and Gifts cultivates inclusive space with books of all genres

Owner Abby Strite has a mixed career background from serving as an Air Force intelligence officer in Washington, D.C. to working for tech companies in the Austin area. After 20 years in the job force, she dreamt of starting a community-focused business. In 2024, she opened Birdhouse Books & Gifts on Burnet Road. 

What they offer: Readers of all genres can find at least one book to peak their interest with the storefront’s sections which include nonfiction, fiction, biography, memoir, cooking, sexuality, history of race, racism and colonization and books featuring cats.

Customers who aren’t readers can also check out the store’s gift options which range from bookmarks and unique candles to soaps, greeting cards and birdhouses.

“If they're not local, they have to be queer, women, people of color or some combination of those three things,” Strite said. “The focus is that we're lifting up artists and makers who are traditionally marginalized, who are maybe not the first ones on the distributors' websites and things that maybe everybody has.”

  • 5925 Burnet Road, Austin

 

YOUR WEEKEND TO-DO LIST

Check out these weekend events across the metro area.

To submit your own event, click here!

Pflugervile  |  Nov. 7, 9 p.m.

Star Party at 1849 Park

More info

 

Austin  |  Nov. 8-9

Texas Book Festival

More info

 

Kyle  |  Nov. 8, 8 a.m.-1 p.m. (market days), 11:45 a.m. (parade)

Veterans Day Parade & Market Days

More info

 

Liberty Hill  |  Nov. 8, 8:30 a.m. (children’s 1K), 9:30 a.m. (5K)

Williamson County 50-year 5K run

More info

 

Round Rock  |  Nov. 8, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.

Purple Ark Music & Arts Festival

More info

 
Key Information
Austin Habitat leads charge for hundreds of affordable homes; 25 new homes under construction in eastern Travis County

Construction is underway on a major affordable housing project in Whisper Valley, a sustainable master-planned community just east of Austin.

What's happening? Austin Habitat for Humanity is building 25 homes this year as part of a multiyear effort to expand affordable homeownership across Central Texas. The project will ultimately include 48 Habitat homes in Whisper Valley, supported by $1.9 million in Travis County funding.

A closer look: County Judge Andy Brown called the community “the future of housing,” noting the homes are designed to stay affordable long term while reducing energy costs through efficient design and sustainable materials.

Whisper Valley features geothermal energy, solar panels, and a 600-acre park—offering residents both affordability and environmental benefits.

Looking ahead: Habitat leaders say the initiative marks a turning point for the nonprofit, which aims to build up to 100 homes annually. The first 25 homeowners are expected to move in by spring 2026.

 

Your local team

Elle Bent
Editor

Krista Box
General Manager

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