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Austinites poised to reject Proposition Q tax hike, preliminary results show

The Austin tax rate election ballot measure Proposition Q appears headed for failure, based only preliminary voting results.
Proposition Q was rejected by a nearly two-to-one margin. Travis, Williamson and Hays counties reported 85,814 ballots cast against the tax increase late Nov. 4, representing nearly 65% of the vote, versus 46,591 in favor.

What it means: Proposition Q asked voters to approve a 20% increase to Austin's property tax rate, as set by City Council during their budget adoption this summer. The higher rate would have generated about $110 million in additional revenue for various programs and raised the typical homeowner's tax bill by over $300.
If the election outcome holds, Austin officials must revise the city's budget based on a lower tax rate—one that's still about 10% higher than last year's, and that would add about $105 to the typical homeowner's tax bill.

 
Latest Education News
Austin ISD to hold off on 3 school closures, delay boundary changes

The Austin ISD board of trustees will no longer vote to close Palm, Bryker Woods and Maplewood elementaries in November.

Additionally, the district will postpone any proposed attendance boundary changes until next year, excluding those related to intervention at failing schools, Superintendent Matias Segura announced in a letter to families on the evening of Nov. 4.

The announcement follows weeks of protesting from AISD parents, staff and students against the district’s initial plan to close 13 schools and rezone most campuses.

What's happening: On Nov. 20, the AISD board will move forward with voting on the closure of 10 of the 13 campuses it initially proposed to close next school year. Seven of these campuses have received three consecutive F ratings and require state-mandated intervention through turnaround plans. 

In the spring, AISD will pick up its efforts to balance enrollment through a comprehensive boundary plan before taking a vote in the fall. Delaying the rezoning “will allow us to ensure all ideas from our community can be considered in our plan,” the letter states.

 
CI Business
Thom’s Market rebrands as Fin’s First under new ownership in Austin

Thom’s Market—a long-standing corner store with several locations across Austin—has a new name and a new owner.

The gist: Now known as Fin’s First, the store will continue offering its collection of locally-sourced foods and products. The name is a nod to new owner Rofin Maknojia.

The corner store’s founder, Bill Thomas, retired after 18 years in business, with Maknojia taking over the flagship Barton Springs Road location as well as the East Riverside Drive and Burnet Road storefronts.

  • 1418 Barton Springs Road, Austin; 160 E. Riverside Drive, Austin; 5901 Burnet Road, Austin

 
Williamson County Coverage
WilCo Homeless Coalition seeks volunteers for annual point-in-time count

The Williamson County Homeless Coalition will conduct its annual point-in-time count, which occurs over the course of a single day in late January, to get a snapshot of the number of individuals and families experiencing homelessness in the county.

How it works: The PIT count covers all of Williamson County and takes place in two parts—a daytime count and an evening count—both on the same day.

During the day, volunteers go to locations where unhoused people might gather, such as food pantries, to count and speak with them in one-on-one interviews. In the evening, volunteers go out in groups, asking a specific set of questions to determine if individuals are unhoused.

Volunteers may also distribute items, such as blankets, socks or food donations. 

Get involved: The operation requires a large number of volunteers, typically around 50-100, though more volunteers can help cover wider areas.

 
CI Texas
Property taxes, bail rules, water funding: All 17 Texas propositions projected to pass

As of press time, all 17 constitutional amendments on the Texas ballot were poised to become law. The state propositions with the most support would either expand property tax exemptions or prohibit new taxes, while voters also favored measures aimed at funding infrastructure and research.

The overview: Some of the state propositions on the ballot included:

  • Proposition 1: new funding to support the Texas State Technical College System
  • Proposition 3: tighter restrictions on when Texas judges can grant bail for felony offenses
  • Proposition 4: $20 billion for water supply projects and infrastructure
  • Proposition 9: a $125,000 property tax exemption for businesses
  • Propositions 11 and 13: expanded property tax exemptions for Texas homeowners
  • Proposition 14: $3 billion to create a state dementia research institute
More information: All results are unofficial until canvassed.

Click the link below to see which state propositions passed and visit www.communityimpact.com/voter-guide/election-results to see results from all local and state elections in your community.

 

Your local team

Grace Dickens
Editor

Taylor Stover
General Manager

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