Good Morning, Lake Travis & Westlake!

Top Story
The Hospital at Westlake Medical Center launches interventional radiology procedures

The Hospital at Westlake Medical Center, a physician-owned hospital in West Lake Hills, launched interventional radiology procedures in May.

The background: The Hospital at Westlake Medical Center is a physician-owned hospital located in West Lake Hills, offering a wide range of medical services including an emergency room, orthopedic and spinal care and impatient physical therapy.

The Hospital filed for bankruptcy in September 2023 due to increased costs exacerbated by the pandemic, yet was able to fully reopen and resume normal operations in March 2025, Chief Administrative Officer Jerry Jasper said.

The details: Now, The Hospital is continuing to expand its services with the introduction of interventional radiology procedures.

Interventional radiology is a medical specialty that uses advanced imaging tools such as MRI, CT, X-Ray and ultrasound to guide minimally invasive procedures that often replace the need for open surgery, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

The Hospital at Westlake Medical Center has partnered with Medical Vascular Partners to provide interventional radiology services spearheaded by Dr. Rajiv Srinivasa and Dr. Taylor Maloney.

 
Travis County Coverage
Travis County violence intervention pilot faces funding gap as contract nears end

A Travis County-funded pilot program connecting violence victims and their families to social services at Austin's two Level 1 trauma centers is expiring this year with no confirmed funding source to continue it, according to a presentation by Ascension Seton staff to Travis County Commissioners on June 9.

What you need to know: The $500,000 contract with Ascension Seton for the Hospital-based Violence Intervention Program, or HVIP, will be fully expended by Aug. 31 with no other funding sources identified, according to county documents. Travis County Health and Human Services submitted a budget request for $250,000 annually in fiscal year 2026-27 to continue the program, a Travis County spokesperson confirmed.

The HVIP launched in October 2024 at Dell Seton Medical Center at The University of Texas at Austin—the only Level 1 adult trauma center in Central Texas—and Dell Children's Medical Center, according to county documents.

 
Transportation Tuesday
Road expansions, weekend bridge closure: 6 Austin metro transportation updates

Check out six ongoing transportation project updates across the Austin metro.

Rockride Lane
Project:
This work will upgrade Rockride Lane in Georgetown to a two-lane collector roadway with a continuous center left-turn lane and a 10-foot-wide shared-use path along one side from SE Inner Loop to Sam Houston Avenue.
Update: As of February, the contractor had completed work on the west side of the road and began working on the east side. 

  • Timeline: 2022-26

  • Cost: $12 million

  • Funding source: city of Georgetown

William Cannon Bridge
Project: The William Cannon Bridge over I-35 will be blocked off with lane reductions on the main lanes and frontage roads in both directions for the second weekend in a row as part of the I-35 Capital Express South Project. Once completed, the project will feature two high-occupancy-vehicle lanes and a southbound bypass lane. 
Update: The bridge will be blocked off from June 19 at 10 p.m. through June 22 at 5 a.m. 

  • Timeline: 2022-28 (total project)

  • Cost: $548 million (total project)

  • Funding source: Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization, TxDOT

 
CI Texas
Gov. Abbott tells PUC, ERCOT to ensure Texas consumers do not foot the bill for data center growth

Texas must protect residential consumers from paying for the infrastructure needed to power new data centers, Gov. Greg Abbott said in a June 10 order aimed at balancing the rapid growth of data centers with the needs of residents and communities.

The big picture: The governor directed state regulators to ensure data center companies do not pass infrastructure costs on to ratepayers, urging lawmakers to tighten regulations on data centers’ water use and repeal certain tax exemptions that benefit the industry.

Abbott’s order comes as Texas grapples with how to manage the data center boom amid climbing electric demand and looming water shortages. It is the first time the Republican governor has publicly called to restrict data center growth.

The context: As communities across Texas consider new data center projects, reporting shows that some residents are pushing back, raising concerns about the large facilities’ water usage, potential strain on the electric grid and impacts on local neighborhoods.

What they're saying: In response, state agencies called protecting consumers from rising electric costs "our top priority."

 

Your local team

Darcy Sprague
Managing Editor

Taylor Stover
General Manager

Email [email protected] for story ideas, tips or questions.

Keep Reading