Author Archives: Comms

Earth Day 2018: Get Involved

Earth Day Opportunities: Attend, Volunteer, Donate, Love the Earth.

Keep Austin Beautiful Clean Sweep

Saturday April 14th

At a location near you.

Annual neighborhood, park, street clean up to keep Austin beautiful.

Volunteer: https://keepaustinbeautiful.org/volunteer-opportunities/

Austin Give 5

Friday April 20th All Day.

At various shops, restaurants, theaters, and cafes around Austin.

Shop and eat at locations that are donating 5% of their sales to a fund which will equally distributing to nine environmental nonprofits working to preserve our local environments.

Visit austingive5.org for more information

Earth Day ATX

Saturday April 21st 12:00 PM to 7:00 PM

Huston-Tillotson University, 900 Chicon St. Austin, TX 78702

Earth Day ATX is a zero waste event with many exhibits and opportunities to lower your carbon footprint, conserve, recycle and upcycle.

Volunteer: http://earthdayaustin.com/volunteering-at-earth-day-austin/

 

Earth Day Mulching at Zilker Park

Saturday April 21st 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM

Zilker Park, 2100 Barton Springs Rd. (512) 477-1566

Get your hands dirty and revive trees at Zilker Park.

Volunteer: https://www.austinparks.org/

Earth Day Volunteering for Youth and Adults

Saturday April 21st 10:00 AM-12:00 PM, trail beautification for adults,

12:30 PM- 3:00 PM beautification and family friendly activities for all ages.

Violet Crown Trail, Specs 290/Brodie Ln. (512.328-2481)

Volunteer:

https://www.facebook.com/events/1415800238440209

 

Pease on Earth Day

Sunday April 22nd 9:00 AM-12:00 PM

Pease Park, 1100 Kingsbury Rd.

Join the Pease Park Conservancy to spread Pease, Love, and Mulch this Earth Day.

Volunteer: https://www.givepulse.com/event/72331-Pease-on-Earth-Day

In Memory of Draylen Mason

By Mayor Adler

Have you ever seen a monarch butterfly? They are spectacular. They flash color through the sky and then after a time so short it’s painful to contemplate they are gone. Their beauty touches our hearts, and the brevity of time we have with them breaks our hearts.

I will remember Draylen for who he was and the life he lived. Draylen touched thousands of lives. I can’t begin to count the number of people who have come to me with his stories. I was at a concert at SXSW two weeks ago. In the middle, a break was taken, and Draylen was celebrated.

Here is what I know of Draylen Mason: He loved. He is loved. He had a rare talent. He worked hard at it. He appreciated his teachers and mentors, and they loved him. He supported his peers. He was kind. He was generous. He was the best of us.

And now, after way too short a time, he’s gone.

But like the Monarch butterfly, he was beautiful.

His parting gift to this city, the legacy of the tragedy of these past three weeks, is that his death has caused our city to look again at who we are, to acknowledge that each of us has a different experience of a life in Austin and that we see our worlds differently based on who we are and where we live.

Draylen has gifted this city an important opportunity, a unique chance to focus and to come to terms with that basic truth. If we accept his gift, we will be a better and stronger city.

I pledge for myself, and for the larger community to honor Draylen with a pledge to reach deep and to find the equanimity and equity that live somewhere in all our hearts, to meet and know and help and ask for help from our neighbors — from all our neighbors — across the street and across the city. We’ve got to get each other’s back.

I will remember Draylen. Like a monarch butterfly, he spent his time on earth dazzling us. He touched so many lives, and now, his embrace will hold a city.