Category Archives: Affordability

Towards creating a more diverse and sustainable Austin for all.

Playback: Mayor Steve Adler’s Politics of Music Policy

Austin Chronicle: Omnibus staff report is imperfect, but don’t stop the momentum, says mayor.

Stevie Addz

Bang the Drum Slowly: Mayor Steve Adler, not to be mistaken for maligned Guns N’ Roses drummer Steven Adler Illustration by Nathan Jensen

 

The Omnibus Resolution, a campaign to craft policy that will sustain Austin musicians, artists, and creative venues, advanced last week with the release of a laundry list of prioritized recommendations from city staff. For the myriad ideas offered in the 68-page report, major questions remain – most importantly: What’s next and when? Last Thursday, its sponsor Mayor Steve Adler sat down with “Playback” to discuss his reaction to the report and what it means going forward.

Austin Chronicle: We’re hearing the needs of musicians characterized as “urgent” and “emergency,” yet many of the report’s proposals include timetables ranging from one to five years.

Steve Adler: Because I’m in this job for a limited period of time, I push things faster than I should, which gets me in trouble, but I think we’re dealing with a crisis. Things are changing on the ground while we’re studying and planning, and we can’t wait anymore. We have to start setting these things in motion and develop massing around this. The report addresses some things that are really good, like Agent of Change. There are also holes in it, things it’s missing.

AC: Give me an example.

SA: Increasing the ties between the tech and music communities in ways that are real. There’s an industry opportunity there. I don’t know specifically what it is, but the talent is here and it plays into the strengths we have in this community.

AC: To what extent can these proposals be put into action, given this year’s limited budget?

SA: I don’t know. It’s going to be tough with the budget this year. Last year we had a lot of money to spend, but a lot of really good social service projects were layered in two-year phases, so they’re just coming into play. It’s really hard to get anything with real significance accomplished in the last month of a budget year. This report just came out and the city manager’s finalizing his budget this week.

AC: Does that mean nothing’s going to happen until next year?

SA: I’m hoping there’s space in the budget to be able to do some of the stuff that’s here, but we won’t know if that money’s going to be there ’til the end of July. Then budget decisions are made in three weeks. There’s just not a lot of time, but that doesn’t mean it waits a year.

I really don’t look at it in terms of a budget year. There’s philanthropic dollars we need to be bringing into play. There’s grant stuff we should be looking at – a lot of different elements. It’s just not that linear. It’s a massing thing, then looking for those opportunities in everything we do.

AC: Why can’t we just give tax breaks to musicians and venue owners?

SA: Usually it’s because the state has taken away, from our city, the tools that other cities have to do that kind of stuff. We can’t do inclusionary zoning, while cities all over the country are doing that to drive affordability. A lot of cities have income taxes and give people breaks. Our state sets our sales tax and we can’t change that. Same with property taxes. We can’t target breaks in ways other cities do.

That said, there are things we can do. We just need to be creative. One thing we’re trying to do that operates outside government and doesn’t require any subsidization will be to actually preserve music venues. It’s the “strike fund.” I want to go to financial institutions who have a billion-dollar bank account and say, “You’re investing that somewhere. I’m going to give you different ways to invest that’s going to give you a return. May not be as high as some other options, but it’s high enough and it’s really safe.”

I’ll pull in money managers or entrepreneurs and say, “I need for you to create a fund.” Then we’ll go get properties that are income-producing – music venues – and buy them at less than market price and preserve them by trusts.

AC: Do you want your mayoral legacy to be tied to music?

SA: Yes. To me, music was one of the reasons I stayed in Austin. I had no intention, when I got here in ’78, of staying. When you grow up on the East Coast, that’s where the world is. I mean, Texas? My God, it was the South! Who would want to live there? Then I found out that I like country music. I couldn’t even say that back in the streets where I grew up.

Not only is music so related to who we are in Austin, but also the issues facing music are tied to base issues in this community. How do you keep this community affordable? How do you grow and still preserve what’s special?

AC: What’s your message to people who want to know where we go from here after the city’s recommendations?

SA: I want people to understand that what’s happened in the last four months has been really good. We’ve developed a coalition. We have focus in terms of resolution and Council in ways we’ve never had before. We have a music department that’s given the license to think on a fundamental level about what needs to happen. And we have a report, which is great, but it’s not the finished product.

My concern is, in classic Austin fashion, when something’s not perfect it’s going to be beaten up so fast that we lose all momentum. I’ve watched Austin do that for 38 years. When confronted with two choices, Austin will find why each isn’t perfect and choose to do nothing.

The report gave us a sled to ride on. What I’m saying to people is push the sled, don’t start pulling. Don’t stop the sled to check if it’s perfect. I can tell you it’s not. It has holes. It doesn’t speak to the verticals. It doesn’t speak to exporting who we are. It doesn’t have a path to save venues. We’ll add more to the sled as we go, but we can’t lose this momentum. Push the sled and get someone to join you.

AC: Should we be calling our City Council representatives?

SA: That’d be great. Keep it at the top of their minds and let them know it’s important to the community. Council members ought to be hearing this slow drumbeat that sounds like something’s about to happen with music, building the expectation that they’re going to deliver something! That’s the drumbeat we need at this point.

Who benefits from upping the homestead exemption?

To:               Interested Parties
From:         Jason Stanford, Office of the Mayor
Date:           July 8, 2016
Re:               Whom we helped by upping the homestead exemption

 

In June, the City Council approved on third reading Ordinance No. 20150604-101, increasing the homestead exemption by 2% to 8%. The projected total savings to Austin homeowners is $3.8 million. Raising the homestead exemption by 2% will save the owner of a $250,000 an extra $22.95 a year.

Questions have been raised, however, about who benefits most from cutting the taxes on Austin homeowners. This memo attempts to address those questions. Continue reading

Austin to share in $4 million TechHire DOL grant

On Sunday, the U.S. Dept. of Labor announced over $150 million in TechHire grants, including $4 million for the Goodwill Careers in Technology (CiT) program in Austin, Texas, Columbus, Ohio, and Roanoke, Virginia.

“We’re good at creating tech jobs in Austin, and this TechHire grant will help Austin become better at getting our own people ready to take them,” said Mayor Adler. “Austin is an innovative city. We lead Texas in patents, startup, and venture capital. We need to be just as innovative in helping our residents take advantage of the opportunity and prosperity all around them or we will never get our arms around the affordability crisis, and this TechHire grant is going to help us do just that.”  Continue reading