Category Archives: Public Safety

Public Safety refers to criminal justice, code enforcement, disaster preparedness, fire, police, emergency medical services, municipal court, judicial appointments, and related matters.

“Great Cities Do Big Things” – State of Our City Feb. 16, 2016 Austin, Texas

“Great cities do big things not because they are great. Cities become great because they do big things.”

Thank you, President Fenves. I am grateful for your leadership at the University of Texas and for our growing working relationship and even friendship.

And with the conversations that need to be happening between UT and the City on issues like the development of the Innovation Zone around our new medical school, a replacement arena for the Drum, the future of the MUNY golf course site, as well as expanding opportunities for closer connection between Austin and the incredible intellectual resources of your faculty, there’s a lot for you and me — and the community — to be talking about.

And by the way, I’m grateful to you for skipping the West Virginia game tonight. You get pretty good seats, so I know what kind of sacrifice this is.

President Fenves recounted the story of the Austin Dam. I love that story, because as the Mayor of Austin I’m often asked what the secret sauce is that makes us a magical city and a center for innovation and creativity. Most every other city wishes it could replicate our success. When I attended the climate change talks in Paris, the 100 Resilient Cities meeting in London, the Almedalen Political Rhetoric Festival in Norway, and the traffic control center in Dublin, Ireland, and people found out that I was the Mayor they’d get a big smile on their face and tell me how much they love Austin.

Cities from all over our country and the rest of the world send entire delegations here to troop through our offices in hopes of finding the magic formula written on a white board somewhere.  These leaders from other cities ask me what makes Austin so special. I tell them about Barton Springs and how our commitment to our environment became perhaps our most important asset. I tell them about Willie Nelson and our live music, how by embracing diverse cultures we established an inclusive community where creativity thrives, about a community where it is okay to fail so long as you learn and grow. And I tell them about Michael Dell reinventing the assembly line in his dorm room and how coming up with radical new ideas here doesn’t make you an outcast — it can make you rich and famous.

And then I tell them about the Austin Dam, and how when the dam burst we were set on a path that turned us into a boomtown of the Information Age. The lesson, I tell these visitors from other cities is clear. They need to leave Austin, return to their hometowns, and destroy all their dams and bridges, too.

But some cities just aren’t willing to do the Big Things.

Continue reading after the break.

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Mayor & City Council Kick-Off “Year of Mobility” with Hundreds of Transportation Improvements Citywide

Today the Mayor and City Council kicked off the “Year of Mobility” by announcing that the City and regional partners are coordinating efforts to make progress on hundreds of transportation projects across the city that will ease congestion, make traffic safer, and plan for the future. Announced today are a total of 109 projects not including regular street maintenance, the mobility improvements paid for out of CapMetro funding to be approved today, and other regular projects such as filling potholes, new striping on roads, and maintaining landscaping.

“The City of Austin and our partners in the region are serious about making progress every day on the transportation challenges we all face. Over the next year, you will see progress that moves us closer to our goal of a safe and effective transportation system, where people have choices about how they get around the city,” said Ann Kitchen, Chair of the Council Mobility Committee.

“We’ve got so many shovel-ready projects lined up that we’re going to run out of shovels. We’re going to cut so many ribbons that we’re going to need to find a place to sharpen our giant pair of scissors. It’s getting harder for people to get to work, so people expect us to get to work, and that’s what we’re doing,” said Mayor Steve Adler.

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Clip: Council must drop mandates, adopt incentives for Lyft and Uber rules

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Mark Nathan delivers petitions to city clerk’s office on Jan. 17.

In the standoff between the city of Austin and ride-hailing companies Lyft and Uber, the momentum clearly has shifted to those companies because of the City Council’s refusal to compromise — but also because Lyft and Uber so far are winning the messaging war.

They have persuaded much of the public — including those who hail rides by smartphones and those who drive for the companies (but please don’t call them employees) — that the City Council is engaged in regulating them out of business. (Full story Austin-American Statesman)

Release: Free fingerprinting for Transportation Network Company drivers available at City Council meeting

Prototypes of the Thumbs Up! Austin validation stations will be set up in the City Hall lobby for demonstration purposes tomorrow during the City Council meeting.  Drivers and passengers alike are invited to stop by and give feedback on the experience overall. Eventually Thumbs Up! could be available throughout the city in local grocery stores, fire stations, and libraries.

At the same time, the City of Austin via the Department of Public Safety (DPS) will provide Transportation Network Company (TNC) drivers the opportunity to get their fingerprints taken, and a criminal background check run. This service will be provided free-of-charge to everyone and is in no way mandatory. Data from these checks will be eligible for the Thumbs Up! Program when it goes live. Continue reading

BREAKING: Good News On Rideshare In Austin

thumbsup_12foot_banner01I want Uber, Lyft, GetMe and other rideshare companies to stay in Austin, and I want people who feel safer with fingerprinted drivers to have a widely available, meaningful choice.

If you share this goal, I’ve got good news for you as reported in Ben Wear’s article in the Statesman. We now have almost every point of view at the table working together to see if we can craft a new and innovative way forward.  I am working with some of my Council colleagues, organizations such as SafePlace, rideshare companies Uber, Lyft and GetMe, creative minds in the start-up community such as those from Capital Factory, and city transportation staff, to see if we can create a “non-mandatory” option that will better enable us to reach the desired number of fingerprinted drivers.

Austin is best served with widely available rideshare options in which passengers have a meaningful choice of selecting a fingerprinted driver. Neither the status quo, which does not provide this choice, nor a mandatory fingerprinting ordinance is the best way to achieve this goal.

Some in our community wish to mandate all thumbsup_standupbanners_with_man01drivers obtain fingerprint background checks even though this would mean that the major rideshare companies leave Austin. However, our public-safety officials tell us rideshare companies make us safer by significantly reducing drunk driving.

Some in our community oppose mandating fingerprinting.  However, our public safety officials also tell us that fingerprinting improves safety because it establishes the driver is the person background checked and it aids in post-incident investigations.

Part of the reason we’re trapped in this either/or box is that we’re not considering the larger issue of how government should best advance its interests in a changing economy.

Government has a legitimate interest in public safety that cannot be left up to market forces. But as businesses adapt to survive a changing world, the way that government deals with those businesses must evolve and change as well.

A hundred years ago, government responded to the Industrial Revolution by creating new kinds of regulations to protect people and the environment in ways that were not previously necessary. Today, a new sharing economy is developing, in which many of Austin’s residents participate, that is giving rise to new kinds of safety issues as thumbsup_final01strangers engage with each other in an increasing number of direct interactions. And this is happening not just in rideshare platforms but in other platforms as well, such as AirBnb and E-Harmony.

The old ways of regulating may not be those that best apply to the new world. In this light, the way government should engage with Uber, Lyft, and GetMe may have as much in common with AirBnb as it does with Yellow Cab.

Austin should be the birthplace for a new way for government to meet its responsibilities in this new sharing economy. Austin is a great city filled with creative people. We must develop new ways that are as creative and innovative as are the emerging platforms.

I am working with some of my Council colleagues to draft a new ordinance that provides incentives — but not a mandate — for drivers to verify their identities by undergoing fingerprint background checks. It builds on the incentive elements of the December ordinance to increase the number of rideshare drivers who voluntarily fingerprint background checks to a level that provides a meaningful choice.

We could do something like E-Bay when it gives a trusted vendor a PowerSeller badge. But we could go further and create a “badge” certified by an independent, secure, third party that would verify a person had voluntarily passed a fingerprint check.  That badge could be the first cross-platform badge in the world to begin to voluntarily appear in profiles that we all set up. An Austin “Thumbs Up” badge could appear for drivers, passengers and all participants in peer-to-peer apps.

And then, to really power the badge to meet our goal, we would provide incentives. Maybe we only allow drivers with the Thumb’s Up badge to pick up close to the convention center during SXSW or at the airport?  What if choosing a driver with a “Thumbs Up” badge resulted in a less expensive fare for a passenger (with no decrease in the driver’s share)?  With these kinds of incentives, more drivers would voluntarily get fingerprinted and therefore allow passengers there own choice between finger printed and non-fingerprinted drivers.

This is a more appropriate way for government to further its legitimate interests in this new sharing economy.  And thinking this way could be our community’s best opportunity to give passengers a meaningful choice of fingerprinted rideshare drivers.  That’s the goal.  And we’ll get there in an innovative way.