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Brown, Watson sign wildfire disaster declarations

From Jo Clifton:

Travis County Judge Andy Brown and Mayor Kirk Watson held a joint news conference Monday to announce that each had signed disaster declarations related to wildfire risk.

“On Friday I signed a disaster declaration,” Brown said. “It will allow Travis County to proactively access resources, streamline emergency coordination (and) reinforce wildfire prevention efforts.”

According to Watson, the preemptive disaster declaration also allows public safety workers to start tracking expenses and facilitates reimbursement from the federal or state government if a wildfire occurs.

Planning Commission recommends multifamily upzoning in Hancock

From Miles Wall:

A small parcel in the Hancock neighborhood may see more intense zoning in the future after winning an endorsement from the Planning Commission during their September 23 meeting.

Planning staff recommended the zoning change with the addition of a conditional overlay. That overlay would limit the site to a maximum of six units regardless of what would be allowed by the MF-3 zoning.

Victoria Haase, who spoke in favor of the rezoning as an agent of the applicant, noted that the total unit density allowable on the site under the requested rezoning would not be very different in practice from what would be possible currently with single-family zoning under the city’s HOME Initiative.

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A plan to help businesses weather downtown construction boom

The Downtown Commission on Wednesday reviewed Downtown Austin Alliance’s new construction-mitigation plan, intended to help businesses manage years of overlapping public works and private development projects expected to reshape the city center.

The plan was created to cover a 15-year schedule of infrastructure projects that includes the Interstate 35 expansion, Austin Convention Center rebuild, Congress Avenue redesign and Project Connect investments, with more than 40 projects likely to overlap. Those efforts together could add 9,000 housing units and at least 6 million square feet of new office space downtown. Research by consultant J.C. Williams Group identified three main risks: traffic congestion, loss of business access and poor communication.

To address those concerns, DAA is creating a construction task force bringing together the Texas Department of Transportation, the city’s Transportation and Public Works Department, Austin Water and other utilities to coordinate closures and project timing. A business-advisory group will provide feedback from property owners and operators, while new public dashboards will track corridor-level data such as foot traffic and sales activity.

DAA also plans to expand small-business assistance through signage, marketing and “survival toolkit” resources including financial couaching to help secure stabilization grants and other funding, modeled after programs used in Denver and Seattle.

Commissioners noted that the forthcoming Downtown Austin Strategic Initiative office, which was authorized earlier this year and is being organized under the City Manager, could become the city’s central clearinghouse for construction planning and communication. They said DAA’s on-the-ground outreach and data collection should inform the new office’s broader coordination goals, framing the next decade of construction as a logistical challenge and as a measure of the region’s long-term economic and cultural resilience.

— Chad Swiatecki

An update on cultural programming and funding

Also at Wednesday’s Downtown Commission meeting, the Downtown Austin Alliance gave an update on its programs offering artists, musicians and other creatives opportunities to work and perform in downtown spaces. DAA staff said its efforts are designed to support the city’s cultural energy in the face of disruptions from redevelopment and ongoing high living costs in the city center.

Through public art and space-activation projects, the alliance has produced more than 50 permanent and temporary installations and converted three vacant properties into storefront studios and pop-up venues. Since launching in 2023, those sites have hosted over 7,000 participants in residencies, markets and performances, with discounted short-term leases and stipends for minority-owned and small businesses.

The DAA also highlighted Vibe Downtown, a recent pilot that awarded $30,000 in grants to local producers to convert two Sixth Street sites into temporary arts venues. The event drew about 800 attendees and generated roughly 250,000 online impressions.

The creative sector initiatives are expected to continue over the next year, with new calls this winter for artist residencies and storefront activations through the Downtown Austin Space Activation program, alongside additional public-art installations under its Writing on the Walls series. The Vibe Downtown event is expected to return in 2026 with more grant funding for cultural producers, and the Musicians Activating Spaces program will continue pairing local performers with pop-up venues and public plazas to keep live music visible downtown amid ongoing redevelopment.

— Chad Swiatecki

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ELSEWHERE IN THE NEWS

With early voting underway, KUT takes a good, hard look at the anti-Prop Q website that was at the center of ethics allegations.

The Texas Observer weighs in with Jack Craver’s take on Prop Q.

Starting next year, Austin will host a PGA Tour event.

And the Austin Business Journal has information about the major upcoming redevelopment of the Town Lake YMCA ($$)

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