Cost of growth

Cost of Growth in Central Texas

Lorri Michel puts Austin City Council on notice about unfair property tax breaks for mansions.

Lorri Michel, Austin appraisal attorney, speaks out for Austin’s middle and low income homeowners urging a halt on bogus historic property tax giveaways to Austin’s wealthiest.

Brian Rodgers testifies at City Council on historic property giveaways to Austin’s wealthiest

Brian Rodgers whistle blows on Austin’s historic property giveaways to Austin’s wealthiest.

Activist Austin Attorney Ann del Llano tells City Council about Austin’s police history

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Activist Austin Attorney, Ann del Llano, gives a tough love history lesson on Austin’s police.

CAMPO’s No-Growth Agenda

The future of Austin – 40% roadway congestion after spending $27 billion.

KXAN coverage

Monday night, in a stunning acceptance of a wholesale drop in Austin’s quality of life and economic vitality, the CAMPO transportation board, comprised of local elected officials, voted 17-2 to prolong a pretend transportation solution which strangles the region’s mobility.

CAMPO accomplished its perverted NO GROWTH plan in the same grotesque way a tumor kills its host – by choking off the organs and causing them to fail. Planning to fail.  Planning for a future that is worse than today and striving to get there.  Driving the region into a brick wall of congestion.

This multi-modal wet dream of homebuilders, road builders, land speculators and meddlers has no reliable funding.  The citizens in the region have no clue what their elected leaders settled for and what’s in store for them.

For comic relief, we give you this ridiculously funny plan by TxDOT to sue 150,000 individuals for non-payment of tolls. Thanks to attorney Bill Gammon who has been fighting the idiot tollers for years now, you will enjoy this:  3 minute KXAN report.

And, here’s what ChangeAustin’s Brian Rodgers told the board:

“People are no longer angry, they’re scared because their property taxes are climbing beyond their capacity to pay them, cutting into the bone of their daily finances.  We cannot ask them to carry the burden of building more roads without shared sacrifice…”  Read the rest below.

ANNOUNCEMENT!

Property Tax Appraisal Protest Mock Hearing
Carver Library, 1161 Angelina, Austin
Thursday, June 17th, 6:30 pm
Reserve a free seat here.

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Action Request-Do this before Monday 6 pm!

Those transportation planners at CAMPO have stepped in it again!

Now they want to bring 40,000 more cars on to MoPAC with another toll road (SH45 in southwest Austin) over the Edwards Aquifer!  Why?  Because big boy developers and land speculators want their roads paid for by…guess who…you and me.  We can pay the tolls and still sit in traffic!

You can stop this madness.  Just do this please before 6 pm next Monday when CAMPO will vote on the 2035 plan.

Email or call (or do both!):

Travis County Judge Sam Biscoe – 854-9555 – Sam.Biscoe@co.travis.tx.us
Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell – 974-2250 –
lee.leffingwell@ci.austin.tx.us
Georgetown Mayor George Garver – 930-3651 –
mayor@georgetowntx.org
Pflugerville Mayor Jeff Coleman – 251-5331 –
mayor@cityofpflugerville.com
Bastrop County Commissioner Clara Beckett – 581-4000 –
clara.beckett@co.bastrop.tx.us
What to say:

Dear Mayors Leffingwell, Garver and Coleman, Judge Biscoe, and Commissioner Beckett:

I am counting on you to put some common sense into transportation planning in our region.  That means voting yes to eliminate SH45 (the southwest toll road) from the CAMPO 2035 plan.

Then say whatever else you want to but keep it clean!

If you want to know what community activist wonks have to say about these complex issues, go here:

Roger Baker in Ken Martin’s new local publication The Austin Bulldog.

Brian Rodgers’ presentation to the Real Estate Council of Austin.

Join us at the CAMPO Meeting on Monday 6 pm.

Free Workshops on Tax Appraisal Protest

[ May 1, 2010; 10:00 am to 11:00 am. ] Flyer for May 1 Tax Protest WorkshopView the slides from this workshop.

Last year, we told you about the big developers who are getting huge property tax under-valuations for buildings like the Austonian.  Did ya hear about the one where Austin millionaires are getting huge property tax exemptions on their “historic” homes by the City of Austin?!

This workshop is for the many middle and low-income Austinites who will receive OVER valuations from the Travis County Appraisal District this year.  Reserve your seat now!  And send us some dough to advertise it!

Download the printable flyer and spread the word: FlierMay1TaxWorkshop-1

How to Protest Your Property Tax Appraisal

Saturday, May 1st, 10:00 – 12:00 pm* (map here)
Huston-Tillotson University
Dickey Lawless Auditorium
7th & Chicon

Note:  The date of this event has changed because your won’t see your appraisal notice until about April 25.  If you think you have been appraised for more than your home is worth, this workshop is for YOU!

If you missed this workshop and wish to attend another, see the dates of more workshops (below), or send a message to us at Contact@ChangeAustin.org or call us!

View the slides from this workshop.

Click here to donate!

Homeowners & Renters Unite!

We have taken somewhat of a break but are now fully back in the saddle getting organized for forums starting on Saturday, April 17th through the end of May, assisting homeowners on protesting their property taxes. (For details coming soon, please check back here and/or sign up to get our emails on right hand side of this page.)

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The Real News on Water Treatment Plant #4: From the Comical to the Real Estatesman

When big news stories broke in the good old days, Austin citizens relied on their one daily paper to get the details.  Along came the Austin Chronicle as the new boss, the progressive alternative to challenge the old boss American-Statesman; a rivalry good for coverage of community issues.  But a while back, the new boss Austin Chronicle (despite the good sensibilities of its publisher Nick Barbaro) decided to be damn nearly the same as the old boss Austin American-Statesman, and kowtow to the real estate growth lobby.  Which maybe explains why some people call them the “Comical” and the “Real Estatesman”. 

This issue will be coming back in May 2010 for a vote of the Austin City Council.  So far, they are split 4 in favor (Leffingwell, Martinez, Cole and Shade) and 3 against (Spelman, Riley and Morrison). 

Get the story the Statesman and Chronicle failed to report, watch the debate yourself and YOU decide a major decision on Austin’s critical future on water policy!

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Rope a Dope Developers!

If the Growth Lobby has its way, our metro population will double in just 16 years — and ordinary citizens will be paying the costs.  4 out of 7 City Council members want to forge ahead with Water Treatment Plant #4, an $850  million project planned during one of the worst droughts and economic downturns this century!

How can we beat the formidable Growth Lobby?  Remember Ali’s ‘Rope a Dope’ tactic used to beat George Forman?  We just wear ‘em down till the last knock out punch.

Read what the Mayor cut off last Thursday on WTP4 here from CostofGrowth.com.

Save the Date:  Good Ol’ Tax Protest, Thursday, Aug. 27, 6 pm outside City Hall — at the last City Budget Hearing as the Council deliberates on raising the property tax rate and fee hikes for water, waste water, trash and more!

Download the flier on our front page and share it!

Note:  Would your organization like to endorse this event?  Contact us right away!

Contact us to volunteer and/or donate to our efforts & check our calendar for meetings.

PS For as little as $5/month you can help sustain our organizing.  Thank you Austin!

Emancipating Pets, Patty Hearst and the Austin City Council

With hope and optimism ChangeAustin.org welcomes the newly sworn in Austin City Council. The past City Council, led by outgoing Mayor Will Wynn, appeared to suffer from a Patty Hearst syndrome (better known as Stockholm Syndrome). As captives of the real estate industry, their sympathy and identity with their captors began last year to catch the attention of voters from across Austin’s political spectrum when 129,209 of them voted for Prop 2 (to halt the Domain mall subsidy and others like it). Will the new Council, as it searches for $30 million in cuts to the City budget to fill the budget gap, snap out of it? We, at ChangeAustin.org, the eternal (albeit critical) optimists, sincerely hope so.

Did you attend any of the recent City budget “charettes”? If not, the City added an additional charette this coming Tuesday, 6:30 to 8:30 pm at the eastside’s Givens Recreation Center, at 3811 E. 12th St. We hope to see you there. Charette is just a fancy name for meetings in which the citizens attending are given a list of potential budget cuts selected by the City from which to discuss our support or opposition. The problem isn’t so much the process, but the pre-selected and sanitized list the participants are given. Decisions involving the real allocation of resources are well outside the margins of debate.

The list of budget cuts up for consideration includes things like libraries, youth programs, Emancipet’s great animal neutering program (which actually saves the City money), neighborhood parks, the Community Action Network which deals with a myriad of concerns making up Austin’s “safety net” programs and nearly a thousand more items in the budget for the “little people”. But it was the items not on the list that told the real story. The one that seems to be a favorite “missing in action” is the now notorious Domain shopping mall subsidy (part of Will Wynn’s “legacy), a nice chunk of change amounting to about $2 million this year!*

Citizens must get ready for a whole litany of smaller cuts unless this new Council breaks the Patty Hearst-like spell and serves Austinites like true populists. Just last week the outgoing Council passed, by 6 to 1 (with Morrison all by her lonesome) a low income housing deal that was a rich deal for the developer because it gave him a 100% property tax break and $3 million in cash. Even low income housing advocates were holding their nose on this one.

For years, Austin citizens and activists have been asking for more accountability at City Hall. When we didn’t get it, we petitioned for a vote. We won some and lost many, but we keep fighting on, sometimes wondering if we need our heads examined.

Is it possible that the fighting will soon come to a halt? While we caution you not to start singing Kum Ba Yah yet, we’re beginning to wonder. A piece we wrote two weeks ago entitled, “Charette or Charade” about the city’s citizen’s budget meetings, prompted the following response:

“Wait till the $2.3 billion Biomass plant deal hits – you ain’t seen nuttin’ yet!” Well neither have you seen “nuttin’ yet” from ordinary citizens who are clamoring for fairness. For example, there are 95,000 property tax challenges going on in Travis County right now!

Will a perfect storm arrive in Austin where citizens, not just activists, are ready to put their foot down? Maybe we won’t need to deprogram the City Council in memory of Patty Hearst, though it was probably jail time that snapped her out of it. Seriously, we’re here to help.

Contrary to what the recently departed Mayor Will Wynn said in those TV ads paid for by Simon Malls last year, the Domain deal was and still is a completely voluntary gift by the City to the developer.

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