City of Austin
Profile: Doug Greco for mayor
Court halts $354 million development subsidy
Austin City Manager: Dallas discard vs Austin retread
City Council Tackles Charter Recommendations
Redistricting Expert, Charter Revision Committee Members,
and Grass-roots Group Critical of Task Force Plan
By Ken Martin
© The Austin Bulldog
Posted Thursday, April 26, 2012, 9:30 pm
Although the City Council could wait until August to set the ballot for the City Charter revisions to be put before voters in November, action is already moving forward.
Seven items were on the April 26 council meeting agenda that dealt with recommendations offered by the 2012 Charter Revision Committee. Four were passed, two were postponed, and one was withdrawn in the face of strong opposition and advice from outside counsel.
Background Investigation: Brigid Shea
Here's What the Public Records Say About
the Former Council Member Running for Mayor
by Rebecca LaFlureMa
© The Austin Bulldog 2012
Posted Tuesday, April 10, 2012 10:10am
After a nearly 16-year hiatus from public office, environmentalist and former Council Member Brigid Shea is challenging incumbent Mayor Lee Leffingwell for the city’s top spot on election day May 12.
Known largely for her public feuds with high-power developers in the early ’90s, Shea said she hopes to bring a fresh leadership approach to City Hall.
“There’s nothing personal in this,” Shea said. “I’ve known Lee Leffingwell a long time. We’ve worked on projects together. But City Hall needs a new direction.”
Background Investigation: Bill Spelman
Here’s What the Public Records Say About
the Council Member Running for Re-election
by Rebecca LaFlure
© The Austin Bulldog 2012
Posted Wednesday, March 28, 2012 1:35pm
Campaign season is in full swing for candidates vying for a seat on the Austin City Council, and Council Member Bill Spelman faces more opposition than any of his fellow incumbents.
Six citizens—all first-time City Council candidates—have signed up to challenge Spelman for Place 5, a seat the University of Texas at Austin professor has held since June 2009.
As the May 12 election approaches, The Austin Bulldog went to work researching Spelman’s personal and political background in an effort to educate Austin residents about their City Council candidates. We used an organized plan to find, copy, and publish every public record we found, and compiled news articles from The Austin Bulldog and other publications.
We invite readers to study the documents and let us know if there are any important details we overlooked, or areas that warrant further investigation.
Campaign donations exceed $31,000
Shea Wants More Contribution Limits, Disclosures
Those Affected Say Shea’s Proposals Would
Further Undermine Candidates’ Campaigns
by Ken Martin
© The Austin Bulldog
Posted Tuesday, March 20, 2012 8:22pm
Former City Council member and current mayoral candidate Brigid Shea says she wants more limits on—and more disclosure of—contributions made to City Council incumbents and challengers.
At a press conference at City Hall this morning she announced proposals that are far tougher than reforms the Charter Revision Committee has recommended for the City Council to put on the November ballot, including restrictions on bundled campaign contributions.
Bundlers are individuals who solicit and obtain contributions of $200 or more from five or more individuals. The reporting of bundlers’ names in contribution reports is already required by City Code Section 2-2-22.
A chart thatserved as a backdrop for the press conference was titled “Bundling Influence at City Hall.” The chart displayed the names of 13 individuals who bundleda total of $103,900 incontributions detailed in the incumbents’ January 2012 campaign finance reports. Not all of the bundlers listed are currently registered city lobbyists.
Why is Apple Getting Tax Incentives?
Austin Won Apple Without Competition
‘The Arizona Republic’ Reported
by Ken Martin
© The Austin Bulldog 2012
The Arizona Republic, that state’s largest newspaper, yesterday reported that Phoenix was never in the running to attract the Apple Inc. facility for which Texas has committed tax incentives, and both Austin and Travis County are considering doing likewise.
Governor Rick Perry is offering Apple $21 million in incentives over 10 years and the City of Austin is considering sweetening the deal with $8.6 million, according to the Austin American-Statesman. Travis County is also considering incentives.
Those incentives were based on the premise that Apple was considering Phoenix and Austin.
However, The Arizona Republic’s story published yesterday reported Phoenix “never had a chance” because the proposed site was on state land and “state trust land did not excite them” (Apple), so there was no Phoenix site reasonably in contention.”