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More posts are in the hopper...

I'm just waiting to see how things play out in the press on these amendments. I have the feeling that the closer we get to the election, the more we'll start to see the discussion ramp up on both sides. I currently have 2 more posts completed and at least 3 in some form of completion but I may or may not publish them. So I guess I'm saying that for the 4 of you out there that are looking for another post (Mom, I know you're one of them!), we'll see how things play out.

BTW, I'm also working on a DailyKos diary detailing this issue. I'll post a link here once I get it completed...
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Informational

Further thoughts on the new ballot language for Prop 1...

The Austin City Council has released the final ballot language for the upcoming propositions including the citizen-initiated Prop 1 and 2. For the first time in Texas history, a municipal council was directed by a court to rewrite ballot language as it was found that the language did not "present a fair measure of the proposed measures [and] chief features" and gave the City Council a deadline to change the language. Since I covered the last, and now found illegal, ballot language, I'll do the same for this final version. But first, the standard disclaimer:

Although I currently work for the City of Austin, I am in no way representing or advocating *any* official position of the City in this matter. I am writing this as a concerned citizen of Austin who would like to see our government as transparent and efficient as possible and I am using information that is publicly available elsewhere to make my points.

At this time, I am neither for nor against the proposed Charter amendment. My focus with this post is to try and bring a non-biased look at the proposed amendment and the ramifications it would bring if enacted. This opinion is put forward in the hopes it will facilitate discussion and will bring other concerned citizens into the issue. So please, do not read anything into this post that is not explicitly stated.

The City Council's final language appears thusly:

Proposition 1:
Shall the City Charter be amended:
  1. to provide online access to public information, which for the most part is already available, by creating an online electronic data system for most City communications and documents at taxpayer expense;
  2. to require that private citizens' emails to public officials be placed on the City website in "real time," including emails or electronic communications between private citizens and public officials in all City departments, and limit the ability of citizens to keep private the details of these communications, unless legal exceptions apply;
  3. to require that the heads of all City departments, all city manager's staff and all city council members and their staff post online in "real time" information about meetings and phone calls with private citizens; and
  4. to prohibit the city from exercising state law protection for information that could expose the City and taxpayers to greater financial and legal liability and risk?

So let's again breakdown each section.

  1. to provide online access to public information, which for the most part is already available, by creating an online electronic data system for most City communications and documents at taxpayer expense;

This is more representative than the last ballot language which included sections on certain departments possibly releasing private information (Library, Health clinics, Police Department, etc) which Proposition 1 did not call for. "For the most part," this statement is accurate and correct but it does miss a crucial goal of the amendment: efficient access to public information. While it's true that most of this information is available, the Open Records request mechanisms employed by the different departments throughout the city are not efficient. The request can take as much as 10 days before the requestor even knows if the information can be retrieved. The amendment seeks to clarify and accelerate the public's access to this public information by putting online as much public information as possible (and, most importantly, where approved by City Council) to let the public find what it needs without using valuable employee time first. As mentioned elsewhere, APD alone will have to fill 2500+ Open Records requests this year and countless hours of employee time will be used in fulfilling those requests. The amendment's core argument is that it is more efficient for the public to search these records first and then be able to put in specific requests for particular information than the current system.

  1. to require that private citizens' emails to public officials be placed on the City website in "real time," including emails or electronic communications between private citizens and public officials in all City departments, and limit the ability of citizens to keep private the details of these communications, unless legal exceptions apply;

This statement is still misleading. First, the premise that email will be placed on the City website in "real time" is not required by the amendment. The ballot language premise is a very broad interpretation of the clause "expeditiously as possible and to the greatest extent practical" and does not mention to the voters the circumstances that would have had to happen for that situation to become realistic. The City Council is the determining body on the practicalness of any measure that is not explicitly stated within the amendment so this situation would have to be:
  1. Sponsored by some department, citizen's initiative, etc., to be placed on the Council's agenda.
  2. At that meeting, Council would have to deem that situation practical.
  3. If found practical, Council would have to draw up ordinances and resolutions to meet and enforce the requirements of the situation.
  4. Council would have to pass the ordinances and resolutions.
So, if "real time" posting of email on the City's website ever does happen, you can lay the blame squarely on the City Council as they would have been the ones who found the situation to be for the public's benefit. Just for argument's sake, other scenarios that could have been used by the Council on the ballot that would have been just as misleading could be the amendment calls for all private citizen's Social Security numbers to be placed on the City website in "real time," or that all victim's records at APD will be placed online in "real time" (I've actually heard people mention that one). The amendment simply does not call for these scenarios nor would the amendment supercede any current state or federal laws in place to do so.

Council Member Brewster McCracken has stated that the email issue had been "[...] litigated and you all lost. ... [T]his language has been upheld as being accurate." At the time, he was talking to the amendment supporters in the Council chambers who rewarded this false statement with an appropriate response (boos and catcalls). As explained in this post, from the judge's own ruling, speaking specifically about the email issue, he stated "I don’t know that there are any city departments that would be excluded but certainly private citizens emails to any public official because there are exceptions that apply." As mentioned by myself and others, and which is validated by the state judge, private citizen's email has exemptions and, for various reasons, may not be put online. The City Council and their supporters *really* need to drop this red herring...

I'm still having a hard time finding the section that the Council is referring to when talking about "limit[ing] the ability of citizens to keep private the details of these communications,". There is nothing in the amendment that limits the citizen's right to privacy when dealing with their government. There is language that makes it harder for the City Council, City Managers, Division heads and their staff to keep their calendars and non-public meetings about City business with others secret. There is language that makes it harder if you are seeking economic benefits from the City to keep those negotiations secret. There is further language that makes it harder to keep the misconduct of police officers secret. But if you are a private citizen, all of the federal, state and local privacy laws on the books are not superceded by this amendment and will remain so. I can't stress this enough.

Finally, I would like to give some credit where it's due. Council Member Jennifer Kim tried to add more descriptive language to the ballot on this point. Specifically, she tried to have the words "consistent with state and federal privacy protection laws" substituted for the phrase "unless legal exceptions apply." Council Member Kim, I commend your attempt and agree that your phrase is much closer to what the judge ruled in his decision and thank you for your attempt at clarification.

When I first read this clause in the original language, I withheld my personal comments through the litigation that followed in the hopes that the Council would change the language and drop this fallacious clause. I'll go out on a limb here... If Proposition 1 is defeated, it will be challenged in court and it will appear on a later ballot because of this clause. Council Members McCracken, Dunkerly, Leffingwell and Mayor Wynn, your steadfastness to this particular language will cost the city more future litigation, the costs associated with it and another dubious legal distinction for this City Council.

  1. to require that the heads of all City departments, all city manager's staff and all city council members and their staff post online in "real time" information about meetings and phone calls with private citizens; and
This is another misleading statement about what the amendment calls for. The relevant section from the amendment follows:
(B)OPEN ACCESS TO CITY CALENDARS
  1. For all matters involving City business, the following people must maintain calendars of all meetings and maintain logs of all telephone calls:
    1. City Councilmembers and their staff;
    2. City Manager and his or her staff;
    3. Assistant City Managers and their staff; and
    4. all department heads.
  2. These calendars and logs must contain the time, date, subject matter, and persons involved in all meetings and telephone calls involving City business. These calendars must be used to schedule and record all past and future meetings that occur after the implementation date of this section.
  3. Calendars and logs must be posted online in real time and be accessible to the public.
  4. “Meetings” includes all informal and formal meetings including but not limited to telephone conferences, videoconferences, happy hours, and luncheons.
  5. This provision must be implemented within six months of approval of this amendment.
I highlighted the relevant sections in that clause. If you are a private citizen and you are speaking to a public official through one of the listed means about City business, then, according to the amendment, that must be noted in the appropriate log. The federal government, proposed by none other than one of the most conservative members of Congress, Newt Gingrich, follows much the same system. It is a way the public can see who their elected officials are talking to and about what subjects. If you are going to call Mayor Wynn and tell him how great or not great he is, there is no need to record the call as that is not City business. Further, if a Council Member calls their doctor, that call is not subject to the documentation clause. Only City business is required to have the notation. Another branch on that limb... This clause will also be seen by a later court to be misrepresentative and misleading and will help to overturn a defeat of the proposition.

  1. to prohibit the city from exercising state law protection for information that could expose the City and taxpayers to greater financial and legal liability and risk?
This section must be referring to the requirement of the amendment that pertains to public information. Here is that section from the amendment.
SECTION 4: Public Information.

The term “public information” means information that is required to be produced under Texas Government Code § 552.021. Public information also includes the following categories that must be produced in response to a public information request:
  1. INFORMATION RELATING TO CIVIL LITIGATION. That the City is a party to litigation does not render information relating to that litigation less important; rather it often means the information is a matter of heightened public interest. Therefore, the City must not withhold information relating to civil litigation under Texas Government Code § 552.103, but it may withhold under other Public Information Act exceptions.
First, the amendment states that the City cannot withhold information under the following Texas Government Code section:
§ 552.103. EXCEPTION: LITIGATION OR SETTLEMENT NEGOTIATIONS INVOLVING THE STATE OR A POLITICAL SUBDIVISION.

  1. Information is excepted from the requirements of Section 552.021 if it is information relating to litigation of a civil or criminal nature to which the state or a political subdivision is or may be a party or to which an officer or employee of the state or a political subdivision, as a consequence of the person's office or employment, is or may be a party.
  2. For purposes of this section, the state or a political subdivision is considered to be a party to litigation of a criminal nature until the applicable statute of limitations has expired or until the defendant has exhausted all appellate and postconviction remedies in state and federal court.
  3. Information relating to litigation involving a governmental body or an officer or employee of a governmental body is excepted from disclosure under Subsection (a) only if the litigation is pending or reasonably anticipated on the date that the requestor applies to the officer for public information for access to or duplication of the information.

Added by Acts 1993, 73rd Leg., ch. 268, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1993. Amended by Acts 1999, 76th Leg., ch. 1319, § 6, eff. Sept. 1, 1999.

From this summary, under the “litigation exception,” a governmental body can withhold information about pending or reasonably anticipated civil or criminal litigation. This exception allows the government to hold back otherwise releasable public information because it feels there is or may be some sort of litigation that might include that information. This is an important concept to grasp. The information being sought by the public does not have to be actually involved in litigation; it just has to be deemed by someone in government that it might, at some point in the future, be part of a litigation claim. Further, the entity can keep this information secret until the statute of limitations expires for the whatever the phantom offense this information may be involved in.

As these examples show, this section of the Public Information Act has been abused by government entities in the past. Historically, this exemption in the Texas Public Information Act has been used in 2 ways:

  1. a shelter to keep clearly public documents secret that otherwise would not be exempt and
  2. as a delay tactic to allow further court motions and "grandfathering" claims to be filed on a dubious ordinance or law.
Proposition 1 still allows the broad and correct exemptions for attorney work product and attorney client privilege that will protect all information related to any litigation the City may be party to. The City does not need this exemption and it's prohibition will not expose the "City and taxpayers to greater financial and legal liability and risk." The City can still use the other numerous, broad and generous Public Information exemptions that protect Public Information through any litigation process. The prohibition in using this one exemption will make it easier for private citizens and watchdog groups to get the public information they already own even if it might cause embarassment or legal problems for some in the government.

So, in summary, I still feel the language on the ballot is misleading. I also feel that even though the City Council has tried their best to stack the deck against this initiative, it will still be a close vote come election day. I guess we'll see how things shake out.

Revision history:
  • 4/28/06 - I was mistaken that it was a federal court the city was sued in. It was actually the 345th Judicial District State court and I removed the reference to a federal court from the post.

Correcting perceptions of the Open Government Amendment

Posted by Weblogsky at Apr 25, 2006 11:04 AM
Voters in Austin will be voting on an Open Government Amendment to the City Charter next month. Opponents to the amendment (Proposition 1 on the ballot) have created a campaign against its passage based on contentions about the amendment that...

Prop This!

Posted by Metroblogging Austin at May 11, 2006 06:24 PM
Two days until the election that'll include a rubber stamp for our current mayor and other things that don't generally garner too much attention like school board and city council seats. There's also 7 city charter amendment propositions. 1, 2...

Visions of Austin

I've been meaning to comment on this story for quite some time now. Unfortunately, it's taken about 2 weeks to actually find the time to sit and jot the thoughts down. The story, which is split into 2 parts, reports that there is a Prop 2 "resurrection" movement afoot by SOS and the Council to take the best elements of the defeated Prop 2 and try to incorporate those as ordinances. Now, to me, this is certainly a fine idea and I think even the opponents of Props 1 & 2 agreed that something had to be done to protect the Barton Springs area. But, contained in the article is a quote from Council Member Lee Leffingwell (one of the most fervent anti-Proposition opponents) who disagrees with that idea:

"Not so fast, opponents say. On Saturday, 69 percent of voters cast ballots against the measure. So some neighborhood and business leaders say that those ideas have been roundly rejected and that more community input is needed to create a lasting solution to the vexing issue of development in the environmentally sensitive area.

Council Member Lee Leffingwell, who crafted the ordinance, plans to slow the process and allow for a larger community discussion to take place. Input from interested parties as well as the two city bodies now considering the ordinance will provide the springboard for conversation."
Now, some would argue (myself included) that the 69% figure used above is completely misleading. While the propositions may have been defeated by 69% that does not, by association mean that 69% of the people of Austin are against protecting the Barton Springs watershed. Most of the Prop 2 opponents had said that protection of Barton Springs is sorely needed but they just didn't agree with how the propositions sought that protection. The fact that 31% of the people of Austin still voted for the propositions considering the outright misleading ballot language is a strong indicator that the citizens of Austin really do value environmental protection over development in sensitive environmental areas.

So now we come to Council Member Leffingwell's statements. On the one hand:

"These charter amendments were written behind closed doors with no public input, no vetting and no opportunity for changes to correct errors and unintended consequences," says Lee Leffingwell, an Austin City Council member who is former chairman of the city's Environmental Board."
And now the other:

"Will you answer specifically which reforms you support and which you do not?

I AM STILL IN THE DISCUSSION STAGE WITH REGARD TO WRITING THE ORDINANCE, AND SO CAN'T COMMENT ON ANY ASPECT OF YOUR SCORECARD AT THIS TIME."
Pot, may I introduce Kettle... (More on that from a blog post by JS Hatcher).

Also, looking around in Council Member Leffingwell's campaign finance reports, one notices that the only PACs that gave Mr. Leffingwell money during that election cycle all had something to gain by defeat of the propositions (granted, these filings were in the 2005 election cycle and the Open Government/SOS amendment campaigns were ongoing but probably not a campaign issue at the time): Now, call me a cynic but a council member whose only PAC contributions came from developers, who is now quoted to want to slow down the environmental protections for Barton Springs and is currently doing what he accused his Proposition opponents of doing, does not instill the greatest confidence in me that he should be the one to lead the effort for protection of one of Austin's most sensitive environmental areas. Anyone else on the Council with a bit more cred care to step up?

Toby Futrell and the "Livable City"

The second part of the article is about a little spat between the City Manager's office and a report released by the City Auditors. In the report, the City Auditors:

"presented an audit that found that Austin does not have an "overarching vision for growth" or anything that ties together a patchwork of smaller city-planning efforts."
To which the City Manager took offense and disagreed with 3 of the 4 study authors by saying:

"In fact, the City has a vision and it is widely recognized. Our vision is for 'Austin to be the most livable city in the country.' "
May I introduce Exhibit A against City Manager Futrell's claim. In the studies cited in the post, Austin ranks as the third highest cost of living in the country. Higher than traditional high cost leaders San Francisco (10th), Boston (9th), Chicago (8th) and Atlanta (4th). Austin has the 4th highest average house cost in Texas (behind Ft. Worth, Dallas and San Antonio) and ranks number 12 nationally for the highest average cost of the typical home in America. These are not exactly the most livable conditions in the country.

Now, does city planning have anything to do with this rise in prices? As cited in this document, my guess is that the 29 now-under-construction-or-planned residential developments and super-condos being built on the shores of Town Lake, throughout downtown and in the ultra-swanky 2nd street area will only further inflate these cost of living indices (most have starting prices in the $200's for a 1/1). One can certainly make the argument that development should take place in downtown (I do support that) but of all the projects listed, from what I can tell, not one project is an affordable housing project.

So I have to agree with City Manager Futrell here. She does have an "overarching vision" of Austin. Under her's and the City Council's leadership, they seek to make Austin unaffordable for most residents. They seek to transform the prime green spaces and park lands of Austin into multi-story, multi-million dollar condominiums, raising the cost of living while attempting to replace the few East Austin parks with nasty infrastructure plants needed to clean the crap out of the water from these lofty, rich residents and the eventual Dallas-like sprawl of SH 130. They seek to keep their vision of Austin planted in future city council elections by raising campaign contributions, creating slush funds and erasing term limits. Yes, Ms. Futrell, you and your Council Member friends have a vision for Austin. Unfortunately, it seeks to replace what some of us have come to believe what Austin is about and replace it with a miserably cloned vision of Dallas.

I came from Dallas after 17 years of living there to Austin for the last 10, with most of that time in the Barton Hills area so I've seen the pace of change downtown under a close lens. I can't help but think that with the most developer friendly City Council in my memory along with the unification of former Council Members and Mayors against environmental protections for Barton Springs, it won't be long before we'll see the 580-ft towers being grandfathered in overlooking Barton Springs Pool.

Re:Visions of Austin

Posted by M1EK at May 31, 2006 08:00 AM

Sorry, but you're absolutely wrong on economics here. Even building nothing but luxury housing units will eventually relieve (some of) the pressure on moderately-priced housing stock, period.

The condo I own in Clarksville is one of those (currently appraised at 150K-ish; bought for 92K - both numbers are irrelevant; what matters is that the rent dropped from $1200 four years ago to $1050 the next year and hasn't made it back up to $1200 yet).

It doesn't matter that the NEW housing stock is 'unaffordable' - what matters is that it relieves (some of) the demand for other housing stock, which then gets lower in price. This is the only kind of trickle-down economics which actually works.

I keep saying (some of) because frankly the amount of downtown development so far has been pretty small. The new buildings being proposed (and especially the West Campus spurt) may finally be enough to make (some of) change to (most of), if demand for central housing doesn't further skyrocket due to other factors like oil prices.

Re:Visions of Austin

Posted by Pat at Jun 01, 2006 03:49 PM

"These are not exactly the most livable conditions in the country."

Depends on who is doing the living. I've been hearing this claim the entire 26 years I've lived in Austin, yet it hasn't stopped folks from relocating here ever since. Seems everyone says the city began costing too much soon after THEY moved here. Yes, it's getting expensive to live in one the most desirable places in the country. Live with it or move along. Progress marches on.

Re:Visions of Austin

Posted by paleo at Jun 02, 2006 10:05 AM

M1EK said,

<i>"New housing units, especially downtown, are never going to be cheap and hardly ever even affordable. That's the way the multi-family market works - properties generally get cheaper with age as newer, fancier, stuff gets built. (My condo in Clarksville, for instance, saw its rent drop a couple years ago and still hasn't recovered - partially due to the dramatic increase in supply of downtown housing taking pressure off the nearby midrange stock)."</i>

I agree with you here in general (but do disagree a bit below) but that does not invalidate the point I was making addressing Toby Futrell's claim that they are striving to make Austin "the most livable" in the country. One thing that needs to be mentioned is that "livability" is more than just property values. It's a summary, a perception or a snapshot of what the community is like for it's residents. I linked to multiple indicies that refuted Ms. Futrell's claim that their overarching vision is to make Austin "the most livable."

As for your partcular point, one way I look at it is with 20 buildings with 200 condos each (we'll work with a nice, even number) of the downtown developments going "luxury" (with properties starting at $200k and probably averaging over $300k), essentially, the Austin housing market is adding 4000 homes at $300k and over to the limited supply of new homes being built throughout Austin proper. This will not, in my opinion, lower the cost of "livability" here in Austin citywide. For example, adding 4000 luxury condos will do nothing to help the "livability" of those residents in East Austin and in fact, could lower the "livability" for those East Austin residents as our city council forces the unsavory infrastructure pieces into their backyards (I would think that property values would go down near a water treatment plant but I could be wrong about that).

As far as your example of your condo, I would argue that your property did not go down because of new condos being built downtown but because there were new properties in a similar price range coming to market all over town in other sought-after locations which led to the reduction in price due to greater supply of that resource in that particular price range. A $300k condo is not an affordable resource for most people (according to a few websites <a href=http://www.fool.com/homecenter/finance/finance01.htm>this</a> being one of them), if 29% of your annual salary is the maximum that most mortgage companies will allow for the loan, then the minimum you have to make yearly is $63k+ (I used a simple mortgage calculator to arrive at that: $300k x 5.7% / 30 yrs = $1,750/mo x 3 = $5250/mo x 12 = $63k avg yr salary which just happens to be right on Austin's avg salary). So, based on this logic, bringing these properties onto market will not lower Austin's "livability." At best, it will keep it at status quo which is against what Toby Futrell claimed is their overarching vision -- "to make Austin the most livable city in the country." (median income here in Texas based on <a href=http://www.census.gov/hhes/income/4person.html>census</a> stats is $54k/yr. Using the above formula, there would need to be a rush to market of properties averaged below $250k and below to pull the "livability" back and have Austin start moving down the "livability" list to make Toby's claim truthful.)

And Pat, I'm all for progress; I'm not one of those stick-in-the-mud curmudgeons that says the good ol' days are better than today. But what I am worried about is that Austin doesn't lose what defines Austin. In my opinion, Austin isn't about $500k condos in massive multi-million dollar towers, Ferrari's and massive office complexes over sensitive environmental areas (that's Dallas without the sensitive environmental areas...). I'm concerned that the change being brought on by the last few councils endanger those few things that define what Austin is as a city and why people do want to live here. I think most people would agree that one of the great things about Austin is that you can ride on your bike one mile from downtown and get on a trail that will take you to the boonies and away from the sprawl (I use that trail just about every day on my daily commute to work on my mountain bike). If we keep paving over the green spaces, Austin loses one of it's defining characteristics. It would be much like losing the live music outlets, UT or the bats under Congress. There are few things that define a city and in my opinion, based on some of the recent development decisions by the council, the path we're on seems to be endangering one of the qualities that define us as "Austinites."

Thanks to both of you for reading and I appreciate the comments. I'm planning to better clarify my points in a follow-up post but work calls now!

Re:Visions of Austin

Posted by M1EK at Jun 02, 2006 04:05 PM

Oh, come on. Even if every single apartment being built downtown costs $5000/month, increasing the supply of ANY kind of housing in this area reduces the growth in cost of other housing units.

New housing units, especially downtown, are never going to be cheap and hardly ever even affordable. That's the way the multi-family market works - properties generally get cheaper with age as newer, fancier, stuff gets built. (My condo in Clarksville, for instance, saw its rent drop a couple years ago and still hasn't recovered - partially due to the dramatic increase in supply of downtown housing taking pressure off the nearby midrange stock).

Sound the Alarm!

Warning signs...

The Barton Springs segment of the Edwards Aquifer has been declared in the Alarm Drought stage. According to the Chronicle:

"One of the drought indicators, Barton Springs, is flowing with 31 cubic feet of water per second, much less than the average 53 CFS, said BSEACD hydrogeologist Brian Hunt. Spring flows and levels in monitor wells briefly increased after rains in early May, but they have been steadily dropping since then. Currently, groundwater users, such as the cities of Buda and Kyle for example, are required to reduce usage by 20%. That could mean lawn-watering schedules or outright bans, said Hunt. Area sprawl development isn't necessarily to blame, he said, but likely exacerbates the situation. If dry conditions continue, the aquifer could reach critical stage by late summer, triggering 30% usage reductions and even lead to crackdowns on chronic water-wasters. The district is urging people to be water-wise at all times. Find more information at their Web site,http://www.bseacd.org/."
I find the timing of this announcement personally interesting based on a conversation I had with a co-worker this week. Their main point was "Who really cares if AMD puts their development within the recharge zone? It's not like that development can block recharging the entire aquifer!" Well, here's the reason why it matters. Recharge zones are typically geographically small areas where the water from the surface starts making it's way down to the aquifer. As this generalized cross-section shows, water, for the most part, doesn't make it's way down from the contributing or artesian zones. To further complicate things, different parts of the aquifer are replenished from different recharge zones (there are usually geologic features that direct water into one zone or the other). So while the Edwards aquifer may be getting recharged down in San Antonio, that usually doesn't do Barton Springs a whole lotta good.

So enter AMD and it's 850,000+ sq. ft development planted directly on top of the recharge zone. As this map shows, the recharge area for the Barton Springs area is relatively small (bisect Hays county and go north to where the aquifer zones stop and that is basically the Barton Springs Segment of the aquifer). So now add the huge AMD complex, the impermeable cover that is associated with it (roads, parking lots) and the infrastructure that will also be needed (water pipes, underground cabling, etc). The impermeable cover will collect particulate and chemical pollution from the cars/trucks riding/parking on it. When it rains, this pollution will be picked up and accelerated into the Barton Springs recharge zone and straight into Barton Springs pool (and don't tell me about the catchments they will be putting in place. No catchment can provide 100% filtration). So we will all get to swim in the eventual gasoline/oil/diesel/chemical mixture that along with low inflows/outflows to the aquifer, we'll see a rapidly degenerative effect on the quality of the water. And, I might mention, that's only if there is a Barton Springs pool left because of the reduction of water collection within the zone that the AMD and eventual future developments will provide.

So sound the alarm, I say! We need to make sure our elected officials know that Barton Springs has entered into drought stage. I hope that the rains will come this summer and replenish the stores but outside of a stray hurricane, I think we're in for another long, hot summer.

I'm moving the blog...

I'm now writing a blog over at my new website, PoliticalSuicide.org. I'll only be using this blog for updating ideas and thoughts on OpenNetwork's philosophies, goals and the like. If you're looking for the more Austin-centric stuff, jump on over to the new site!

Thanks for your readership and I'm looking forward to many new posts (and your comments) in the future!
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