Government
Ocials seek federal investigation of APD Travis County District Attorney José Garza and Austin leaders on Dec. 4 asked the Department of Justice to investigate the Austin Police Department’s response to the city’s May 2020 protests. Garza also announced protest-related prosecutions against 17 APD ocers will end, while four remain in progress. The specics Ocials requested a federal “pattern or practice investigation,” to determine whether residents were deprived of their constitutional rights. Garza’s update on the APD prosecutions came nearly two years after the indictments. Separately, Austin has paid more than $20 million in injury settlements stemming from the 2020 protests.
Travis County readies for immigration law costs A new Texas law allowing local governments to arrest and expel undocumented immigrants could have “enormous” nancial impacts on Travis County, according to county sta. Senate Bill 4 passed Nov. 14 and now awaits approval from Gov. Greg Abbott, who said he will
“I think there’s been a perception that the bill would just impact border counties, but any person that’s here that wouldn’t be able to show their
status could be charged with this new oense. You don’t need to be on the border
for that to happen.” INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS OFFICER JULIE WHEELER
sign the bill. The impact
Currently, only the federal government can take on most immigration law enforcement including arresting and expelling undocumented immigrants. The new law could cost millions of dollars locally and put pressure on the Travis County Jail’s already short-staed corrections department that had a 32% vacancy rate in November, county intergovernmen- tal relations ocer Julie Wheeler said. One jailed person costs the county at least
$125-$600 per day, depending on their physical and mental health care needs. That range does not take into account the cost of indigent defense or inter- preters, costs Wheeler expects to go up when SB 4 takes eect. In August, the Travis County Jail saw 318 inmates with immigration detainers, which cost the county $1.65 million, according to data from the Texas Commission on Jail Standards.
Austin creates separate homelessness response oce The city established a new stand-alone Home- less Strategy Oce Dec. 4 after a recent review found its former structure wasn’t eective. The breakdown
Austin’s new stand-alone Homeless Strategy Oce will handle: • The city’s extensive homeless service contracts • Homeless shelter operations • City and community collaborations to make more housing available • Local, state and federal partnerships • Public space management, including cleanups and encampment closures • Homeless response fundraising • City communications
according to Austin ocials. The reorganization came with the promotion of David Gray as Austin’s permanent homeless strategy ocer. Gray took over that role on an interim basis in late September. The new structure will support an upcoming “joint independent assessment” of homeless services and spending by Austin, Travis County and several other community partners.
The city’s homeless strategy division previ- ously operated under Austin Public Health. The oce’s spino is aimed at better focusing the city’s work with the local unhoused community,
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