Northwest Austin Edition | April 2025

Government

BY HALEY MCLEOD & BEN THOMPSON

Austin now requires AC for all housing All Austin residents are now required to have access to air conditioning in their homes or apartments. The big picture There’s no statewide standard for housing in Texas to oer residential cooling. Some cities have adopted their own air conditioning rules, but Austin didn’t yet have one in place. review of dozens of cases handled from 2021-22 is a rst in the city, and nationwide, meant to improve police work including interactions with victims. Similar processes and public reporting will now take place annually. “We hope our proactive approach and ongoing eorts to improve the experience and outcome for sexual assault survivors will serve as an example to other units and agencies throughout the nation,” Police Chief Lisa Davis wrote in March. The approach A recent audit of APD’s sexual assault responses called for the case analyses, alongside dozens of other updates. City ocials boosted funding for APD responses and victim services in 2023 including $100,000 for the rst case review. EVAWI credited aspects of APD’s investigations based on “unprecedented” access to case les, and proposed revisions to training, documentation, data collection and communications. Hanna Senko—a plainti the city settled with Austin sex crime reforms ongoing after in-depth case review An inaugural review of Austin sex crimes cases is leading to several improvements to police investigations. What happened The analysis conducted by nonprot End Violence Against Women International followed extensive scrutiny of APD’s mishandling of sex crimes and a nearly $900,000 legal settlement with survivors. Austin Police Department leaders said the

Public defenders seeking higher pay Members of the Travis County Public Defender’s Oce told county commission- ers that their initial Counsel at First Appear- ance, or CAFA, investment isn’t enough as sta pay is lower than similar positions in Central Texas and statewide. What happened CAFA—representation post-arrest and during bail-setting regardless of ability to pay—has moved through stops and starts in recent years. County ocials earmarked $15.5 million to expand the program this scal year, funding dozens of new positions. Legal sta packed a late March commis- sioners court meeting to voice concerns over aspects of CAFA’s recent implementation, where public defense advocates said pay dynamics devalue their work. Georey Burkhart, county executive for Community Legal Services, said his oce could use funding from unlled positions to raise salaries and address pay disparities.

Road to reform The Austin Police Department’s work with sex crimes cases has been under city and third-party scrutiny for years.

2019

Jan. 2019: Audit nds Austin police improperly closed rape cases, City Council calls for third-party police review

2020

Jan. 2024: City ocials publicly apologize for mishandling cases Sept. 2023: Council funds case review, Sex Crimes Unit audit Early 2023: Collective Sex Crimes Response Model project launches to oversee reforms Nov. 2022: Third-party evaluation recommends more than 100 changes for sex crime investigations Jan. 2022: Council approves $875,000 settlement with sexual assault survivors with improvement plan

2022

2023

2024

SOURCE: CITY OF AUSTINCOMMUNITY IMPACT

who’s now helping to oversee local reforms—noted the signicance of the changes for victims. “For any sexual assault survivor, going through the process of reporting can be dicult regardless of how much implementation that we put in place for improvement,” she said. “It’s things like this case review that’s going to ensure that that can occur for every survivor that comes forward, and continue to improve year over year.”

“The future of indigent defense in Travis County is kneecapped when we cannot retain and develop great attorneys.” AMALIA BECKNER, TRAVIS COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER

Amid record heat in summer 2023, ocials asked to lay out new rules ensuring all Austinites can keep their homes cooled to comfortable and safe levels. An air conditioning mandate was created under new property maintenance code adopted in April following a year of public review. When Mayor Pro Tem Vanessa Fuentes rst drafted the new cooling standard for Austin, she noted the hundreds of heat-related calls Austin emergency medical services handles each summer and the hundreds of people who die statewide each year due to heat—conditions that are expected to worsen locally over the decades ahead.

The details Austin property owners must provide equip- ment to keep indoor temperatures at least 15 degrees cooler than outside, and below 85 degrees at all times, in every habitable room of existing housing units. They’ll also be required to keep air conditioning systems and related equipment in working condition. City sta will work with property owners on meeting the new requirement, which goes into eect this summer. Residents believing a building is out of compliance can le complaints through Austin 3-1-1 for investigation by the Development Services Department’s Code Compliance team.

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NORTHWEST AUSTIN EDITION

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