Cypress Edition | April 2026

Government

BY SARAH BRAGER

Harris County to consider future of ARPA programs Harris County commissioners will review the future of several county programs created with funding from the American Rescue Plan Act, a 2021 federal aid package supporting local govern- ments after the COVID-19 pandemic. The details With ARPA support set to expire at the end of 2026, commissioners voted Feb. 26 to consider nearly $14 million in general fund appropriations in scal year 2026-27 that would allow the county to continue the services. The appropriations could support nine areas, said Tom Hargis, director of grants and partner- ships for the O„ce of County Administration. Hargis said the ARPA committee will work with county departments to develop a “current level of service” budget for each program to maintain the existing services in the next scal year.

$88M clean energy projects advance Harris County commissioners on March 19 authorized $88.3 million to fund projects for the Solar for All plan despite the Envi- ronmental Protection Agency’s attempted termination of grants associated with the program. Harris County led a lawsuit against the EPA in October to reclaim the promised funds, and o„cials said a decision

Harris County ARPA-funded services to be considered in FY 202627 budget

$4M: Apprenticeship Advantage Program

$2.3M: Food & Nutrition $2.215M: Homelessness $1.23M: Maternal Health

$1.1M: Chronic Disease Prevention $1M: Eviction Support & Diversion/ Legal Aid

$1M: Behavioral Health $600,000: Women's Empowerment Center $500,000: Youth Diversion

is expected later this year. What you need to know

The March 19 vote authorized county sta‡ to execute solar power and battery energy storage projects at approximately 6-10 locations across Harris County, which energy providers will be able to then deploy to qualifying low-income households. County o„cials said exact sites are still being evaluated.

SOURCE: OFFICE OF COUNTY ADMINISTRATIONCOMMUNITY IMPACT

What’s next? The action does not guarantee all nine programs will be included in the next general fund. Harris County commissioners are expected to review the initial FY 2026-27 budget proposal around August, with nal approval in late September.

Harris County looks to grow public defenders Harris County leaders want to expand the capa- bilities of public attorneys who represent criminal defendants who cannot a‡ord a lawyer, known as

Public defender appointments

Misdemeanor cases

Felony cases

misdemeanor cases. However, county leaders want the o„ce to be able to take on half of all indigent cases in the legal system, a feat that will require more funding and sta‡. “We want to make sure that we assist people not with just their case but also try and reduce the chances that they return to the criminal legal system,” Chief Public Defender Genesis Draper told Commissioners Court.

269% 154%

30% 20% 10% 0%

indigent cases. The big picture

March data from the Public Defender’s O„ce shows public attorneys have been appointed to about 15% of felony indigent cases and 30% of

2018 2020 2022 2024 *2026

*THROUGH MARCH 19

SOURCE: HARRIS COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER’S OFFICE

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