Yearly Clean-up, Summer ’22-Summer ’23

I’m trying something different with this year’s retrospective: I picture it functioning like a table of contents, to help organize the past year into a coherent timeline. (Find last year’s retrospective here.)

It’s really dry, boring reading. Sorry! Tune in next week, when our courageous city council members return to their normal shenanigans, on the 23-24 season premier of the San Marcos City Council.

One more thing: Election season is coming up! Two city council seats are up for election:
Seat 3: Alyssa Garza (our noble, lonely progressive representative)
Seat 4: Shane Scott (loves small government and business interests)

Currently, Griffin Spell has filed to run against Alyssa Garza. I have lots of thoughts, but I’ll save them for the future.

No one has filed yet to run against Shane Scott. The last day to file is August 21st.

I am not plugged in enough to know if anyone is thinking about challenging Shane Scott. But I’m hoping!

Yearly Summary

Caveat:
– Many items show up at multiple meetings. I’m usually listing an item at the meeting that you’d want to consult if you went back to look up details.
– when relevant, I’ll include how each person voted
– San Marcos is 15 months behind on posting the minutes to city council meetings. The most recent is May, 2022. What’s up with that?

August 2022:

1st meeting:

  • Four separate zoning cases near the Outlet Malls and Amazon
  • Zoning for housing sprawl approved waaaaaay south, absolutely in the middle of nowhere, near the Hays power plant
  • Decriminalizing weed makes it on the ballot, due to Mano Amiga’s petition
  • Form a committee to talk about a San Marcos GRACE act, which has never come back around again
  • Quail Creek Park is purchased

2nd meeting:

  • San Marcos elections are problematic
  • Riverbend Ranch tries to put exemptions on the industrial part, upstream of Redwood
  • School Resource Officers are renewed.
    • Yes: Mayor Hughson, Shane Scott, Mark Gleason, Saul Gonzalez
    • No: Alyssa Garza, Max Baker
  • Shane brings 3 oz of weed to a city council meeting
  • The Lobbying ordinance dies
    • Yes: Alyssa Garza, Max Baker
    • No: Mayor Hughson, Shane Scott, Mark Gleason, Saul Gonzalez, and Jude Prather

September 2022

1st meeting:

  • Budget and property tax rate discussions
  • Tax credits for a giant tract of sprawl out behind the outlet malls
  • New firestation approved downtown
  • Meet and Confer with SMPOA is approved

2nd meeting:

  • Election discussion
  • Property tax rate set at 60.3 cents, 7 extra police/fire fighters are funded
  • Boyhood Alley renamed
  • Library Fines go away
  • Loquat Street is traded to the University for undisclosed purposes that make me nervous.

October 2022

1st meeting:

  • Noise ordinance and alcohol subcommittee formed. Has not come back around yet.
  • Eviction delay sustained

November Election: my city council candidate recommendations

2nd meeting:

  • EDSM conflicts of interest with GSMP
  • Workshop on the Edwards Aquifer and purple pipe

November 2022

1st meeting:

  • Election results
  • Zoning some new apartments near 5 mile dam
  • Rehousing a few people from the 2015 floods into Sunset Acres
  • The pick-a-pet problem

2nd meeting:

  • Curfews (recently outlawed at the state level!)
  • Puppy mill discussion paused on the second reading.

December 2022

1st meeting:

  • Curfew ordinance is approved. There are two votes:
  • Voters have approved marijuana decriminalization

2nd meeting:

  • Free electric cabs approved downtown
  • Curfew is approved.  (May now be illegal). In theory, CJR committee is studying the issue
  • Very first discussion of SMART Terminal: should 660 acres be moved from the Cotton Center to the SMART Terminal? 
  • Campaign funding and ERC review

January 2023

1st meeting:

  • More apartments on near the intersection of Rattler Road and McCarty
  • Trace gets rid of some of its commercial zonings

2nd meeting:

  • SMART Terminal development agreement is updated. It gets the mushiest, least critical treatment from council. 
    • Yes: Mayor Hughson, Saul Gonzalez, Jude Prather, Mark Gleason, Matthew Mendoza
    • No: Alyssa Garza
      That vote aged poorly!
  • Fire department codes updated
  • Riverbend Ranch subcommittee formed to support Redwood
  • Paid parking at Lion’s Club
  • Human Services Advisory Board grant money new guidelines

February 2023

1st meeting:

  • Repeal of Meet & Confer agreement, re-entry into renegotiations with SMPD
    • Repeal: Alyssa Gara, Saul Gonzalez, Shane Scott, Jude Proather
    • Deny the petition: Mayor Hughson, Mark Gleason, Matthew Mendoza
  • Some townhomes in Trace
  • Preserving land next to Ringtail Ridge park
  • Tiny houses out on Post Road
  • SMART officially approved in an extraordinarily brief discussion (Alyssa is the only no vote)

2nd meeting:

  • Stephanie Reyes is promoted
  • P&Z appointments 
  • Bike lanes on Craddock and sessom

March 2023

1st meeting:

  • Rezone a bit between I35 and the Saddlebrook mobile home community as Heavy Commercial
  • Got rid of some commercial zoning in Cottonwood Creek, despite residents writing letters wanting it to stay commercial
    • Rezone/Tote water for developer: Mayor Hughson, Mark Gleason, Saul Gonzales, Shane Scott, Matthew Mendoza, Jude Prather
    • Keep commercial/listen to residents: Alyssa Garza
  • HSAB grant money finally parcelled out
  • Puppy mills are banned! (Final vote is unanimous)

2nd meeting:

  • Citizens protesting SMART are ramping up
  • McCoys will be building a new headquarters campus in town
  • New murals!
  • Committee-on-committees is formed. Alyssa, Matthew, Mark
  • Vacancy taxes are floated by Max in public Q&A. Will hopefully come back around

April 2023:

1st meeting:

  • P&Z approves the Heavy Industrial zoning for SMART Terminal
  • Little square behind Embassy Suites is officially denied Light Industrial zoning.
    • Deny: Mayor Hughson, Alyssa Garza, Matthew Mendoza, Mark Gleason
    • Approve: Shane Scott, Jude Prather

2nd meeting: 

  • SMART Terminal zoning ends up with Council agreeing to revisit the development agreement, due to community outcry
  • More apartments by the high school, along 123.

May 2023:

1st meeting:

  • Presentation on the new Meet & Confer agreement
  • Clubhouse style apartments across from the Outlet Malls
  • The SMART development agreement is re-opened
  • The city can boot cars with too many unpaid parking tickets

2nd meeting:

  • P&Z members rewrite their own Comp Plan, I am annoyed 
  • Satanic Temple leads the council in prayer
  • Remove 104 acres of commercial from Riverbend Ranch, because why not let developers build 1200 acres endless uninterrupted sprawl like they want?
  • Meet & Confer comes back around.  Negligible changes were made. Council did not bring the Hartmann reforms to the negotiation table in any meaningful sense.
    The vote:
    • Yes: Mayor Hughson, Jude Prather, Shane Scott, Mark Gleason, Matthew Mendoza, Saul Gonzalez
    • No: Alyssa Garza
  • Eviction delay is set to end
  • Ending the General Contractor testing requirement to pull permits

June 2023
Only 1 meeting:

  • CBDG money delegated
  • 4 hour parking in limited locations downtown
  • The last $3 million of ARP dollars is parceled out
  • New art installation in Ramon Lucio Park

July 2023
Only 1 meeting:

  • SMART Terminal/Axis Logistics withdraws its zoning request
  • La Cinema land is annexed and zoned
  • P&Z has an extremely frustrating workshop on the new Comp Plan.
  • Homeless action plan workshop

July 3rd City Council Meeting

Hello everybody from the dregs of summer! Who wants to talk shop about your friendly city council reps over at city hall?

The meeting was unexpectedly short, and so I added in some extras: the P&Z Comprehensive Plan Workshop, and the City Council workshop. You know how I like to do that.

Hours 0:00-1:21: The whole city council meeting.  From the end of the SMART chapter, to La Cinema, to some gas company talk. 

P&Z Comp Plan Workshop: In which I’m irritated by our NIMBY representatives. 

City Council workshop: a presentation on a homeless action plan, and our long-slumbering Housing Action Plan reawakens, and it’s hungry.

That’s a wrap! That’s the only meeting until August, too. Maybe I’ll add in some extra posts though – like a year end summary thing again…

Hours 0:00-1:21, 7/3/23

The SMART/Axis Logistics Semi-Unsatisfying-Partial-Resolution

We were scheduled to have the big vote for zoning the SMART/Axis Logistics 2000 acre monstrosity to Heavy Industrial. But instead: they withdrew their application. So this chapter of the story lurches to its anticlimactic conclusion.  (Backstory: here, herehereherehere, and here.)

This isn’t exactly a bad thing – a bad thing would be if the Heavy Industrial zoning had passed. But it doesn’t mean that the community can let their guard down, either.

Here’s what I imagine: city councilmembers were squirming under the pressure to deny, and told the developers that a denial was likely. It’s better for the developer to withdraw and regroup, rather than get the denial. If they had gotten denied on the zoning request, they’d have to wait a year to re-apply.  This way they can play their cards close to their vest and figure out what they want to do. 

Besides: the developer still has the original 880 acres zoned Heavy Industrial and ready to go.

Citizen Comment: Mostly frustrated citizens who want answers to the current state of the SMART terminal.  Which development agreement is currently in effect? What’s the future hold?

Items 11-13:  La Cinema, the La Cima Film Studio.  (Background on La Cima here.)(La Cima is controversial because it is over Edwards Aquifer. More background.)

Here is the current version of La Cima:

That’s RR 12 going through up through the middle of the pink part. (Everything to the right of RR 12 was added in May 2022.)

Back in November 2021, Council said that La Cima could have movie studios in their commercial zoning areas.  Just like with revising the SMART development agreement, this passed on a single reading, and no one in the community got wind of it. 

Then in June 2022, it was time to decide what kind of tax credits the studio should get. (Me, in my tiny voice: why should they get any?) This is when the community first heard about the movie studio. Everyone got mad, because we really should not be building on the aquifer.  But it was too late: that ship had sailed the previous November.

This past Tuesday, it got annexed and zoned. The film studio is the dangly part of the pink land in the picture above:

That’s about 147 acres.

The inner part is film studio, and the outer part has to stay natural:

So there you have it. It’s been annexed and zoned. In ten years, we’ll know if this was an extremely bad idea, a moderately bad idea, or if it worked out pretty well, after all.

Passes 7-0.

Item 14:  Universal Gas Franchise.

Apparently in Texas, any gas company can demand to have access to dig up your streets and put their pipes in so that they can sell gas to the people of your town, and you have to let them.  More accurately, you have to give them the same contract as the other gas companies have. 

In this case, it’s someone called Universal Gas Ltd. The city gets 5% of their profits, and in exchange, they’re allowed to dig up our roads and put pipeline in and whatever else.  It sounds like they’re aiming for Riverbend Ranch, but it wasn’t entirely clear. 

I got annoyed with the Universal Gas lawyer, who kept answering questions that were directed at city staff.  For example, Saul Gonzalez asked if 5% was typical for the cut that the city gets.  The Universal Gas lawyer hopped right in and said, “Oh yes! If anything, it’s too high!  Usually they’re 2-5%.  You wouldn’t want us to have to pass those costs on to the consumer, would you?” [waggles eyebrows in threatening corporate-speak.]

The city manager, Stephanie Reyes, said that every few years we conduct a rate study, and then implement new rates across the board. 

Passes 7-0.

Item 15: The city is taking over Southside’s home repair project. This has been in the works for awhile.

Item 16: The animal shelter has hired a vet, and they’ll be joining the Animal Services Committee.

Items 17-18: Top Secret Executive Session about wastewater plants going up way out on 123.  I’m guessing this is also related to Riverbend Ranch.

And that’s the whole meeting! It was weirdly short. But the workshops were very interesting, so go read about those next.

P&Z Comprehensive PlanWorkshop, 6/21/23

Note: I mostly try not to call out P&Z members by name, because they’re not public officials the way that City Council members are. But there are nine of them, and they’re not all equally frustrating. Last time, I gave William Agnew a hard time, and I give Jim Garber a hard time in this post. What can I say? They’re staking out positions that I disagree with, hard.

Markeymoore does the best job of gently pushing back against the crap that I’m describing below. Griffen Spell sometimes does, as well. #notallp&zcommissioners

Quick Timeline:
– 2020-December 2022: Team of community members plus consultants and city staff spend two years putting together a comp plan. A huge amount of community input goes into it.
– February 2023: P&Z says, “This plan is an utter disaster. We will form a subcommittee to rewrite it.”
– May 2023: Now there are two versions of the Comprehensive Plan. The changes are so extensive that they need a workshop to get through them

This workshop was so exasperating.   It was aggravating for the exact same reasons that the previous P&Z comp plan discussion was aggravating.

More background: There’s an area of condos called Sagewood. It’s roughly here:

on the edge of an older, beautiful neighborhood.

The landlords of Sagewood have let Sagewood get really rundown: buildings seem to slant, broken fences don’t get fixed very quickly, trash cans get knocked over and trash stays strewn about, etc.

Here’s what Google Streetview has to say about the matter:

(It actually looks fine in that photo.) It’s mostly college students living here.

The point is: many of your older San Marcos NIMBYs close their eyes at night, and dream of Sagewood taking over their own neighborhood, and presumably wake up screaming.

In the 2000s, tons of new giant apartment complexes were approved: The Retreat, The Cottages, Redwood/The Woods, and probably some I’m forgetting. This angered a lot of citizens, including me! I think it was criminal to build The Woods on the river. (Here’s some backstory if you’re curious.) Many NIMBY types feared that Sagewood was taking over the city.

This is what you must understand, if you want to understand fights over the comp plan: many P&Z members are stuck in 2010, fighting against The Cottages, and suffering from Sagewood night terrors when they try to close their eyes and rest.

What else was 2010 like? I did my best to find some data:

  • Median rent in 2009: $741/month. (Median is more useful than average – this means that half the units rented for less than $741, and half for more than $741.)
  • In 2011, the median house in San Marcos sold for $140K.
  • There were 165 total listings for houses on the market
  • the 2010 census puts San Marcos at 44K people.
  • Median household income in 2009: $26,357

So that’s the world that most of P&Z believes we’re living in: 44K people in San Marcos, many houses cost less than $140K, and median rent is around $700/month.

Here’s the most current numbers I could find:

This is a wildly different world! Rent has almost doubled, home prices have more than doubled, and there are fewer houses on the market.

The comp plan has got to deal with the actual San Marcos in 2023:

  • we need affordable housing,
  • we need public transit and safe biking options, and
  • we have a moral obligation to give a shit that the world is quickly overheating.

The way you do this is by controlling sprawl and increasing density, in small-scale ways. Build 3- and 4-plexes throughout single family neighborhoods. Increase public transit options. Put commerce near where people live, so you can drive less.

This is why the Comp Plan discussions are so frustrating. There are three main coalitions:

  • Old San Marcos, fighting the battles of 2010.
  • Developers, who would still love to build those giant apartment complexes that piss everyone off
  • Progressives, trying to wrangle developers into building small scale, dense housing, and simultaneously trying to convince Old San Marcos not to sabotage it.

I’m really not exaggerating. The chair, Jim Garber, literally states that this is his position at roughly 0:43:00:

  • The apartment complexes approved in the 2000s drove him to local politics: he got involved in the last Comp plan, in order to save San Marcos neighborhoods from giant student apartment complexes.  
  • This last Comp plan was approved in 2012. In order to get it passed, the Planning Department promised to conduct Neighborhood Character Studies. Every neighborhood was going to get to come together and declare what its personality is. Your personality is things like “no duplexes” and “no carports”. In other words, it’s mostly class-based.  The goal is to enshrine these wealth signifiers for all eternity. 
  • However, the neighborhood character studies were never carried out.  Jim Garber has been steamed up about this ever since; the planning department cannot be trusted; etc etc.
  • He just doesn’t understand why “protection of existing neighborhoods” is not in this plan.
  • He wants to divide all neighborhoods into “existing” and “new”. Once a brand new patch of land has been platted, it switches from “new” to “existing”, and then it’s personality is enshrined, never to be touched again. 
  • What’s the difference? Existing neighborhoods should not have duplexes, triplexes, townhomes, and condominiums.  In other words, no small-scale, dense, affordable housing.

Jim Garber is so mad about The Retreat, The Cottages, and other gigantic apartment complexes that he is fighting tooth-and-nail against small-scale affordable housing that would blend in to a neighborhood.   He is stuck fighting the battles of 2012, and can’t empathize with 30 year olds in 2023 who can’t afford to live in a little residential neighborhood.

Amanda Hernandez is the planning department director.  She responds thoroughly to his points:

  • First off, she has only been the director for three months. Most of his complaints span previous admins.
  • She wrote most of the comp plan in 2012, and she now thinks it’s a terrible plan.  They started the neighborhood character studies and spent a year or two on them, and then she was told to abandon them and to switch and work on the new Code Development.
  • But! Now! They are now finally doing character studies. Blanco Gardens and Dunbar are underway.  Victory Gardens and north of campus are coming up next.
  • You know the Cottages, the Retreat, Sagewood, and The Woods? Big complexes in residential areas? Those have not been approved since 2012. The old Comp Plan worked. Those were all passed under the even-older comp plan, two comp plans ago.

Bottom line: we have effective mechanisms to prevent giant apartment complexes from being built in residential neighborhoods.  This is no longer happening.  The fight against giant apartment complexes is going to sabotage efforts to bring small-scale affordable housing into neighborhoods.

Finally, I’m going to be blunt: the utter narcissism of the Historic District is exhausting.  To hear P&Z speak, there is no neighborhood that could merit planning, besides this one. All Historic District, all the time.  It’s extremely tiresome and means that nothing else ever gets considered. 

At the public comments, speakers try to explain that no one wants to change the Historic District. The Historic District is actually the gold standard of a neighborhood!  It’s got small scale tri-plexes and four-plexes sprinkled around, it’s got neighborhood commercial, and nearly every house has an ADU – a mini-house in the back.  It is the dream of small scale, dense living!

One of the speakers, Rosie Ray, made some handouts for P&Z, to try to convey this point. She was kind enough to share them with me:

Cottonwood Creek does not have diversity of housing. The residents keep telling the city that they want some stores nearby. The Historic District is chock full of different kinds of functionality. It works great.

When this is brought up, the P&Z folks say, “Yes, but the Historic District happened naturally.”

Basically: Historic Districts usually are older than land use codes. Single-family zoning originated to make sure white, wealthy neighborhoods stayed that way. So along with red-lining, you wanted to make sure there was nothing affordable. Hence you specify that lots have to be big, and houses have to be big and spread out. This is the problematic origin of single-family zoning.

So sure, the Historic district happened naturally, because it’s older than single-family zoning.  And now we will prevent that from happening anywhere else. 

Bottom line:

  • P&Z wants to separate all existing neighborhoods and freeze them in carbon, like Hans Solo. Future neighborhoods, in a galaxy far far away, can be built like the Historic District.
  • Developers will not build future neighborhoods like the Historic District, because the way you maximize profit is to build yet another sprawling single family neighborhood or a giant apartment complex. (Good link on how to get builders to fill in these missing middle housing types. The problem really is single-family zoning.)
  • In ten years, we’ll have another comp plan, and we’ll beg and plead for this all over again.

I’m struggling to avoid making “OK Boomer” jokes about P&Z, but gerontocracy is a real thing in the US, and in San Marcos. The members of P&Z do not seem attuned to the idea that the financial hurdles of 30 year olds in 2023 are wildly different than the financial hurdles of 30 year olds in 1990.

(I didn’t have a good place to put it, but Rosie also passed out this map:

It’s pretty stark!)

City Council workshop, 7/3/23

City Council Workshops were fascinating. There were two topics:

  1. Homeless Action Plan
  2. Housing Action Plan  

First, the Homeless Action Plan. 

San Marcos hired a guy named Robert Marbut for five months, to write a report about what we should do to help homeless people in San Marcos. He gave the presentation on Tuesday.

First off, Max Baker is very wary of him. And rightly so: the Wikipedia entry on Marbut is pretty awful: 

According to The Huffington Post, Marbut’s advice to most communities was to limit food handouts and build a large shelter that stays open all day and doesn’t turn anyone away. He called his approach “The Velvet Hammer”; since then he has said he prefers the phrase “The Velvet Gavel”.[11]

Marbut’s methods were criticized by housing activists who preferred a policy widely adopted since the 1990s called “Housing First,” which finds apartments and houses instead of shelters for homeless people.[11][12][13] Some activists called Marbut’s approach outdated, punitive and patronizing to homeless people, and more effective at hiding them from downtowns than at solving homelessness.[13][2][10]

In response, Marbut said, “I believe in Housing Fourth” — awarding permanent housing after residents have shown their personal lives are in order.[11] “I often say, ‘Having a home is not the problem for the homeless,'” Marbut told the magazine Next City. “It’s maintaining a financial stability that allows you to maintain your homestead.”[14]

In Pinellas County, Florida, Marbut consulted on a 470-bed shelter called Safe Harbor, which opened in 2011 in a former jail building next to the current jail outside of St. Petersburg. It was run by the sheriff’s department and included a “penalty box” in a fenced-in area of the parking lot where residents who broke rules would sleep. Most residents stayed for less than a month, according to sheriff’s department data, and few were known to have found permanent housing afterward. Between 2011 and 2013, 7 percent of those leaving the shelter found permanent housing, 3 percent went to another shelter or a friend or relative, and 67 percent headed for an “unknown” destination.[11][12]

His presentation on San Marcos was mixed.  Parts of it were really good! For example, he stated several times that criminalizing homelessness does not work.  Arresting homeless people does not work.  He was clear and emphatic on this point. 

But parts of it were total garbage. For example, he believes that “handouts promote homelessness”. He can fuck right off with that bullshit.  You know who gets a lot of handouts? Wealthy people! They get the mortgage interest deduction for big houses and second homes, the estate tax, the social security earnings limit, and many, many more. They get legacy admit assistance for college. Robert Marbut himself gets handouts, and yet he is not homeless! It’s a Christmas miracle.

He criticized “housing first” policies, but his evidence against them was dishonest.  He implied that “Housing First” policies have been tried in San Francisco, LA, Phoenix, Portland, Seattle, and Austin, and consequently, homelessness has skyrocketed in all of them.  It’s a bad-faith argument, and he should know better.  Their homeless populations haven’t skyrocketed because of a housing first policy; they’ve skyrocketed due to the wildly rising rental costs and the shrinking supply of affordable housing. The fact that he gave an intellectually dishonest characterization of the other side makes me suspicious of a lot of what he says. 

His argument goes: If you don’t treat the addiction, domestic violence, mental illness, and so on, then the homeless will be right back on the street in six months. (I don’t think that’s how Housing First policies work? I don’t really know.)

But his counter-proposal isn’t entirely bad, either. He says, “Treat your way out.”  Give people shelter while connecting them with help for addiction, domestic violence, mental illness, and so on. I’m not disputing the need for services.

I’m just very worried about the part where you withhold housing in the meantime. How long does it take people to “earn” a key to an apartment or some sort of permanent housing?  And what do you do with someone who will never overcome their addiction or mental illness? Is your plan that they live their life in a shelter forever?

Anyway, here’s his five major points:

  1. “Stop the Growth”

    Marbut wants us to only help locals.  “The worst thing you can do is convert out-of-towners to in-towners!” he quips. He claims we get lots of homeless traffic from the I-35 corridor, and we can’t give handouts to everyone.
    • This is fine if you’re talking about homeless people from Austin.  It is absolutely true that San Marcos cannot afford to take care of an Austin-sized population.
    • This is cruel and inhumane if you’re talking about refugees from Central America.  

What exactly does this mean? How would it be implemented?  

He is clear about a few details that sound reasonable:

  • Only ship someone to their hometown in conjunction with a coordinated care team.  (But will we actually do this?)
  • Do not send domestic violence victims home under any circumstances.

I can believe that – sometimes – connecting people with their family can be the path to stability. But it just depends on how humanely it’s implemented.

  1. “Improve the Overall System Through Increased Effectiveness and Efficiencies”

It sounds like he wants a team of people to go break up homeless camps, and connect them to resources. 

Again, he stresses that arresting homeless people (for anything short of violent felonies) does not work.   And it sounds like we already have a HOTeam that goes out and does this sort of thing, and it includes officers, and they supposedly don’t arrest people for being homeless. 

It’s hard to sell me on the idea that cops should go and break up homeless camps. You need to do some work to convince me that they won’t just destroy homeless people’s possessions and make them scatter and start all over.

  1. Expand Capacity

There’s a court case, Martin vs. Boise, where six homeless people were kicked out when a shelter closed, and then promptly arrested.  The courts ruled against the city of Boise: you can’t arrest people for being homeless unless there are enough beds for them.

Currently we are not Boise-compliant.  We need more shelter space. We should partner with Southside and the Salvation Army. (Updated to clarify: Those are Marbut’s recommendations. Salvation Army has a problematic past.)

Once we’re Boise-compliant, he wants us to have “zero-tolerance of encampments.” What is he picturing, besides arrests? He already said not to arrest non-violent homeless people. How is he imagining forcing people into compliance? (Again, my mind goes directly to things like making homeless people give up their pets and come with you, or else destroying their possessions and making them scatter and start over.)

We should also be partnering with some of the SMCISD and Hays ISD employees who focus on homeless families. We also need a LOT more affordable housing.  Both of those sound good.

  1. In the future, build a right-sized Homelessness Assistance Center.

So that’s the spiel. I’m very skeptical of parts of it, but other parts of it are okay, if they’re implemented well.

Mostly City Council has very little to say, aside from some bland platitudes.

Alyssa Garza asks a key question: where did he get his data on San Marcos homelessness? he says he collected it himself, by going out on multiple occasions and talking to people. He’s implicitly claiming that he collected data using sound statistical sampling methods, and didn’t just wing it.

This article is extremely critical of his data claims. It sounds like he does, in fact, just make shit up. (In fact, Marbut claimed on Tuesday that he reduced homelessness in San Antonio by 80% in the 2010s. The linked article points out that homelessness actually grew in San Antonio during that time.)

From here, staff will bring forth a possible plan for City Council to adopt, to help homeless people in a coordinated, effective way.

Housing Action Plan

In 2018-2019, we carried out a big housing action plan.  Then City Council just… didn’t approve it.  They just shrugged it away.  It’s really insane. It’s just been collecting dust here, ever since.

Now we’re waking up the slumbering giant, and bringing it around again! The numbers are now out of date.  City staff will update the numbers, and get the ball rolling. (Incidentally, these are the numbers I’m always crabbing about not having, whenever we’re considering new zoning! I’m very pleased right now.)

It did go to P&Z last time, and P&Z passed a number of amendments. Most of these are focused on wealthy, secure people.  Those redlines are still in effect. We shall see.