Hours 0:00 – 7:20, 5/6/25

There is only one topic of the night: approving a call for a ceasefire in Gaza. Wild.

Background

If you want to read a recap of the Israeli/Palestinean conflict since 1948, go here. And here’s a timeline of all that backstory.

Here are some nonnegotiable facts:

  1. Hamas murdered about 1200 people on October 7th, 2023, and kidnapped 400 more, and they have not yet returned about 59 hostages.
  2. The Israeli army has killed an estimated 50,000 Palestinians in this war, and has destroyed an estimated 70% of all buildings in Gaza.
  3. Antisemitism is a real problem, but calling for a cease-fire is not automatically antisemitic.
  4. The US is morally culpable in this specific war because we fund weapons for Israel, in a way that we don’t for other wars around the world. (We fund Ukraine, but they’re not the aggressor, of course.)

Why now?

Activists have been calling for this for about a year. About 100 cities across the US passed ceasefire resolutions last spring. However, in San Marcos, it takes two council members or just the mayor to put an item on the agenda. Alyssa was the only council member interested. So it didn’t happen.

In November, we elected Amanda. Now there were two – Alyssa and Amanda – who could put this on the agenda. So they did, and here we are.

At the April 15th meeting, the ceasefire resolution was just a discussion item. The vote was “Do we want to bring this forward for a formal vote, or not?” That passed. So today is the formal vote on the actual resolution.

What happened since the last meeting?

The backlash intensified.  Last time we had a letter from Donna Campbell.  Now we have additional letters from US House representative Chip Roy:

That letter is obnoxious.

But it pales compared to this next one from Governor Greg Abbott:

The key is that last paragraph. He is threatening to withhold state grants and terminate existing grants if we pass this ordinance. That is a wild escalation.

And from the assistant attorney general:

That’s basically “here’s how we can strip your city of lots of funds”.

Then there was the backlash-to-the-backlash, from Greg Casar:

And this from a bunch of local lawyers:

Which basically says “get the fuck outta here with that unconstitutional bullshit,” but in legalese.

That’s all that I caught wind of, but that doesn’t mean there wasn’t more out there.

Some Pre-game Analysis

The calculus has changed from the last meeting to this meeting, because of these letters from Abbott and the Attorney General. Let’s separate out some issues:

1. Morality.  Let’s be very clear: the activists have the moral upper hand. 

    The sheer scale of obliteration, death, and starvation in Palestine is far disproportionate to the terrorism waged by Hamas, and the toll is mostly borne by civilians.   This is a moral atrocity.

    2. Strategy, Part 1:

    What is the cost-benefit analysis of passing a San Marcos ceasefire resolution? Does it move the needle on the causes we care about?  What resources does it cost to pass this?

    3. Strategy, Part 2:

    The bullying: How do Greg Abbott’s threats affect the calculus?

    There are two main issues:

    • Free speech and first amendment rights. This is clearly protected speech, and Abbott’s threats are most likely illegal. Threats to your freedom of speech should be taken very seriously.
    • Risking city funding for San Marcos residents. If you take on that a legal fight, you are risking the grants and funding that the people of San Marcos depend on. You are also putting the cost of a legal fight on San Marcos, and there is no guarantee that we’d get a fair ruling.

    How do you balance standing up for your first amendment rights against risking grant funding for struggling San Marcos residents? Both are incredibly important.

    Listen: either decision carries consequences. This is not an easy thing to balance. Anyone who says this choice is obvious or easy is being overly reductionist.

    We’ll get into this during the council discussion. 

    This brings us to last Tuesday’s meeting!

    Citizen Comment

    By my count, there were 125 speakers. They each get three minutes, so you can see how this can add up. My notes have 93 speakers in favor, 29 speakers opposed, and two where I just could not tell which side they were on. (One speaker spoke on the AI Data Center proposal.)

    Main Arguments in favor are roughly:

    • we are culpable in this mass brutality.  Therefore we must speak out.
    • This is a local issue because clearly local people are passionate about it.
    • There have been about a hundred other cities that have passed resolutions, and the international community has condemned the war
    • This is a first amendment fight. Concessions to a bully just makes them come back for more.

    Main Arguments against are roughly:

    • What about Hamas and the hostages, and October 7th?
    • This is a local governing body, and we should stay in our lane
    • This isn’t worth the retaliation that it will bring.   Don’t play chicken with Greg Abbott

    A few stray themes I want to address:

    • Many people mention that San Marcos has sent $4 million in tax dollars to fund the war. That number seems to come from this website.
    • A couple people call on Matthew Mendoza to recuse himself, because he works for an Israeli IT company. He works for these guys, I think. (He addresses this in his comments.)
    • A few people call Shane out for falling asleep. 

    Is this true? Was Shane asleep??

    Mostly he looks like this:

    Sadly, I can’t really tell. You know I would have enjoyed making a big deal out of this, but I can’t quite justify it. I have standards.

    Seven hours later, Citizen Comment winds down.

    Council Discussion

    It’s 1:00 am now, when Council finally dives in.

    First, Amanda introduces the updates to the resolution. (Old version here, new version here.)

    The major changes are:

    • Explicitly condemning the targeting of civilians
    • Explaining and organizing the intent of the resolution, and limiting the scope to the past 18 months
    • A legal CYA paragraph at the end, to reassure Abbott that this resolution does not call for San Marcos to break any state laws
    • Some #allwarsmatter language to clarify that we also care about Ukraine, Sudan, Ethiopia, etc.
    • Naming the international and federal laws that govern arm shipments

    Council approves swapping in these changes, so this is the official version being voted on at the end of the meeting.

    Everyone states their positions:

    Jane:  Rereads the Kirk Watson quote that she stated at the last meeting:

    “The proposed resolution of the Austin City Council will not realistically end the violence on the other side of the globe. Nor will it stop federal taxes from being used to implement foreign policy. That is not in our power. The resolution, however, has the power to divide Austin, and will.”

    Jane’s avoiding the morality discussion altogether, and strictly making a strategic argument here: this issue is causing too much fighting between residents of the same community. Therefore she is a “no” on this issue.

    Later on, she states that she was a “no” even before Abbott’s letter. She is not responding to bullying. She is trying to end the discussion locally.

    Amanda goes next.

    The first half of her comments address the morality issue:

    Last time I spoke to you all, I spoke off the cuff.  I didn’t want to do that, because I felt like there are some things I really want to say, but listening to you all…

    There are many things I don’t know. 

    I do not know what amount of death will finally be enough to quiet the screams in Gaza—the screams of children crushed by bombs, of doctors carrying the limbs severed without anesthesia, of stomachs howling from hunger while this country turns away.

    I do not know how many more nights Palestinians must dream of meals they will never taste, or how many more days must pass where the only thing that briefly drowns out the screams is the sound of bombs falling. 

    I don’t know how many more years and decades need to pass for our government to care more for all of us and our loved ones, more than their cravings for funding death, deceit, and suffering around the world. I don’t know how many more years we have to watch our loved ones working till their bodies wear down and give up, to be able to survive. I don’t know how many more years we have to spend nights scared of the future we will leave for our children.

    The second half of her argument addresses the strategic issue. Here she is making the case that this is the best way to respond to bullying and threats from the Governor:

    But if there’s anything bringing forward this resolution has taught me so very clearly, our democracy is dying – if not dead already. 

    The past few days have revealed something deeply disturbing. We’ve witnessed, in real time, the methods of collective punishment this state is willing to use to force a city to bend the knee—not because of violence, not because of lawlessness, but because of speech they disagree with.

    To everyone here, and to those watching—do something for me:  Set aside the contents of this resolution, just for a moment.

    Your Governor—and the political machinery behind him—threatened to defund you. Your neighborhoods. Your city. Why?

    Because your neighbors dared to courageously ask this council to speak out against the targeted and indiscriminate killing of Palestinians in Gaza. The very neighbors we are taught—by faith, by conscience, by shared humanity—to love.

    We didn’t arrive at this moment by accident. Generations of misplaced energy, of silencing dissenters, of confusing comfort with justice, have led us here, to a moment where the foundational right to free speech is not just under threat — it is being dismantled in plain sight.

    And all of it is happening against a backdrop of rising hyper-individualism and deepening apathy, where too many have been taught that someone else’s suffering is not of their concern.

    Know this: whatever your stance on this resolution is, that is no longer the question before us.

    The real question, the only question, is whether you can walk out of these chambers tonight, and carry on with your life, knowing that the right to dissent now belongs only to those in power, and those who pull their strings. That our ability to speak truth has become conditional—granted or revoked at their convenience.

    As those before me have used their power to raise alarms, so shall I.

    And I don’t know where the camera is, but to Governor Greg Abbott:  how dare you. How dare you use your energy to perpetuate collective harm against those who are already suffering, due to the shortcomings of this state. You have the power to protect, yet you wield it to destroy, to punish, to fuel the suffering of those you were sworn to serve. Your actions scream louder than any words ever could. And for that, I do not hate you.  I feel sorry for you. It must be so miserable being that cruel and vindictive.

    As a child, I used to ask myself and God, how horrors like chattel slavery were ever allowed. How could entire genocides unfold across the globe, with no one stopping them? How could some live in unimaginable wealth, while others starved in silence? How could humanity bear such cruelty?

    But I understand it now. I see the truth in the crushing silence of our leaders. I see a media too afraid—or too complicit—to show us the truth of what we’re funding. And I see the dangerous, dangerous weaponization of Judaism to justify violence, not just against others, but at the expense of Jewish safety and integrity. Despite the atrocities of today being live-streamed, we still are left to confront the crushing weight of our tax dollars contributing to the suffering without our consent.

    I’ll end with this. Despite the constant assertion that local governments should stay within their carefully crafted lanes, history has shown us something else entirely. Local governments have always been on the front-line defenders of the most marginalized and oppressed in our society. They have been the first to sound the alarm when the system falters, when justice is denied, when communities are left to suffer. Local governments should never be passive bodies that wait for the perfect moment to act, or hesitate while injustice takes root. They should be bold and courageous because that’s what the moment requires.

    To everyone here today, I ask you this, and not just the people who came to speak for this: Do not sit idly by as this country continues its spiral into destruction, thinking you have no power to change the course of things. The power has always lied in the hands of the people. And that’s exactly why they work tirelessly to keep you from realizing it, to keep you from knowing what you’re capable of. But the truth is, your power is real, and it’s undeniable.  It took you a year to get here, and you got here, because you didn’t give up. They fear you, and that’s why they try so hard to suppress you.

    I plead with you: Whatever happens tonight, get involved. Engage with your communities. Talk to your neighbors. Learn from each other. Listen. Share your stories, your knowledge, your anger, and your hope. Do not let them strip you of the strength that lies within us all. It doesn’t have to be just death.  Death can mean rebirth, and that happens because of you. So I thank you. I thank you for coming here and displaying such courage, such courage that for so many people, they are not willing to show.  And I love this city, despite what people may say. 

    For the people who are sitting here, and not condemning the fact that our own governor – who you are all constituents of – has threatened to defund you, because he cares more about silencing you, than protecting you. 

    And I want to end with one quote.  “When words offend people more than babies buried under the rubble, something is very wrong with our society.” 

    Saul goes next. He has been openly upset by the accounts of brutality in Gaza, and has acknowledged the moral argument in previous meetings.

    Here he sticks to the strategic argument:

    This topic has drawn so much attention in San Marcos.  And it is dividing our community, in ugly ways.  I hate to go back to the way it was, years back.*  But as for my decision, I decided, after talking to several of my constituents, to stay in my lane and deal with the citizens of San Marcos voted me to do and the responsibilities that come with that. Therefore I’ll be voting no on this one, Mayor. 

    *I don’t know exactly what he’s referring to, here.

    I’m extremely sympathetic to Saul here. I think he’s really wrestled with this in a genuine way.

    Matthew goes next.  Some of the citizen comments asserted that he should recuse himself, because he works for an Israeli IT company. Matthew addresses this part first:

    First and foremost, I’ve already run through my company, and I’ve already asked them if there’s any conflict of interest, and they flat out told me “We don’t even know who you are.” I’ll make it very clear: I don’t have security clearance with the United States, let alone security clearance for any other organization.

    I’m just a peon in a corporation, and I want a job, and I’m sorry if people feel like I shouldn’t work for that company, but guess what, it’s one of the few jobs in the world that allows me to use a skill set – which by the way, I don’t have college, so I busted my ass to get to where I’m at right now in the IT company.  So I’m going to work there. And I want to work there because it’s a company that provides me with funds for my family, funds for me to be able to stay home, and to be able to contribute to our great community.

    I go back eight generations in this family.  First generation non-migrant worker. Ok? So to sit there and pretend like I am compliant to all this crap is ridiculous, it is insulting for you to sit there and call me that I’m willing to go ahead and contribute to genocide. That’s just – c’mon, you’re human beings. Why would you claim that somebody else who doesn’t have that power? So that’s done.

    (For what it’s worth, I don’t think Matthew needs to recuse himself. Israeli support for the war is very split, so who knows how his bosses feel.)

    He mostly makes the Stay In Your Lane case:

    Now, I was elected to represent my city limits of San Marcos. I have no control or no authority over any other city, any other county, or any other nation. And nor do I want France or Germany or Israel or Palestine telling me how I should run my city, and make the decisions I have with these amazing 6 other individuals I have with me. We were elected. We are all different. We argue with each other consistently. We hold each other in such high regard so we treat each other with respect.

    I have seen the division in this city in just the last month, and it’s become disgusting. People that are here – again, these are simple individuals – what people don’t realize here is this area that you’re in right now – San Marcos, Texas, that we love and that we cherish – ladies and gentlemen, the majority of it are migrant workers that have lived here for generations*. So simplicity is what sits in our hide.  We don’t want to worry about everybody else. We’re so concerned about making our bills. We have an average family’s wealth here making $51,000 a year. We are one of the poorest counties in our state of Texas** and we are the poorest city in our beautiful county. 

    *This is not technically true, but I see what he’s getting at.

    **This is definitely not true.

    We’re being outrun by every other city, and you guys see where it’s coming out there. Ok. My priority – because my constituents have called me – my people who live in Barrio Pescado, who live in Sunset Acres,  who live on Hunter Road, who have lived there for decades and I keep bringing this over again.  Go to Parkdale on a day that it rains more than two inches and you have – excuse my french – but you’ve got shit coming out of their drains.

    Now, why is that not a priority? Why are we not fighting over that? You know, if we’re going to fight the governor – which, I’m sorry to say it, it sucks that he’s here for two years, it is what it is – he’s elected, okay? I can’t change that. For us to actively go out there and try and yank funding from our very poor community makes no sense to me. It makes no sense that we’re denying our first obligation to the oath that we took to our charter of San Marcos. Our constitution. That’s where our obligation should stand, is within our city limits. And again, it’s called “city limits” for a reason.

    I in no way want genocide to exist. I’m a human being. I don’t want children dying. I don’t want any of that stuff happening. But I want to remind everybody about the 1980s, 1990s, and the atrocities of Yasser Arafat***.  This has been going on. There is such complicated behind this. You see division existing in my beautiful city. So I’m going to vote no, because my priority is the citizens of San Marcos.

    *** I dunno, decide for yourself.

    This next part is the strongest part of Matthew’s speech:

    Now I hope we can get together, and there was a gentlemen there in the sunglasses that had a great idea about trying to reach out to the governor. You want to make a difference, you want to talk about the funding that’s coming through? Then talk to our state representatives. Go talk to Erin Zweiner.  Mrs. Zwiener’s one of the most amazing representatives that we have. And she’s willing to fight. But nobody’s going and knocking on her door! You need to go and talk to her. She has the power. Go run down Carrie Isaac. Go talk to Greg Casar.  These are people who we all voted for! To make those choices for us. My limitations are here.

    And I’ll be honest, I don’t want Greg Casar or Carrie Isaac or any other representative I have telling me how I should run my city that I live here and I intend to die here. I was born here. Eight generations go back, I can’t repeat that further enough that I am more committed to this now than anything else. That’s where the strength comes too, okay?  And the fact again – I said it – Greg Abbott has made this threat. Whether you believe it or not, whether you want to sit there and say he’s a great man or evil man, the fact is that he’s the governor and he has the authority to do this, whether it’s legal or not, it’s going to be done. Now we could spend years going through litigation. We don’t have the funds for litigation like Houston, Dallas, or any of those cities that are sitting there doing it. And I’d sit back and ask yourselves, “Why haven’t these other cities done it? Why?” Because they have so many citizens that are at risk of this. My answer’s no. 

    Alyssa goes next. She is focusing on the First Amendment argument.

    That is a perfect segue to my comments!  Thank you, Matthew.  I think that really helped set this up. You mentioned you don’t want Casar or other reps to tell you how to do your job as a local elected official.  And so you don’t want to tell them how to do their job. The thing is, the Governor is telling us how to do our job in this situation. 

    I echo everything Amanda said. And for me, what it comes down to is – all of us can agree. Genocide is bad, right? Okay. 

    We are here to decide: Will we allow Greg Abbott to dictate what this community is allowed to care about? Will we allow ourselves to be threatened into silence? Because that is what’s happening. We’ve received letters from the Governor, Senator Campbell, and the Attorney General’s Office—all saying the same thing: “Shut up, or we’ll take away your money.”

    But dozens of legal experts—right here in Texas and beyond—have confirmed what we already know: These threats hold no legal merit. This is political theater meant to scare us into submission. And yet… here we are.

    So I’ll ask my colleagues: Do you condemn the Governor’s threats to San Marcos—yes or no?

    Because regardless of how you vote tonight, I really want to challenge myself and the rest of this body to lead courageously. Our community deserves to know where each of us stand. I think it’s important for us to contemplate whether or not we believe it is just for the Governor to weaponize our city’s financial future to silence our voice.  Whether it’s acceptable for a state leader to misrepresent irrelevant legal statutes to threaten our ability to govern?

    We all know this isn’t about legality. It’s about control.  He’s told us plainly: if this resolution isn’t fully denied, our bonds may not be approved. They’re going to take all our money. They’re going to make it harder for us to get any form of external funding that – to Councilman Mendoza’s point – we need.  We’re not a rich city, by any means. 

    So no matter how each of you vote—I urge you: Use the platform our neighbors entrusted you with to name this for what it is: Government overreach. And it’s not okay.

    We have to not just represent, but lead.  And I can already feel the energy.  I know how this vote is going to go.  But not because anyone here supports genocide, Not because y’all agree with Abbott’s tactics, But because many of you can’t see the precedent this sets.

    We’ve watched preemption escalate across Texas and the nation.  And time and time again, local bodies fail to push back.

    Like, I understand why. We have felt the anxiety of city staff. We’ve felt the anxiety of our neighbors who are reading in the newspapers and reading social media that all these lifelines are going to be taken from them. Right? If this body chooses to voice an opinion. 

    We care about operations, we want to keep things running, we want to protect what we have. But that’s exactly what we have here, because staying quiet does not protect us. And I just do not understand how that doesn’t weigh heavy on you. 

     This just makes it easier to be steamrolled next time. At what point do we say no more? At what point do we stop pretending that silence is strategy? At what point do we call on other cities to join us in refusing to be bullied?

    Because yesterday, it was the constitutionality of our local can ban. Before that, it was whether citizen-led ballot initiatives were worth defending. And tomorrow, it’s gonna be whether we’re allowed to maintain some of the most robust environmental protections in the state.

    Texas has been ground zero for regulatory preemption — where state leaders strip away local power every time cities do something they don’t like. And that’s messed up, y’all! 

    The onus is on us to figure out a way to push back. They don’t want us governing. They want us to comply. 

    But the more we fold to keep the peace, and to save us – the struggle of trying to figure out where to pull the money from to keep the lights on – the more control that they take.  I feel like it’s so dystopian and wrong. 

    And I also just want to be clear—this resolution didn’t ask anyone to break the law. We’re not asking for anything illegal. But I do think that the edits that my colleague made reaffirm that and really lay it out in words. 

    We’re simply calling on our federal government and our state government to reconsider how it allocates our  dollars, and how that money could be reinvested right here, in San Marcos.

    Because we are interconnected. And again, it baffles me when people say this isn’t a local issue. That inability to see how all of this connects—how what we fund abroad shapes what we can fund at home—is why we’re losing local power.  We can’t keep pretending that if we just “stay in our lane,” we’ll be safer. We need that external funding—the very funding going to another country, And that very funding Governor Abbott is now threatening to take from us.  

    I also just think it’s interesting that the Governor didn’t go door to door in San Marcos asking residents if they wanted their dollars funding bombs in Gaza. He didn’t poll Texans on whether to maintain business ties with a government accused of war crimes.

    But the second we – the level of government closest to the people, speak up – suddenly we’re overstepping? Like, that’s bizarre.  We are the government closest to the community’s heart. We feel the grief. We hear the voices. And if our people are calling on us to speak, I think we have to answer.

    And yes—this is about genocide. I’m not drilling on that because I think everybody did a wonderful job presenting that piece.  I just think we don’t get to say we care about children and then stay silent about the ones buried under rubble. We don’t get to say we care about safety while ignoring the violence we have helped fund. Even if it’s unintentional.

    For me, the resolution isn’t symbolic. It is a stand for life, for local authority, for the soul of our city.

    So I’ll close by asking once more:  Do you stand with your community? Or with the Governor’s threats?

    Because history is watching. And so are your constituents.  That’s all I got.

    Alyssa has been focused on the creep of legislative preemption for a while now. It is a really huge problem, but it mostly flies under the radar of what most people hear about.

    That’s basically the end of the conversation.

    What about Shane and Lorenzo?

    Neither Lorenzo nor Shane say anything.

    Finally, it’s time to vote:

    Should San Marcos approve a resolution calling for a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza?

    So there it is. The ceasefire resolution does not pass.

    There are another 15 minutes of Q&A with the public, and the meeting finally ends at almost 2 am.

    Hours 6:00 – 6:59, 4/15/25

    Item 16: Council Resolution Calling for a Palestinian Ceasefire:

    Hooboy. Contemplating how to explain all this has me going like this:

    But here we go!

    Background

    I cannot provide you with a 3000 year timeline of Israel. I’m just one tiny marxist blogger.

    I also can’t provide a timeline from 1948 to the present day. We’d be here for months. Suffice it to say that there has been a lot of hatred and killing by everyone involved. But Vox attempted a timeline and a summary, if you’d like.

    Here’s my summary: War is very bad, and Hamas and Israel should stop fighting one.

    If I had to summarize the three positions in San Marcos, it would be:

    • Activists: Our federal tax dollars are funding mass amounts of killing!! This is horrifying. We must do something, even if it’s just symbolic.
    • Passivists: What on earth can little old San Marcos do? This is divisive. Council should stay in their lane.
    • The Backlash: We’re going to throw the word “anti-semitism” on any criticism of the war, and also drive up actual anti-semitism!

    Let’s be clear on a few things:

    1. The activists absolutely have the moral upper hand. The killing of the Palestinians, and leveling of entire cities is a moral black hole.
    2. Actual anti-semitism is also on the rise! It’s a real problem! There is real anti-semitism, but calling for a cease-fire ain’t it.
    3. Hamas murdered about 1200 people on October 7th, 2023, and kidnapped 400 more, and they have not yet returned about 59 hostages. The Israeli army has killed an estimated 50,000 Palestinians in this war.
    4. The US is morally culpable in this specific war because we fund weapons for Israel, in a way that we don’t for other wars around the world. We’re not funding soldiers in Myanmar, Sudan, Ethiopia, etc in the same way.

      (We fund Ukraine, but they’re not the aggressor, of course.)

    Which brings us to today. Alyssa and Amanda put this on the agenda.

    Here’s how it’s phrased: “A Resolution Calling for an Immediate, Permanent, and Sustained Ceasefire in Occupied Palestine, Arms Embargo on the State of Israel, Recognition of Palestinian Sovereignty and Protection of Constitutional Rights.” (It’s about three pages long, and you can read it here.)

    The Activists: 37 people spoke in favor, and one more at 3 pm.

    • The most common argument was humanitarian: the scale of destruction is staggering. We are complicit.
    • Therefore we have to do something. Even if it’s symbolic, it matters to the local Palestinian community and to the people showing up.

    The Passivists: 17 people showed up against it.

    • This is an extraordinarily complex topic that has nothing to do with local politics, and City Council should stay in their lane.
    • The brutality of October 7th, and the remaining hostages have gotten lost in all this focus on Gaza.

    I don’t know what kind of letters and emails Council got, because they weren’t included in the packet.

    The backlash:

    At the actual meeting on Tuesday, the speakers on both sides engaged in respectable civil discourse. However, I get the impression that there was an ugly backlash elsewhere. Here’s what I was told about:

    Backlash #1, on Facebook:

    Listen, when you threaten to call ICE on someone in 2025 for protesting about Gaza, you’re threatening to potentially have someone detained or deported without due process. That’s not civil discourse.

    Backlash #2:

    This is wild! Also very in line with Texas. (Did you know that all state contractors over $100K must sign a statement that they will not boycott Israel? Boycotting Israel is against state law, for anyone doing business with the state.)

    To be clear: Donna Cambell is not our representative:

    We’re in the totally normal-looking, not at all gerrymandered District 21:

    mm-hmm. ANYWAY.

    The Council Discussion

    Jane starts by reminding everyone that this is just a discussion tonight, and not a vote on the actual ceasefire resolution.

    Next Alyssa and Amanda state their cases. I kinda just want to let them use their words?

    Alyssa speaks first:

    As we begin discussion on the ceasefire resolution, I wanted to take a second – or several minutes – to clarify some things. 

    This resolution is rooted in the belief that all people deserve safety, dignity, and justice, under both US and international law. If the moral case made by so many today doesn’t move this body, then let’s talk about what this resolution means for local power and public resources, because both are under attack.

    I’ve said this several times. Across the country, and right here in Texas, we’re seeing a coordinated rise in pre-emption laws, which are power grabs by higher levels of government, designed to silence local voices and override local control, and that should matter to all of us.  And to all our neighbors. This isn’t speculation, it’s already happening, and this council and our city leadership have discussed it repeatedly. These types of laws are actively limiting our ability to govern in ways that reflect the needs and the values of San Marcos.

    But it goes beyond this type of over-reach. We’re now seeing very real threats to defund cities, counties and non-profits – especially those who dare to push back – under the guise of reducing government spending.

    So I just want us to be for real about what that means. Federal and state grants are being frozen or cancelled, including critical funds for infrastructure, climate resilience, and public safety.  Field offices are being shut down in Texas and across the nation, agencies are facing steep cuts to programs that serve many of our residents, from emergency housing, to public health. 

    Here’s the important part that needs to be said: these threats to our funding existed long before we put this resolution on the agenda. Over the last four years, (and before, but I can only speak to the last four years), this body has worked diligently to strengthen relationships with the federal government, to bring millions of dollars in federal grants and resources for this community. The federal government knows this and is weaponizing this.  That’s not just for us, that’s for everybody in our country.

    Earlier – I guess technically yesterday – I met with nonprofit leaders across Hays who expressed that they’re terrified of losing more federal and state funding, and frustration that this is all under the guise of federal fiscal responsibility.  These neighbors – the people who are doing this work – they are our neighbors.  We know them, we love them.  We know they are underpaid, overworked, and absolutely essential, yet their work is being politicized and threatened by federal government. And yet some folks who spoke today expect San Marcans to plead with that same government to rely on them to stop a genocide? They won’t even entertain the pleas of those who provide lifelines to people in our own country. 

    So perhaps if the federal government stayed in their own lane, and stopped funding the continued use of US weapons in violation of international law and humanitarian norms, we might have more money to provide to these lifelines. 

    On all fronts, caving to political bullies to preserve funding that again is already being stripped from communities across the nation is not leadership. It’s submission and we cannot like literally the numbers, we cannot afford to stay silent, not when silence means enabling intimidation and injustice. I echo the concerns of our neighbors that said, “You know, you were elected to serve San Marcos.” Our duty is to the people of San Marcos, not to the fragile egos of those who govern through coercion and fear.

    Another point of clarity that I want to make is the resolution does not distract from local work.  As elected officials, we must be able to walk and chew gum at the same time. (I remember a constituent emailed me that and it kinda stuck.) I and several of my colleagues have consistently been present in the community even without the support of city council staff, like we don’t get staff, designated support for constituent services, we’re like a one-person show, right? Even while juggling fulltime jobs, a lot of us, a family, and constant community presence, we do that, right? To further highlight this, I think it’s really important to name what sometimes our community doesn’t see. Or all members of our community don’t see – when state and federal systems fail us, we show up.  Right? I show up. During the pandemic, I helped organize food distribution, PPE drives, Mutual Aid for San Marcos. When the county lost that super confusing and ineffective rental assistance program, it was people who came and spoke on the ceasefire resolution who rallied together to set up camp all over the city, with their laptops, to help their neighbors be able to apply, to prevent evictions. Right?  And they were helped by current and past members of this dais.  And also thank you to those who spoke tonight who also helped San Marcans navigate evictions and secure airship documents needed for our home rehabilitation program. Perfect example of someone with a law degree who uses that power and privilege to help our neighbors, instead of threatening to call federal law enforcement on them.  During the winter storm, when our state failed to keep the lights on, who showed up? We showed up. We partnered with unlikely allies to distribute drinking potable water, get warming busses to the east side of San Marcos, and a lot of us, even those of us that weren’t elected and a lot of those who have come and talked about the ceasefire resolution – we showed up to do all that.

    So if anything – and this is for those who kept like emailing and just really trying to express that we should focus on local, not let this distract from local work? – I think this resolution is entirely consistent with how I’ve always shown up, practically, compassionately, and rooted in real care for this city, even when it’s not in my lane, especially when it’s an emergency, and this work that a lot of us did, went on to shape several city and county policies reforms or services that benefit us all. I share that to illustrate that all our priority is san marcos, getting policy change requires hard work and imagination that we all do, and when you just read the charter it doesn’t say to do all that, right? it says “Stay in your lane!” But anyways, I think that’s really important to name, and what else? 

    This is really important. This resolution didn’t happen on a whim. It was brought forward after over a year of reflection, dialogue and listening. Again, it draws on international human rights, echoes values that are rooted in our constitutional rights, including free speech.

    I won’t apologize for centering human dignity over political convenience. I won’t apologize for fighting to protect local power, and for asserting that supporting this ceasefire resolution is one way that we reclaim this power. And I also hope that this has helped our local leadership and neighbors begin to recognize interconnectedness of it all, because this isn’t just about this one resolution or one issue, it’s about the broader pattern of overreach, and we should all be worried about that, where those in power – namely the state and federal government, use fear, funding threats, and red tape to control, not just what we can say, but how we’re allowed to care about it.  It’s clear to me that when they fund bombs but cut aid to housing and education, that’s connected. When they silence protests here, and crush dissent abroad, that’s connected. When they defund local governments and nonprofits, and they call us distracted for standing up, that’s absolutely connected, it’s to keep us divided, distracted, and disempowered so that they can keep consolidating power. I see the pattern. I think a lot of folks who spoke and emailed see the pattern. We have seen the pattern when we talk about how this pre-emption is going to impact our daily operations, so yeah. I won’t apologize for naming it, even in the face of threats aimed not only at our community, right? So senator Donna Campbell’s letter? But also my person, my physical safety, my family, and those that I love – yeah.

    I will continue to resist because my abuelo reminded me on his death bed: Si Dios con nosotros, ¿quien contra nosotros?  And that’s all I got, because then I’m gonna cry, you don’t wanna see that.

     

    Amanda goes next:

    Thank you all for being here. I’ve spent the past 3-4 days trying to write something down to bring this item forward in a way that does it justice. But after watching this livestreamed for over a year, I don’t know if there’s a word for it.  On Council, we’ve been getting a wide range of emails. Many in support, but some threatening.

    I’m not interested in being a politician who can only extend care within the geographical boundaries that I represent. That is such a conditional level of care, and if that’s the kind of politician you all want, I am not that. My term is over in 3 years. I will never be that.

    This is not a political issue to me. This is a moral issue. This is the moral litmus test, for many of us.

    I want to talk about a little girl who has stayed in my mind, for over a year.

    Amanda goes on to describe a girl who was killed so brutally, along with her family, that pieces of her body were found hanging off the wall. (This is Sidra Hassouna.)

    And people came here today to invoke God and religion to justify that? I think what breaks my heart is that I hope we’re really not that lost as a society, to where something like Sidra Hassouna’s death is okay, is justifiable. I’m not the most spiritual person in the room, never professed to be. But I’ll tell you: the God that I serve is not okay with that. You should feel shame invoking God as a reason to justify that.

    Our tax dollars are literally subsidizing over 70% of this genocide. We meet people every day, they come to this dais, and they say “We can’t afford housing. I can’t afford to take care of my kids.” You go to the schools in this school district, the kids are literally waiting to get to school to eat their first meal. Where have we gone wrong, in our society? Where are our priorities?

    I don’t mind being a pariah on this body, if it means standing up for what is right. I’ll be honest with you, and for all the people who have been calling my phone, threatening me, my life, threatening deportation, even though I’m a US citizen, calling me a terrorist, calling me this, calling me that. My own mother is not able to sleep at night, because she’s so worried as to whether somebody’s going to pull up to our house, because I’m literally asking for children and civilians to stop dying? to stop being killed?

    I’m so desensitized to death, in a way in which I have learned more about death through my screen than I ever thought I could. I have seen children’s bodies lined up – and I’m not talking two, I’m not talking three – I’m talking 10+ bodies lined up, next to one another. And their pants are stained with pee, because they took their last breath.

    And people are coming here to me today, with this whole argument, trying to make me convince y’all whether this is a local issue? My colleagues. Saul. You have grandchildren. Two of which are literally the children of my best friend. I held one of them in my arms the other day, and the entire time I thought, “I have seen so many lifeless bodies the size of theirs.” That is wrong.

    It was mentioned, “What about the genocides elsewhere?” First of all, free the Congo. Free Syria. Free Puerto Rico. Free Cuba. It’s the same energy for them all. I want to read a quote. This is following a massacre at Khan Yunis (one of many) on December 15th. This is someone who witnessed literal tents in a hospital being bombed. They said, “Shrieks of rage and grief, coupled with the smell of burned flesh. The only light is the roaring fire in a room of motionless bodies. Those who are left to witness are not the lucky ones.” You have people wishing for death. Because to die is better than to live in the situation that we have helped create.

    This isn’t some natural disaster. This is a man-made atrocity. And we are fully subsidizing it.

    I have seen doctors who are literally traveling from all parts of the world – including this country! So clearly people of this country can realize this is our fight, too – they describe children who have literally had a bullet sniped through their heads, through their hearts. And for my people who have been in the military? You know how much intentionality it takes to not only set yourself up, look through a scope, and then look at a child and pull that trigger? And we’re not supposed to care about this? Because it’s happening elsewhere?

    I’m sorry. But when people on this body go and ask for people’s votes – which you will! – and when you profess to them that you care about them, that you want to see a better livelihood for them, that you want them to be able to take care of their family: all of that is for the birds, if you don’t support this.

    This government is choosing not to do those things for our people, in order to fund this. So if somehow, some way, you are so not able to comprehend this on a humanity level? Don’t go and lie to our people, in this city, and say you care about those things. Don’t do it. And I will say, I will actually use a quote by the Israeli Defense Minister, Yoav Gallant, to help people understand how – similar to an email that we all recieved, I know you all probably read it! from a well-known person in this community, but I’ll do her a favor and not call her name out. But referring to Palestinians as “terrorists”, “rapists”, “killers” – he also used that same language. He also said, “We are fighting against human animals. Gaza won’t return to what it was before. We will eliminate everything.”

    I appreciate the people who brought up the hostages tonight. I too want to see the hostages returned. But I don’t know how you expect that to be accomplished, with indiscriminate bombing. It was never about the hostages. There was an opportunity, and there have been many opportunities, you have the families of the hostages praying to their own government, saying “STOP. You are going to kill our loved ones.” The bombs don’t sit there and fall and say “oops! let me turn around, that’s a hostage under there!” They hit them, too. So if you care about the hostages, you support a ceasefire.

    And I’ll just be quite frank. For all of my friends that are Jewish, who didn’t come here tonight, because of the fact that there has been such a conflation with this resolution being compared to anti-semitism: this resolution explicitly asks and acknowledges both the release of the hostages as well as being absolutely against anti-semitism. But I will say: you cannot tell me that Judaism, as a religion, supports this. Jewish people are not monolithic. That’s why so many people in Israel have spoken out against this. That is why so many people refuse to enlist in an army that is perpetuating a genocide. They don’t want to be a part of it, either.

    So I just, I really plead with y’all. It’s been over a year. I sat on that dais a year ago. And I asked each of you, (with the exception of Lorenzo and me), I stayed until a little after the time we’re at now and I asked you explicitly: If a resolution came before you tomorrow, who would support it? For the crowd’s knowledge – and this is on video! – Councilmember Scott and Councilmember Saul Gonzales both raised their hand. They raised their hand.

    And so I hope you all would do right today, because I’m telling you, it’s getting more hellish by the day. I don’t know what threshold you all expect us to be okay with. But I’m not okay with this. If I had an opportunity – let’s take it back to the holocaust! – and I was sitting on a city council in America? I would have said the same thing then. Because any genocide is wrong. It’s wrong.

    So thank you to the organizers who came, thank you to all the people even who may have come here in opposition, who are able to have conversations with organizers and admit, “Man. I learned something.” I know this may not be favorable to everybody, but this position on this council does not mean more to me than knowing when I go to sleep at night, I did everything I could. Thank you.

    Council discussion

    It is well past midnight at this point, and there is very little Council discussion.

    Lorenzo asks about amendments? What’s the best way for everyone to share amendments to the ceasefire resolution? They kick around how best to draft and share amendments.

    Several councilmembers express regret that this conversation occurred during Passover – that was not intentional.

    Jane Hughson quotes Kirk Watson, from last year when the Austin city council considered a ceasefire resolution:

    “The proposed resolution of the Austin City Council will not realistically end the violence on the other side of the globe. Nor will it stop federal taxes from being used to implement foreign policy. That is not in our power. The resolution, however, has the power to divide Austin, and will.”

    Jane makes two main points:

    1. We can’t do anything that makes a difference.
    2. Why this one war, and not all the others?

    To the first point, Jane and Amanda quibble about whether this makes a difference or not. Amanda argues that yes, it’s symbolic, but it matters to the local Palestinian community. And after all, activists have been showing up for over a year. Clearly it matters to them.

    To Jane’s second point: I mean, this is the only current war where the US is funding the aggressor to this extent. It is uniquely different.

    The vote: Do we want to discuss this further?

    Yes: Lorenzo, Alyssa, Amanda, Saul

    No: Matthew, Jane

    I’m Stuck on the Fence: Shane

    But four is enough!

    So this will come back. Stay tuned.

    Question and Answer from the Press and Public:

    Four people stuck around to ask questions, at 1:00 am in the morning:

    • Will amendments be made public?
    • Were any of the councilmembers lobbied by rightwing organizations?
    • We shouldn’t agitate anyone over this.

    Hours 0:00 – 2:06, 6/4/24

    A solid hour of citizen comments to kick things off!  

    Nearly everyone – 17 speakers – spoke about the issues of Malachi Williams’ death at the hands of SMPD, and calling for a ceasefire resolution for Gaza.

    Malachi Williams: backstory here.

    The family and activists are calling for three things:

    1. Release the name and badge ID number of the officer that killed Malachi Williams
    2. The officer should be placed on leave while the investigation is ongoing.
    3. The family should be able to view all officer and storefront footage, with a lawyer present.

    It sounds like the chief has offered to let the family watch some of the footage, but not all, and is denying the request to have their lawyer present. That’s pretty goddamn outrageous that you would ever require someone to forgo a lawyer in a legal context.  (They don’t have a right to a lawyer, because nobody is under arrest or anything, but plainly it’s what’s fair.)

    A lawyer would be able to inform the family about what Chief Standridge is legally able to do, and what he can’t, and a lawyer can advise the family – on the spot – on what’s in their best interests. If a lawyer isn’t there, then Chief Standridge is the authority on what Chief Standridge is legally able to say and do. See the problem?

    Resolution for a ceasefire:  

    The activists didn’t just make this up on a whim. This is what’s going on all over the country.  They’re working on it in Austin, where they ultimately got fed up and passed a People’s Resolution instead. They’re working on it in San Antonio, which also got stuck. There haven’t actually been any cities in Texas that have been successful, but here’s a full list elsewhere.

    There were a few other speakers:

    • One guy from Outsiders Anonymous shows up to advocate for their gym/treatment center during the CDBG grants item. (We ended up funding them at about 80% of what they asked.)
    • One speaker talks about her adult child with disabilities. There’s no day center in San Marcos anymore, and he commutes to New Braunfels.

    We absolutely should have a day center for adults with special needs. I’m super uninformed on this topic, but it’s definitely part of serving the needs of your community.

    But let’s talk about the other part: there’s no public transportation to get back and forth between San Marcos and New Braunfels.

    Here’s the problem: we’re on the southern tip of the Austin Cap Metro service area:

    New Braunfels, Redwood and Seguin are on the northern edge of the San Antonio Alamo Regional Transit:

    And the two systems don’t overlap or coordinate on their boundaries, so there’s just this cliff dividing San Marcos from its neighbors:

    Puzzle pieces! (I had fun making that picture.)

    Suppose you use the shuttle service because of your physical disability. How are you supposed to get from Redwood to San Marcos? There are a lot more mental health resources in New Braunfels than in San Marcos, but only if you’ve got the means to get yourself there and back.

    Listen: Seguin, New Braunfels, and San Marcos need to triangulate on some shared public transit along I-35 and 123. Austin Metro is not meeting our needs here.

    Item 9: Community Development Block Grant applications, 2024-25

    HUD gave us $766K this year to give away, and we’ve got $639K rolling over from last year. So total, we’ve got about $1.4 million to give away.

    First off: we have $639K leftover? Out of $712K that we were awarded last year? What on earth happened?!

    It turns out that it rolls over from year to year, and there are project delays. It’s spelled out in the report here:

    So the first two categories – Housing Programs and Public Facilities – are really falling short.

    Alyssa Garza asks about the Housing Rehab program?

    Answer: Housing Rehab had $800K from CDBG and $800K from ARPA, for a total of $1.6 million. They are running seriously behind. Currently there are 30 houses with bids in place. Five are under construction and 25 are pending, and that will use up the funding.

    Alyssa also asks: Can we hire lawyers to help homeowners with title problems? (This is mentioned under the Home Demo program above – “Properties with sub-standard structures also tend to have ownership issues”.)

    Answer: We mostly rely on volunteers, because Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid tends to be so backed up.

    Alyssa: There are free legal aid programs at St. Mary’s and UT-Austin that have offered to help.

    The staff is vaguely friendly about this suggestion, but not in an “omg I’ll do that tomorrow” kind of way.

    In the end, they decide to put “paying for a lawyer” on the list of side-projects that can be consulted when there’s a loose bit of money that suddenly becomes available.

    Onto 2024! Here’s the criteria that we use:

    (For what it’s worth, I don’t love the Council Priorities. I think they risk creating perverse incentives.)

    Moving on! There was one ineligible application and 11 eligible applications. Here are the recommended funding amounts from staff:

    Anyway: Council does not make any changes.

    I believe this is just a first reading, so if you’ve got advice for Council, you’ve got another chance at the July meeting.

    Items 10-11: Kissing Tree

    Kissing Tree was approved in 2010. It’s a PDD – “Planned Development District”. This means the city got to micromanage every last detail of the whole project, and put it in writing, in a contract.

    [Quick primer on PDDs: They’re a mixed bag. You can spell out exactly what will be built, but you can also waive a lot of regulations that the developer doesn’t like. In general, PDDs are only as good as the Council that negotiates them.

    We got rid of them in 2016, which was an unforced error and I’ve complained about it a lot.  Then recently we brought them back again. So now the city has the ability to lock things down again.]

    Here’s where it is:

    You know, this thing, out on Hunter Road and Centerpoint:

    Here’s the original plan:

    So, a lot of homes around a lot of golf course. (To their credit, they use reclaimed water on the golf course.)

    That map has not been updated since 2010, so I have no idea how much has been built out already.

    Kissing Tree wants to modify their PDD, so they have to go back to Council.  Here’s what Kissing Tree wants to do:

    “Active Adult Units” means senior housing. 

    In other words:
    The original plan is for 3,450 units:
    – 2,850 were senior housing
    – 600 were available for everyone else.

    Now they want build 3,150 total units:
    – 3,150 for seniors
    – 0 available for everyone else.

    It’s not that big a deal – I’m sure this is more profitable for them now – but I’m irritated that no one provided an explanation or talked about consequences.   In fact, Council talked about it for roughly 30 seconds, and this was the entire exchange:

    Shane Scott: “This is a great example of why PDDs are so useful. We got rid of them, and we should bring them back.”

    Jane Hughson: “We are bringing them back. We’ve discussed this.”

    Shane: “Was I here for that?”

    Jane: “I think so?”

    SMCISD gets kind of affected by this kind of decision. The problem is that San Marcos is lopsided – we need more families to balance out all the non-family tax base (ie the university, the outlet malls, and things like Kissing Tree.) From time to time, we get dinged under the state’s Robin Hood law and have to send money back to the state for poorer districts, despite being a Title 1 school district ourself. It’s a complicated mess.

    But just remember: Texas squandered a $32 BILLION dollar surplus last legislative session.  This was sales tax money – from all Texans – which got sent back to property owners. We literally took money from renters and gave it to home owners.

    There is plenty of money in this state to fund all schools properly. We just need to elect a governor and legislature that wants to do so.

    ….

    Item 12:  Good news on the Water-Wastewater Treatment Plant front!   

    We’re getting a new centrifuge:

    and a diffuser replacement in aeration basin:

    We promise not to spend more than $6,716,477.45.

    And a very special San Marxist shout-out to the kind soul on city staff who put these photos in the powerpoint presentation!

    These slides didn’t even get shown during the meeting. I see you, I appreciate you.

    Item 16:  We are meekly opening the door for the possibility of maybe someday, beginning a conversation about paid parking downtown.

    This is such a tentative baby step that there are no details or decision points yet.  We’re just strapping on our sun bonnets, lacing up our sneakers, and sizing up the path ahead of us.

    I did think this heat map was interesting:

    That map is pretty unintelligible; here’s my attempt to improve:

    This is only measuring parking – not traffic congestion or anything.

    Here’s what the colors mean:
    20 red blocks: street parking is generally over 90% full.
    Three orange blocks: street parking is usually 85-90% full.
    Twelve yellow blocks: street parking is usually 75-85% full.
    Eight green blocks: street parking is usually 50-75% full.
    Four light blue blocks: street parking is usually 25-50% full.
    Three dark blue blocks: street parking is usually under 25% full.

    It was a very short meeting!

    Hours 0:00 – 2:03, 5/7/24

    Yowza, you guys. Most of this meeting was Citizen Comments. There were two full hours of citizen comments on Tuesday. A total of 40 speakers. Plus an additional 3 speakers at the 3 pm meeting.

    So we are going to park it at Citizen Comment and unpack all this.

    Topic 1: Malachi Williams.

    We’re going to start with the most heartbreaking part, which is that the family of Malachi Williams spoke to council.  I cannot do it justice – you should go listen yourself.  Here’s the video. 
    – Malachi’s grandfather speaks first, at 1:25:40
    – His older sister, at 1:29
    – His mother at 1:31
    – His younger sister at 1:36
    – His aunt at 1:38:30
    – His third sister at 1:58
    – His grandfather also spoke at the 3 pm workshop, here at 11:30.

    You should definitely believe that Malachi Williams came from an incredibly loving, supportive family who is devastated by this loss.  They are desperate for some answers.

    So what do we know?

    Malachi Williams was a 22 year old who was killed by cops on April 11th, 2024.  You can read the basic facts here.

    Here’s a video of Chief Standridge explaining the SMPD side. There is a transcript at the YT video, if you don’t feel like watching

    The family has three requests:

    • Release the name and badge of the officer
    • Take the officer off duty until the investigation is complete
    • Let the family and their lawyer watch the bodycam videos, as well as gas station and HEB footage.

    These are really reasonable.  In the video, Chief Standridge has a big long thing about how legally, the videos are evidence, and so they can’t be released publicly until after the grand jury and/or trials play itself out.  But the family is not asking him to publicly release the videos – they’re asking for family and a lawyer to see them.

    The family’s comments are beautiful and heartbreaking. They’re an extremely close family. They just need answers so that they can begin processing this enormous loss.  

    The rest of us will not know what happened for a long time. (But look: a knife is not a gun.  He was armed with two large kitchen knives. I have questions about how exactly Malachi could be close enough to pose an immediate risk to someone else, and yet it was safe to fire a gun at him.)

    About 20 of the other speakers talked about Malachi Williams and called on Council for justice.

    Topic 2: Ceasefire in Gaza.

    There were 32 speakers calling on Council to pass a resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.  (Most of these speakers were also the same ones who talked about about Malachi Williams, and they connected these two topics under the same umbrella of state violence against civilians.)

    There’s been some drama, because this appeared on the rough draft of the council agenda:

    But then it was not on the final agenda, because Shane Scott withdrew his support. (It takes two council members, or the mayor alone, to put something on the agenda.)

    Lots of speakers say that Shane withdrew his support due to a threat of some sort? Maybe! Or maybe he just didn’t feel like being in the hot seat. Who knows.

    Anyway, 32 speakers is a LOT of speakers. The resolution for a ceasefire has been coming up for months – here, here, here, here, and here – but not this many speakers. Obviously this connects with the mounting protests at Columbia, University of Texas, USC, and so on.

    And look, the protests are actually paying off. Biden has paused two shipments of bombs to Israel over the invasion of Rafah. Biden is slowly hardening on Israel. (He’s going too slowly for me to stomach, but he’s miles away from how Abbot or Trump would handle it.  They would escalate the destruction of Palestine to armageddon levels. )

    Look, we’ve got a governor who is actively supporting Israel in a number of ways.

    This ceasefire resolution is a municipal issue because city councils can amplify the voices of their community. This resolution would send a message to Abbott (which he would ignore) and a smaller message to Biden (which he seems to be responding to). So c’mon, Council, get your act together.

    Topic #3: Miscellaneous

    Finally, there were a few other topics:

    • The need for more teen programming in San Marcos
    • A great comment about “bro-dozers”. I love this one. You know the guys that rev their engines through town and startle you into spilling your drink, if you weren’t expecting it?

    The speaker has an apartment on Hopkins, and so he got himself a decibel reader. When the bros rev their engines, it’s 90-95 decibels in his apartment.

    We actually have a noise ordinance against vehicles!

    But see, it only covers music coming from the vehicle, and not the engine itself.  

    But consider:

    Presto! Look how easy to fix!

    City staff! File this away for the next round of code updates, please and thank you.

    • Remember the SMART Terminal? Oh yes you do. (Brush up on it here, if you don’t.)

    It was originally on the agenda for tonight as well:

    But it got pushed back to a future meeting. (Franklin Mountain is the SMART/Axis company.)

    Noah Brock and Annie Donovan were two of the main activist organizers last time. They’ve submitted a ton of open records requests. Here’s what they’re saying about this upcoming issue:

    Franklin-Mountain is apparently getting mad at Caldwell County, because Caldwell County doesn’t let developers do whatever the hell they want. Caldwell County requires all these planning documents up front, such as:

    • Subdivision plan
    • Water Protection Plan
    • Phase Development Plan
    • Traffic Impact Analysis
    • and more!

    before they’ll process Franklin-Mountain’s application.

    Whereas we were all ready to let the developer pinky-swear to be good-hearted, and we’d sign over all rights to do anything they wanted. We didn’t require any of those!

    So here, the developer is moving roads around, in ways that seem to violate their good-neighbor promises. This roadway doesn’t match anything they’ve claimed up till now. This annexation seems like it would not benefit San Marcos in any way, but it would off-load costs onto the city.

    Stay tuned! This might be on the agenda at the May 21st meeting.

    • Virginia Parker speaks again about the drought triggers passed last time, and asks if there’s any way to revise it.
    • One speaker talks about Purpose Built Student Housing, and has a number of recommendations to address tenants’ rights. Things like increased funding for code enforcement, a right to resolve late payments before evictions, a right to a public defender, just cause evictions, and no-net-loss housing ordinances.

    Texas is very pro-landlord, so it would take some research to figure out what’s legal to do here, but I generally support all action in this direction!