If approved, the $720 million bond would cost city of Austin taxpayers an additional $56 per year based on a median-valued home of $250,000 if the cost were implemented at once. Below is the cost based on the median home price from the listed council districts. If approved, the $720 million bond would cost city of Austin taxpayers an additional $56 per year based on a median-valued home of $250,000 if the cost were implemented at once. Below is the cost based on the median home price from the listed council districts.[/caption]

Austin City Council is one step closer toward pursuing the largest transportation bond proposition in the city’s history that Mayor Steve Adler said he hopes will transform significant corridors and make meaningful improvements to sidewalks, trails and bicycle facilities.


On June 23, the council approved pursuing a $720 million bond package proposed by Adler for the Nov. 8 election. At an early August meeting, City Council will set the bond language and officially put the bond on the ballot.


“It will have things that are important to everybody, but it may not be the same things,” Adler said. “… This package is judicious in the projects it picks but also actually will enable the community to move forward on those things that it has spent years planning.”



Putting plans in place


Adler’s proposed bond package would allocate the majority of funds—$482 million—toward implementing the city’s seven completed corridor studies on Airport Boulevard, Burnet Road, East Riverside Drive, Guadalupe Street, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, and North and South Lamar boulevards.


Moving forward on these plans would increase vehicle throughput, improve congestion, enhance transit, and make communities more complete and walkable, Adler said.


“If we really want to make the city affordable, then we have to lower housing costs and we have to lower transportation costs,” he said. “Those are the two biggest costs that people pay.”


The bond package would also dedicate $55 million to implement the sidewalk master plan and other safe routes to schools; $30 million for the urban trails master plan, $20 million for the bicycle master plan, $15 million for the Vision Zero master plan, and $17 million to upgrade substandard streets and other capital improvements.


For areas of the city not near the corridors, Adler proposed dedicating $101 million toward improvements to regional roads, including Old Bee Caves Road near the Y at Oak Hill.




If approved, the $720 million mobility bond would allocate $482 million to implement the city’s seven completed corridor plans, $101 million for regional projects and $137 million to implement other existing master plans for sidewalks, urban trails, bicycle facilities and Vision Zero as well as make other capital improvements. If approved, the $720 million mobility bond would allocate $482 million to implement the city’s seven completed corridor plans, $101 million for regional projects and $137 million to implement other existing master plans for sidewalks, urban trails, bicycle facilities and Vision Zero as well as make other capital improvements.[/caption]

Funding the bond


Voters last considered a transportation bond proposition in November 2014 but defeated it by 57 to 43 percent. That proposition would have authorized the city to sell $600 million on bonds to fund a 9.5-mile urban rail line and would have used $400 million in nonvoter-approved state highway bonds for regional projects.


If voters approve the $720 million bond proposition this November, the city would use $250 million of its existing debt capacity to finance the bond. The city would then issue bonds for the remaining $500 million, requiring an increase to the debt service portion of the tax rate by 2 1/4 cents.


Greg Canally, the city’s deputy chief financial officer, said he estimates the increase could be in half-cent increments over eight years with the first increase occurring in fiscal year 2017-18. By spreading out the tax rate increases, he said, this will put some of the tax burden on future residents.


“It’s one of the trade-offs we make when we live in a community,” he said. “We want to make sure we do [tax rate increases] in an equitable fashion because future residents will benefit from those improvements, too.”


The financial impact on voters would be $56 annually, or less than $5 per month, based on a median-valued home of $250,000, Canally said.


The city usually has a general bond election every six to eight years for various projects, including housing, libraries, parks and transportation, capital program consultant Susan Daniels said.


Since 1998, voters have approved
$638 million in transportation bonds. Bonds from 2010 and 2012 are still active, she said. Transportation bonds usually take longer to implement because projects are typically funded in phases, Daniels said.


“It’s really important for projects to keep some momentum moving forward,” she said. “In the 2012 program, we had a design bucket [of funding] for the intent of getting [transportation] projects through another phase of development.”



‘Go big’ on transportation


The city typically creates a citizens bond advisory committee to spend about a year creating a bond package. But with a quicker timeframe for pursuing a bond in 2016, the council hosted Mobility Talks this spring to gather public input.


A lack of a more vetted process caused concern among other council members that the process was too rushed, but Adler said the community has been discussing the corridor plans for six years.


“I feel that what we’ve proposed has been vetted—and vetted a lot over a very long period of time and involving thousands of members of our community,” he said. “So I heard my colleagues saying the process felt rushed, but I disagree with that because the things we were proposing were the things that have already been vetted by the community.”


During his conversations with the community, Adler said stakeholders—pedestrian, bicycle and transit advocates as well as business owners and area chambers of commerce—told him to “go big” on the bond and specifically implement the corridor plans. About half the city’s population lives within 1.5 miles of one of the corridors and about one-third live within a half-mile, he said.


“We wouldn’t be able to complete all of the corridor work, but I also think there’s going to be an opportunity to leverage the money we have with developments that are going to be occurring,” he said.


“Everything points to the corridors,” Adler said. “If we were going to make a significant investment in transportation, everything that this city has done points to that place.”


Citing concern about the lack of regional projects in South Austin, District 5 Council Member Ann Kitchen advocated for more corridor planning funding throughout South Austin. Although her amendment to the mayor’s proposal was not approved June 23, the proposal did include funding for another corridor plan somewhere in the area.


“I’m optimistic we can make a few changes to the language in August that will represent a better balance for South Austin,” she said. “… The interest is there among council members to have balance across the city; we’re just not quite there yet.”


She said South Austin residents told her roads needing improvements include William Cannon Drive, Slaughter Lane, Manchaca Road, South First Street and South Congress Avenue, some of which are also identified in the city’s Imagine Austin comprehensive plan as priorities.


“South Austin is a large area, and we need the flexibility to identify the most appropriate roads and significant dollars to make improvements,” she said.