Justin Jacobson

City Council, District 3

Campaign Website

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With Council’s decision to end CodeNEXT, how do you envision moving forward to update Austin’s land development code?

We have to get stakeholders back to the table in a good faith effort to get a rewrite done. Too …

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How will you help address the affordability problems in Austin?

First, we need to commit to preserving the income restricted housing that we already have. Moving up the income latter, …

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How will you address Austin’s housing shortage? What regulations will you change to allow more housing where people want to live?

We need smaller lot sizes and the ability to build more units on them. The ability to have and process …

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What is your vision for the future of high capacity transit in Austin?

It has to be an integral part of our transit solution. I see this as a combination of (true) light …

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Moving forward, what role should dockless mobility play in Austin?

It’s a critical solution to figuring out the first and final mile solutions for how we get people from their …

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What steps will you take to support modernization and digitization of operations within the City of Austin?

I’d like to see a task force or commission established, from our leading tech minds in the city, to work …

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What do you see as the City’s responsibility toward addressing the digital divide in Austin, and what steps would you take to bridge that divide?

Overcoming this divide has lifelong implications for residents of Austin. With the realities of today’s economy, the impact of not …

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How can the City support the continued growth and success of Austin’s tech sector?

We need to maintain our high quality of life in Austin. It’s the amenities here that give our city its …

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How can the City better work with Austin’s tech community to bring innovative approaches to civic challenges?

One of the biggest challenges facing CodeNEXT was the sentiment about how people were able to engage with the process. …

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Affordability is discussed a lot in our community. How do you define affordability?

Affordability should encompass the total costs for housing, transportation and quality of life factors including proximity to one’s work, school, …

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Which bond Propositions on the November 2018 ballot do you support or not support? Check each that you support. Briefly explain your position.

Prop A Prop B Prop C Prop E Prop F Prop G Prop H Prop I Props A-G help to …

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Do you support a budget at the effective tax rate so home and business owners continue to benefit from the “growth dividend” and pay the same amount in property taxes as in the previous fiscal year? How do we balance this strategy with meeting the needs of people struggling to access services due to a lack of service capacity? How do you prioritize additional funding? Where would you look for efficiencies? (Y/N; Explain)

No While I think the effective tax rate is a good tool in understanding the yearly increases of tax dollars …

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As you know, the City unsuccessfully tried to change the code, what do you believe needs to be done differently to achieve a better code? Will you support working to revise the land development code to provide and allow for predictability and deep affordability? (Y/N; Explain)

Yes I will support revising the code to provide and allow for predictability and deep affordability. The failure of our …

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Would you support a policy requiring the City’s Development Services department to achieve its goal of 90% permit review completion within 15 business days across all departments/disciplines by April 2019? (Y/N/Explain)

Yes. The stories I hear from my father, a 38 year participant of construction in Austin, homeowners, and small business …

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Do you support maintaining affordable utility costs across Austin Energy and Austin Water that adheres strictly to the City’s affordability goals for Austin Energy, which require AustinEnergy rates to be in the bottom half of Texas ratepayers and minimizes increases to two percent per year for each rate class? (Y/N Explain)

Yes, In retaining public ownership of our utilities, these are the cost and rate benefits we should expect. Keeping closely in …

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What is your collaborative vision when working with other governmental entities (Travis County, State of Texas, Central Health, etc.)?

There isn’t an issue that Austin confronts where there are not either other jurisdictions experiencing the same thing or where …

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Solutions to homelessness exist – they require scaling up social services and housing programs, including the pathways from shelter to housing. To date, Austin has not identified adequate funding to address this challenge. How would you work to identify the funding needed?

Funding to combat homelessness will have to come from a combination of sources. As council has recently done, we should …

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Council adopted the Strategic Housing Blueprint last year, calling for 13,500 new units annually over 10 years. This gets us to break-even in terms of need. Would you support amending the City’s proposed Strategic Housing Plan to increase the number to at least 15,000 housing units per year for 10 years, keeping the breakout across income levels and including permanent supportive housing for those chronically experiencing homelessness? (Y/N; Explain)

Yes We need to get beyond breaking even. We need an amount of stock that will help put downwards pressures …

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Many low-income families and persons experiencing homelessness have debt to the utility companies, which are now barriers to their ability to securing housing. Would you support increasing debt forgiveness programs for 3-4 years to help more people access housing? (Y/N/Explain)

Absolutely. Utility costs factor in for over all affordability. If we have the ability to help our neighbors get into …

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Austin has experienced growth but some constituencies have been left behind. What is your vision for the City’s role in funding/supporting the nonprofit network that provide much needed social services? What is your plan for addressing disparities and inequities in our community?

The nonprofit sector goes a long way in filling the gaps where the City doesn’t have the extra bandwidth. Council …

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Council has passed 2 resolutions supporting an annual increase of about 2-3% for social service contracts in order to ensure that service agencies can keep up with rising costs of doing business and maintain service capacity. Would you direct the City Manager to include this annual increase in the budget for contracts meeting their performance targets? (Y/N/Explain)

Yes. This is a fair mechanism for contractors that are meeting their targets. It helps to ensure continuity and efficacy in …

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One of the best ways to make Austin more affordable is to ensure we have a diverse set of industries which provide local, skilled and the hard-to-employ talent the opportunity to compete for jobs that have a career ladder. The Austin City Council is considering adopting a revised economic incentive policy, expanding the previous one-size-fits-all policy. If the Austin Chamber of Commerce presents a company that meets the criteria for an incentive as set by City Council policy, will you vote to support incentivizing jobs for both small operators and large in our city? How will you monitor success with the provision requiring employment of the hard-to-employ?

If these newly adopted incentives have strong tangible benefits for the community, I’m am more than open to considering them. …

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How will you coordinate with regional partners to meaningfully address our increasing traffic level? What is your long-term vision for addressing traffic in Austin, and what would be the immediate first actions you would champion as a City Council Member to address the crisis?

We need to invest in the knowledge of what’s happening on the ground for our partners, articulate the interplay between …

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Transportation is the second highest family cost. When it is difficult to move freely around Austin, access to services and economic opportunities are limited; time spent commuting leaves less room for family obligations and socializing; and Austin becomes a more frustrating place. Do you support the items below? (Please mark each one you agree with)

Agree: Improve high-capacity transit to make it a more convenient, reliable alternative to single occupancy vehicles Support improvements for South …

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In a recent poll, residents of Austin cited rising property taxes as a major issue they face, iconic business are having to close their doors and longtime residents are moving out citing rising property taxes. Some have also cited homelessness as an impediment to business. How would you slow or stop the increase in City property taxes, encourage other taxing entities to do the same, and balance the requests for more funding coming from the City Departments and the public? One example of the request of more funding is to expand social service contracts to meet needs, including to provide more supportive housing programs. How do you balance less taxes and increased demand for social services? Please explain.

First and foremost we need to take a more aggressive fight to the legislature to do something about school finance. …

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Austin has long since been perceived as a town of creative innovators. Given the City’s recent regulatory attempts with the sharing and gig economy (Uber, AirBnB, Scooters), what is your position on how the City should handle emerging technologies and emerging markets? What is your view, generally, on the conflict between consumer demands and government interests? Similarly, when non-profits secure grant funding for innovative social solutions that requires a local match, what is your view on city funding being available for the match?

The City needs to be as open as possible to emerging markets and technologies, but never waiver in its commitment …

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Do you agree that the ballot language proposed for two ballot petitions – the CodeNEXT petition and the Austin Efficiency Audit – was misleading to the voters of Austin and if so, will you help clarify to voters what these measures really mean – regardless of how you might vote on them? (Note: This article in the Austin Bullldog is a helpful review. Also note: the Texas Supreme Court ruled on August 27 th , in favor of the city of Austin – see KUT report here.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

I find the language for the CodeNext petition cumbersome and leaning too far in the direction that requires one to …

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Will you pledge to immediately reconvene the Charter Revision Commission to revisit its recommendations and to discuss how to ensure its most important recommendations are placed on the next available city ballot? (Note: This helpful article in the Austin Bullldog explains how Council inaction put the kibosh on major reforms that should have been on the November ballot. The most egregious omission to us at IndyAustin was Recommendation 4 – which would close a loophole currently preventing petitions to repeal controversial Council decisions like the Precourt Soccer Stadium or the 2008 $2.3B biomass boondoggle – aka Voter Referendum. Read our Referendum page here.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

Rate your support: 8

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Will you refrain from voting to allow the City Manager to execute contracts for controversial projects like the Soccer Stadium on public land and demand a final review and vote of the Council? (Note: This letter from open government attorney, Bill Aleshire, to the City Attorney, warns about the legal problems that are likely ensue after a final lease or contract is signed with Precourt Sports Ventures.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

On issues of this magnitude, its paramount that council fulfills is roll of oversight and offer leadership. Is they do …

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Do you agree that Austin desperately needs a united front of officeholders, local businesses and voters to “make growth pay for itself?” (Note: An example is the passage of full water impact fees implemented on new developments in 2013. See the huge benefits below. Mind you, these benefits would have disappeared had the “Pilot Knob fiasco” been allowed to stand.) $300 million collections years 1-10 (already raised $150M in first 5 years) $45 million less debt service Fiscal Year 2018 15% lower customer bills Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

I don’t want to subsidize the profits for anyone at the expense of our city’s limited resources. However, I think …

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Do you agree that increasing housing supply is only one side of the supply-demand equation for beating back Austin’s affordability crisis, and that Austin should refrain from subsidizing growth during times of rapid growth so as to reduce demand growth to levels that can be met with new supply? If so, in the Candidate Response section below, please tell us your ideas for ways to make Austin’s growth pay for itself. (Hint: You can refer to any of the materials parked on this page from the years of work conducted by local developers, Brian Rodgers and Ed Wendler, Jr., especially the power point at the bottom of the page Total Accounting and Impact Fees.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

I agree with the first statement that increasing supply is only one part of the supply side equation in the …

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Will you refrain from supporting any economic development projects that do not adhere to a 90% local hiring requirement​, unless they are related to addressing a security threat to the Austin area? (Note: 2014 Candidates Steve Adler and Greg Casar approved this idea in ChangeAustin.org’s candidate questionnaire. To our knowledge, neither have attempted to fulfill this promise.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

I can commit to making sure that any economic development project the city pursues has tangible meaningful benefits for our …

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Will you pledge to propose an ordinance or charter amendment to end the practice of the Chamber of Commerce or any other private trade association from negotiating public subsidy deals for the City of Austin without a super-majority vote of the City Council? — like the one going on right now for bringing the Amazon H2Q to the Austin area? (Note: This IndyAustin blog linking to the Austin Bulldog on the secretive Amazon negotiations by the Greater Austin Area Chamber of Commerce and Amazon for the City of Austin.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

Large scale deals, such as these, most certainly need the consultation and oversight of council. If these groups think they …

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Do you support Austin voters securing their right to vote on CodeNEXT or any comprehensive​ development code overhaul — Proposition J on the November ballot? (Note: Passage of Proposition J does not mean that all code changes come to a public vote – only a comprehensive code overhaul, whether it’s called CodeNEXT or something else.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

While I completely agree that council has been deaf to the concerns of citizens during our recent attempt at a …

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As climate change and fast-paced growth proceeds in Austin, there is growing concern to both secure water supply for the future while conserving a finite resource for our region. Will you pledge to support an Austin future that prioritizes conservation, reuse, and local water supplies, and to oppose actions that would require pumping of groundwater in either the Edwards Aquifer or the Carrizo/Simsboro aquifers east of Austin beyond a sustainable level that matches rates of recharge? Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

Water sustainability should be one of the top considerations as we grow and develop into our future. Rate your support: …

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Do you support the right of Austin voters to vote on the sale, lease, or conveyance of any City-owned land that will be used as a sports and/or entertainment stadium? (Note: We recommend this Statesman commentary by UT Professor, Nathen Jenson, for context to this question.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

This is an acceptable use of a ballot measure and something the population writ large should have a say in. …

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When the Council considers an agenda item that includes granting fee waivers or waivers of environmental standards, a.​ will you pledge to push for public agenda notices that clearly set out proposed fee waivers whether or not it is required by the Texas Open Meetings Act? And, b.​ , will you pledge to help ensure that staff- granted waivers are reported to Council? (Note: District Judges said that the postings for Pilot Knob – which did not mention over $100 million in fee waivers, and the Champion tract agenda item – which did not mention waivers from the Hill Country Roadway Ordinance and Lake Austin Watershed Ordinance – should have included public notice of those waivers.) Rate your support on a scale of 1 to 10, 10 being the most support and 1 being the least.

It is more than fair that, if a fee waiver is granter that it should have public notice. I know …

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What are the most critical issues in your district and how will you address them?

The negative costs of Austin’s growth, rising rents, tax bills, home valuations, increased displacement, and questions of retaining neighborhood character …

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What is your top environmental concern and how would you address it?

Climate Change is our number one challenge. It effects the severity of droughts, the maintenance of our water supply, increased …

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Explain what important aspects of the land development code revision you support.

I want to see code that allows for building diverse missing middle housing stock, decreased parking space requirements, respect of …

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What policies do you support to make Austin a more affordable place to live for all residents?

I want to preserve current affordable housing, identify city owned properties prime for affordable housing, commit to strategic land banking …

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Do you consider parks an important community asset? Why?

Parks are an essential community asset. In an attempt to save space, I would like to echo the myriad of …

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Ensuring equitable access to quality parks for all Austinites is a key priority for Austin Parks Foundation. How might you work as a decision-maker for both your district and the city as a whole to move the needle on equitable access to quality parks?

I want to intensively identify the wants and needs of District 3 in regards to Parkland, acting decisively on them. …

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What’s your favorite park in Austin? Why?

Edward Rendon Sr Metro Park. Specifically, the shaded bench next just west of the pedestrian bridge as one is leaving …

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Parkland dedication fees are one mechanism by which the city funds park acquisition and improvements. What is your stance on parkland dedication fees, and are you in favor of maintaining them during the Land Development Code updating process?

I fully support these fees. I also believe in maintaining them in any future update to our city’s Land Development …

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Austin Parks Foundation is continuously involved in community engagement to ensure that our projects and work align with community values and needs. What is your philosophy on community engagement, and how would you engage with the community to ensure that their needs around parks and open space are appropriately addressed?

I believe that there can never be enough community engagement. Through switching to the 10/1 system and other efforts, Austin …

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What do you believe the role of private partners should be in maintaining and improving public parks? What actions would you take to strengthen and improve public-private partnerships?

They are highly important, especially in light of the finite resources that the city can command, but should not give …

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The City of Austin Parks and Recreation Department faces $125 million in deferred maintenance each year, ranging from playground maintenance and aquatics needs to mowing and servicing trash and recycling receptacles. What would be your strategy for addressing this need?

The funds proposed in Prop C are a good starting point, but speak to only half of the back log …

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How can legislation improve access to affordable housing?

In the State of Texas, one of the biggest boons for affordable housing would be the permission for localities to …

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How would you address the issue of declining enrollment in Austin’s schools and bridge the achievement gap across AISD?

From a position at city hall, I think it is important that city leaders are helping to foster complete communities …

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What role can Austin play to improve access to affordable healthcare?

When we look forward at building complete communities, I believe projects should get higher priority when they include space for …

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How do you plan to accommodate low-income neighborhoods who need alternative transportation methods?

First, let’s listen to those folks and follow the data to meet their needs. This is an area where we …

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How would you improve access to affordable housing for both renters and owners in Austin?

To address affordability, we are going to need an all the above strategy. On one end, we will need to …

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How do you plan to to improve access to public transportation and ensure its affordability?

We need to build out a more robust transit system writ large. Whether Bus Rapid Transit or Rail, we need …

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How can you make healthcare more accessible and affordable to the large population of small business owners and entrepreneurs in Austin?

The city can put extra money up to inform small businesses of existing programs and services provided. The synergies that …

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How would you counteract anti-immigrant sentiment to make our local communities welcoming to all?

I start with my personal story. Immigrants make up many of the folks in my life, be they documented or …

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As a majority-minority state, what role do you see Austin playing in the long-term conversation around immigration and migrant rights?

Austin has to be one of the leaders. We can uniquely show how these groups allow our city to flourish. …

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