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Austin's Downtown Commission hopes to get anti-graffiti task force off the ground with help from the city

The Downtown Commission wants the city of Austin to allocate funding toward the task force in its upcoming budget. The Austin Downtown Commission is seeking funding from the city of Austin to create an anti-graffiti task force in its upcoming budget. The commission voted in January 2023 to create a task force aimed at speeding up the process of cleaning up graffiti. The Chair of the Downtown Commission, August Harris, stated that the city had not had a good process in place to address the graffiti challenges. The goal is to establish a $2 million budget for the task force, which Harris said is already used to abate graffiti in the city. The task force's purpose is to remove graffiti done without permission, which violates state penal code.

Austin's Downtown Commission hopes to get anti-graffiti task force off the ground with help from the city

Veröffentlicht : vor 4 Wochen durch Kelsey Sanchez in

The Downtown Commission wants the city of Austin to allocate funding toward the task force in its upcoming budget.

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AUSTIN, Texas — Austin's Downtown Commission wants to combat graffiti across the city, but it needs some help from the city in order to do so.

In January 2023, the commission voted to create an anti-graffiti task force aimed at speeding up the process of cleaning it up.

"The city did not have a great process in place to address the graffiti challenges we have in the city," said August Harris, the Chair of the Downtown Commission.

Harris explained that last year, he had noticed the city had become a canvas for vandals, and the expense to abate the graffiti was coming at a great cost toward the city and businesses affected by it.

Last week, members revisited its recommendation to city council in an effort to have them allocate funding toward the task force through the city's upcoming budget, which will likely be tackled by new city manager, T.C. Broadnax.

The goal is to establish a $2 million budget for the task force, which Harris said is an amount already being used to abate graffiti in the city.

"This just put it in one bundle, in one streamlined package, so it was more efficient and so that this issue could be dealt with more effectively across the city," said Harris.

Harris added that the purpose is to remove the graffiti that is done without permission.

"Some of the work that's done is very artistic, but if it's done on private or public property without the owner's consent, it is a violation of the state penal code," said Harris.

“The city understands that this recommendation was made, but we don't have a "stance" to share at this point and aren’t in a position to provide any possible budgetary implications, since it's just been brought to our attention."

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