protist

joined 2 years ago
[–] protist@mander.xyz 11 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I don't recommend anyone ever go to "Barking Springs," the free part downstream of Barton Springs Pool. People let their dogs play in the water off-leash, and (this is going to sound really judgmental, but) the crowd is generally trashier. Pay the $5 to go inside Barton Springs Pool.

I hope we can find and arrest these guys, they don't belong free in our city

[–] protist@mander.xyz 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (4 children)

Do you have a source on this? Texas Gas Service is absolutely doing this, but Austin Energy's residential rates are really good compared to other utilities in the state, and really haven't ticked up much in recent years outside the $5 base rate increase in '23.

As far as uptime, outside the statewide winter storm outage in '21 and the ice storm in '23 that shredded power lines, I don't think I've experienced an outage in 10 years

[–] protist@mander.xyz 28 points 5 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

Thank you for giving the Austin Chronicle credit where it's due. I'm a donor and love their paper. It's a free weekly that's the only print news really left in Austin, and they do great work. Also a great resource to find live shows around town

[–] protist@mander.xyz 34 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Reading this article, is that your takeaway from this? The band doesn't seem to have had much at all to do with it

[–] protist@mander.xyz 16 points 5 days ago

In vivo in mice

[–] protist@mander.xyz 15 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Sure, but let's let him run with this one

[–] protist@mander.xyz 7 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Fascism describes a political system that can occur in the context of multiple economic systems. It's not unique to capitalism.

[–] protist@mander.xyz 5 points 5 days ago (1 children)

That's an incredible factoid. I've only ever had dried lobster mushrooms, and can only imagine how delicious they are fresh.

[–] protist@mander.xyz 30 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

Nobody tell him that egg prices dropped dramatically in March and have stayed down, I guess

[–] protist@mander.xyz 6 points 5 days ago (3 children)

What's the 5th one, where your gloved hand is flat on the ground beside it? I have something very similar growing in my yard right now and don't know where to begin to identify it

[–] protist@mander.xyz 13 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

He had two investigations running simultaneously, the classified document case in the Southern District of Florida and the January 6th case in DC. In the latter case, the DOJ indicted Trump on:

  • Conspiracy to defraud the United States
  • Conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding
  • Obstruction of and attempt to obstruct an official proceeding
  • Conspiracy against rights

Trump prosecution for election obstruction

[–] protist@mander.xyz -4 points 6 days ago (3 children)

Wasn't this case in process when he was elected? Jack Smith was the prosecutor. My point is they absolutely pursued the evidence in criminal court

 

Thirsty Planet Brewing Co. is closing its taproom and suspending distribution.

 

The Hole In The Wall music venue has secured a 20-year lease and will remain open to celebrate its 50th anniversary next summer, thanks largely to $1.6 million in assistance from the city’s Iconic Venue Fund.

Will Tanner, who purchased the club located on the stretch of Guadalupe Street known as The Drag in 2008, signed the new lease agreement – an initial 10-year lease with two five-year extensions – with The Weitzman Group realty firm on Monday. The signing followed 10 months of negotiation and work with staff from the city and the Austin Economic Development Corporation to become the first recipient of city funds allocated to preserve culturally significant music venues.

 

[T]emperatures have reached the century mark for 27 days in a row. With records dating back to the 1890s, that ties with 2011 as the longest stretch of triple-digit temperatures ever recorded in Austin.

The KXAN First Warning Weather team is currently forecasting at least seven more days at or above 100°, which would extend the streak past 30 days.

 

Positive news from the state on this issue, and kudos to Kirk Watson for knowing how to build relationships and get things done with the state

 

Austin’s City Council is currently on summer break, but when its members return next week for the meeting scheduled on July 20, they’re taking on a fairly significant land use resolution with the potential to shape the future of housing across the city. You’d think Agenda Item 126 might have dropped with a little more fanfare, considering its seemingly enormous scope — let’s dig in:

If you don’t want to sift through all those “be it resolved”s, the gist is that Austin’s 1980s land development code imposes a minimum lot size of 5,750 square feet for homes built under the single-family zoning regime that dominates the vast majority of the city’s available land. This size requirement, combined with Austin’s sky-high land values, drives up the price of even modestly sized “starter” homes — so the resolution proposes amending the code to reduce the minimum lot size in single-family zones to 2,500 square feet or less “so that existing standard-size lots can be subdivided, and be developed with a variety of housing types such as row houses, townhomes, tri-and four-plexes, garden homes, and cottage courts.”

The housing types listed here represent the so-called “missing middle” residential typology that’s currently absent from most of Austin due to the current restrictions of our code, and unlocking this style of lower-density infill development is generally considered an effective way to increase housing stock in existing neighborhoods. To incentivize this kind of development, along with its proposed minimum lot size changes the resolution also proposes amending the code to allow at least three units per lot in single-family zoning districts.

To streamline this process, the resolution also directs the City Manager to propose amendments adjusting current limits on setbacks, height, impervious cover, floor-to-area ratio, building cover requirements, and other tweaks like only imposing the city’s McMansion Ordinance on projects that intend to construct a single home on one lot. The time and cost of jumping through all the hoops of the city’s current code is reflected in the final price of new housing, and fast-tracking the development of these missing middle residences should benefit local affordability.

If this isn’t surprising enough for you, perhaps you could chew on the fact that this item is sponsored by Council Member Leslie Pool — yes, that Leslie Pool — with co-sponsors including CMs Vela, Qadri, Ellis, and Mayor Watson. We’ve often ripped on CM Pool as part of council’s longstanding NIMBY bloc, but she (and her staff) deserve a hand for taking a clear-eyed look at Austin’s housing crisis and rejecting the typical priors of the do-nothing crowd with this proposed legislation. The part we can’t figure out is how the resolution, as a change to existing zoning regulation, plans to avoid the property owner notification requirements that currently have even more modest tweaks to Austin’s zoning code mired in legal trouble thanks to those aforementioned NIMBYs — fingers crossed that the folks on the dais know something we don’t.

This is a lot to drop on a humble blog without any official urban planning credentials, but we’re doing our best to wrap our heads around the ramifications of this change. Although these code tweaks are a major step in the right direction, they’re similar to light rail in the sense that we should have passed them about 20 years ago to truly stave off a crisis — at this point, we’re trying to close a wound with band-aids, but it’s a lot better than doing nothing. For the record, that 2,500-square-foot minimum lot size is a more modest reform than the infill renaissance we’ve seen with townhomes in Houston, where the minimum lot size is a mere 1,400 square feet.

Still, a triplex on every residential lot could win over at least a small portion of the housing-skeptic crowd with its lack of intensity compared to a typical apartment building rising five floors or more. We’re fond of all types of housing, but this proposal has the potential to become the most significant land use reform Austin’s passed since the failure of the land development code rewrite in 2018. Can you tell we’re nervous?

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