DD88 said:
A big step forward for Travis County would be to vote out Jose Garza in the Democrat Primary on Tuesday.
https://elections.traviscountytx.gov/current-election-information/current-election/#polling-locations
Even if that were true, they are spot on here. Garza is a catastrophe.AggieOO said:
FYI - the NY Post is about a half a step above the National Enquirer.
Martin Cash said:
Looks like the brilliant voters of Travis County are going to re-elect this reprehensible DA.
Garza is not simply incompetent, he is despicable.cityagboy said:
Despite austin still being safer than most big cities in the country and still safer the SA, Dallas and Houston.
Austin is growing rapidly and that expansion has had some issues but austin is still pretty damn safe.
But hey push the narrative that helps the GOP politicians!!!!
JOHN2010 said:
https://www.fox7austin.com/news/austin-police-officer-shortage-leaves-portion-of-east-austin-without-patrol.amp
Yeah…. "Pretty damn safe"
KT 90 said:
Officers and potential new officers know that the council doesn't support them and that the DA will jump at the chance to prosecute them just for doing their job. When you are in this situation, you have to pay above and beyond the going rate to attract new hires. But you seem to enjoy it. We are headed to a bad place if we keep losing more police officers than we have new incoming police offers.
https://www.kvue.com/article/news/verify/austin-crime-jose-garza-verify/269-19a528ef-08df-4b6d-b717-3dbb81fbbae0Quote:
An article from a website called The Free Press claims, "Crime in Austin has soared under a progressive district attorney," referring to Garza. But the numbers tell a different story.
Crime reporting data from the Austin Police Department (APD) shows that in December 2020, before Garza took office as DA, 20,500 crime against people were committed through the whole year.
In 2023, several years into Garza's time as DA, that number was 2,000 less in the same timeframe.
Looking at property crimes, the statistics showed a similar trend. In 2020, there were a little over 53,000 property crimes. In 2023, that number was just under 47,000.
So crime has not increased while Garza has served as Travis County DA.
KT 90 said:
The bottom line is that Austin is not safer than it was 10 years ago, or even 5 years ago. This failed anti-policing social movement is stupid, and Austin is headed in the wrong direction.
txags92 said:
Not to nit pick, but 24.9 per 100k is higher than 22.7 per 100k. As is typical for these arguments on this board, you are arguing the current levels, which are not extraordinary compared to other large cities, while others are discussing trajectory, which is not good.
So your contention is that APD has a huge pile of cash available to hire new officers and they are just sitting around counting it instead of hiring the officers they need? I don't think you understand the life of a cop or the pressures of the job if you think they can just snap their fingers and whistle up 500 more officers. Experienced officers are not looking to move into a job where the public dislikes them, the city leaders don't support them and are willing to use them as pawns for political purposes, and the DA is actively looking to put them on trial. And potential new cadets have plenty of other options with cities looking to grow their forces, so APD is having to compete hard for them too. If I were a cop, you would have to at least double my current salary to get me to leave a job where I was generally appreciated by the public and supported by the city leaders and DA to come to Austin. And realistically, no amount of money would get me to go work somewhere that I would go to work every day knowing that the DA was sitting in his office rubbing his hands together and hoping for the chance to charge me with a crime for something I did that day. I think you dramatically underestimate the impact Garza's past actions have on APDs current hiring woes.
Quote:
Excuses for APD. Don't act like they are dealing with issues other cities aren't. They have the money. Make the hires.
txags92 said:
Wow, talk about trying to go in circles, we already had the "where do you live" discussion on another thread, so you don't need to tell us about your wife feeling comfortable jogging at night around your south lamar neighborhood. But if you would be so kind, please point me in the direction of your postings about the root cause of APD's manpower shortage if you believe they have all the money they need to fix it and just aren't doing it. I must have missed that one.
They are offering significantly higher than HPD and SAPD, both for cadets ($50k per year) and for officers (min. $65k per year). And right now they are offering a $15k hiring bonus. Like I said before, it is about more than just money. HPD certainly has a lot of challenges too, but at least until now the DA was not actively anti-cop. We will see what happens with Soros' newest minion taking over for Kim Ogg in Harris County.cityagboy said:txags92 said:
Wow, talk about trying to go in circles, we already had the "where do you live" discussion on another thread, so you don't need to tell us about your wife feeling comfortable jogging at night around your south lamar neighborhood. But if you would be so kind, please point me in the direction of your postings about the root cause of APD's manpower shortage if you believe they have all the money they need to fix it and just aren't doing it. I must have missed that one.
Did you answer? Maybe I missed that. I don't keep track of names on posts.
What is the cause of their shortage? They have had problems for many years. They don't pay enough for people to live in Austin despite having the money to pay more. They spend more time complaining than trying to help themselves. They don't make an attempt to better relations with people who live in Austin.
But also…. As I have said…. I don't think the police are even close to the main reason Austin has seen an increase in crime, positively or negatively.
txags92 said:They are offering significantly higher than HPD and SAPD, both for cadets ($50k per year) and for officers (min. $65k per year). And right now they are offering a $15k hiring bonus. Like I said before, it is about more than just money. HPD certainly has a lot of challenges too, but at least until now the DA was not actively anti-cop. We will see what happens with Soros' newest minion taking over for Kim Ogg in Harris County.cityagboy said:txags92 said:
Wow, talk about trying to go in circles, we already had the "where do you live" discussion on another thread, so you don't need to tell us about your wife feeling comfortable jogging at night around your south lamar neighborhood. But if you would be so kind, please point me in the direction of your postings about the root cause of APD's manpower shortage if you believe they have all the money they need to fix it and just aren't doing it. I must have missed that one.
Did you answer? Maybe I missed that. I don't keep track of names on posts.
What is the cause of their shortage? They have had problems for many years. They don't pay enough for people to live in Austin despite having the money to pay more. They spend more time complaining than trying to help themselves. They don't make an attempt to better relations with people who live in Austin.
But also…. As I have said…. I don't think the police are even close to the main reason Austin has seen an increase in crime, positively or negatively.
students either rack up loans or student debt. Fast food workers take the bus in from the distant burbs. It is a big issue for employers who don't pay much. Public transit needs major upgrades cause people can spend up to two hours coming in from Leander and Manortxags92 said:
So where do all the students attending UT live? Where do all the fast food and retail workers live? Because they aren't making $65k either and somehow they manage to live and work in Austin. It may not be enough to buy a house in Austin, but you can certainly afford an apartment on $65k, and the wages go up pretty quickly. The range shown for a police officer in Austin is $65k-109k. If you go through the academy, you are making $81k by your 2 year anniversary and $92k at 10 years. The pay for a corporal/detective is $88-119k. That doesn't count all the extra incentives for education/certification, night/evening shifts, etc. The pay being offered is more than competitive with any other force in Texas.
Or working spouses/GF/BF210 said:
Plenty of people live on $65k, they just have roommates. Agree it would be tough to raise a family on that salary alone though.
. Yeah. It's a serious issue. I believe it's a serial killer but the police are saying it's not.Struggle and Strifer said:
Obligatory Austin board check in to see if another drowned body has popped up. It seems like it has been 2 or 3 weeks since the last one.
read the thread. If you don't live in austin you are here to troll. APD is ok with a huge budgetStruggle and Strifer said:
Not trying to troll. I believe that this is a serial killer and that there will be escalation. I also believe that the city council's attempts to neuter APD will only make this issue worse. Austin is not a city that I would want to linger around in due to safety concerns.
I am good friends with an HPD cop that lived in an apartment for about his first 5 years on the force with an HPD buddy that he went through the academy with, and then he bought a house out in Cypress and commuted into work for the next 20 years. No reason the roommate has to be a random stranger or that they have to live in Austin. We have several Travis County Sheriffs, DPS, and APD that live out here in Bastrop County.cityagboy said:
Many people over 25 don't want a roommate. Many people are single. And Austin is a very expensive city both for rent and other living expenses. Affordable housing and public transportation are real problems that city leadership has done a poor job on.
This article is from 2022 but does a good job of breaking down the real cost of rent in austin although it has gone up since it was written
https://www.kut.org/austin/2022-10-07/monthly-rent-cost-austin
Another from July of 2023
https://www.fox7austin.com/news/housing-cost-living-austin-texas-expensive-real-estate.amp
Last I saw was that you needed about $120k minimum to BUY a condo or small home in austin and about $160k for a couple with no kids. (Yes, there are people who bought a long time ago who make much less than that)
I believe the number to live comfortably as a solo renter was just under $90k if you don't have significant debt to pay off.
Let's be honest most police officers aren't going to want a tiny apartment or have random roommates