cityagboy said:
KT 90 said:
Struggle and Strifer said:
cityagboy said:
Struggle and Strifer said:
cityagboy said:
Struggle and Strifer said:
txags92 said:
Struggle 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.
To be fair and support what Cityboy is saying, even though I disagree with him on other subjects, the city council has restored the funding to APD and they are trying to correct some of their earlier missteps with policing. The same can't be said for the DAs office. I think the damage to APD will have long-term ramifications, but the recent changes they made are positive in my eyes.
Did they reinstate the partnership with DPS? That would go a long way to short term stop gap.
. Yes they did in July
So you are stating that DPS is currently actively partnering with APD in keeping the city safe? That is great news if they are, but the fact that the partnership was needed is a great indicator of the safety of the citizens. The last I had heard was that the partnership was ended again.
To me a war zone is defined by homeless camps, trash littering the city sidewalks, graffiti, brazen behavior in the downtown area and city ROWs that need maintained and mowed. Those are all happening in Austin and that is not a dramatization.
As far as I knew the DPS started back up in July. I don't know if it stopped after that.
You can have you opinion on Austin but I think it's a dramatization. I live in Central Austin, kid goes to school in Central Austin, both my wife and I are frequently DT, on the Eastside and in Central Austin…. There are a lot of really nice and fun areas. I don't ever feel unsafe, nor does my wife and son, but we feel comfortable with people who not like us. Austin is pretty nice compared to other big cities and is clearly safer than other big cities. Maybe big cities just aren't for you. They surely are not as "pretty" as a wealthy suburb and surely more crowded than a rural town.
The program ended August 25th after violent crimes had been reduced by 26% from previous year for the time period. It made a significant impact to the cities short staffing issues. But was ended after the council and other critics believed that it unfairly targeted troubled areas and minority populations. As far as I know, there are not many large cities in TX that have had to have the help of the State agency for this. The short staffing of the APD is criminal.
You can think that my opinion on Austin is a dramatization, just as your opinion is. Neither one holds any more weight than the other. You can be proud of your city's sanitation and safety and graciously claim that it is better than other large cities, but I compare it to the large cities that I frequent and I am not impressed with the direction that Austin is going compared to those large cities.
The City of Austin ended the DPS partnership program (I assume the date above is correct). Then Abbott basically said too bad, the DPS is going to continue their patrols and that continued for a few months until the DPS staff was pulled to assist down at the border. As far as I know, the DPS supplemental patrols have not resumed.
they did resume and stopped Dec 23rd as the program ended as scheduled. It wasn't just Abbott that brought them back. Our new mayor brought them back.
No, the program didn't end as scheduled. An announcement was made that DPS troopers were needed at the border. There was no scheduled end date, as Abbott continued the DPS troopers on his own after Watson shut down the initial program.
Here are a few snips from the Statesman:
"The Texas Department of Public Safety task force dedicated to policing Austin will cease operations on Saturday, the state agency confirmed Thursday. Troopers will be redirected to the southern border "due to the ever-changing situation," according to Ericka Miller, a press secretary for the DPS.
It was not immediately clear whether the DPS will revive the Austin task force in the future or how many, if any, troopers will remain on Austin streets."
Here is a note from the same article about Watson ending the program and Abbott restarting it:
"On the same day in July that Watson announced the partnership's end, Abbott announced DPS troopers would
continue to patrol Austin streets anyway, given their statewide jurisdiction, and the only change made would be the repeal of directives from Austin police. In
a post on X, formerly Twitter, Abbott said he would send an additional 30 troopers to the capital city, bringing the total to 130, which was more than had patrolled the city during their partnership with the Austin police."
https://www.statesman.com/story/news/local/2023/12/21/texas-dps-troopers-cease-austin-task-force-police-us-mexico-border-greg-abbott/72002945007/