Early voting for the March 12 primary begins next Wednesday, February 21, and
lasts through Friday, March 8. The following is a list of some of the state-
and county-wide races that are of local interest. Incumbents are identified by
an asterisk (*), and only contested races are listed. (For info regarding early
voting polling locations, call 473-9553.)
U.S. SENATE
DEM: John Odam, Victor Morales, Jim Chapman, John Bryant
REP: David Young, *Phil Gramm, Henry Grover
U.S. REPRESENTATIVE
District 10: REP: Teresa Doggett, Mark Wetzel
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
District 47: REP: Jo Baylor, Kirk Ingels, Bill Welch, Randall
Riley, Terry Keel
District 48: DEM: Daniel Gustafson, *Sherri Greenberg
District 51: DEM: *Glen Maxey, Eloy De La Garza, Abel Ruiz
RAILROAD COMMISSIONER:
REP: *Carole Keeton Rylander, Robert Wood
TRAVIS COUNTY SHERIFF:
DEM: Raymond Frank, Margo Frasier, Charles Littleton, Mike Simpson, Stacy
Suits, Greg Zaney
REP: Alvin Shaw, David Drew McAngus
DISTRICT ATTORNEY: DEM: *Ronnie Earle, David A. Schulman, Joe Sawyer
TRAVIS COUNTY COMMISSIONER, Precinct 1: DEM: *Sam Biscoe, Ron Davis
Mending Fences on the ARA
The members of the Austin Revitalization Authority (ARA) convened their firstofficial meeting in two months last Thursday, and two East Austin neighborhood
representatives were actually present.
The ARA board, Councilmember Eric Mitchell’s apparatus to carry out the
redevelopment of East 11th and East 12th Streets using $9 million in
city-controlled federal loans, has been in the center of controversy after the
four neighborhood representatives claimed that the board — which is dominated
by business and real estate interests — had not informed them of meetings.
Things are more congenial now; the neighborhood reps are overlooking past
transgressions, and they see last week’s meeting as a step in the right
direction.
The main item on the agenda? Reconciliation. Six members of the 15-member
board voted to create an advisory neighborhood committee, headed by Letesia
Cantu-McGarrahan, president of the Guadalupe Association for Improved
Neighborhoods, and realtor Karen Box. The board will offer suggestions to the
ARA Negotiating Committee, a five-member team that contains no neighborhood
representatives and has been negotiating with the council on the terms of the
redevelopment.
“Today was the first time they told us they want neighborhoods included,” says
East Austin resident Mary Kimbles. “They have made us feel welcome,” she adds,
despite the fact that she was the only one of the four neighborhood reps to be
invited to the meeting, and that with one day’s notice.
“There’s been miscommunication and misunderstandings, and we wanted to put
that to bed before we moved forward. Hopefully, now we’ll get a contract with
the council in less than two months,” said Herman Lessard, ARA and Urban League
President. Lessard blamed Councilmember Brigid Shea for furthering the
“misunderstandings” by raising questions about the ARA board in a memo she sent
to the city manager last month. In the memo, Shea pointed out her three
concerns: The recent purchase of land in the ARA area by a board member may
represent a conflict-of-interest; neighborhood representatives on the ARA board
were being ignored; and only five of the 15-member board were needed for a
quorum — a rule that could be used to exclude neighborhood reps.
In a written response dated February 7, City Manager Jesus Garza said that the
City Attorney’s office is reviewing the conflict-of-interest issue, that the
neighborhood representatives’ participation in the planning of their
neighborhood will “increase with time,” and that Lessard agreed to address the
problematic five-member quorum rule.
The next meeting will be Saturday, February 17 at 9am, at a location to be
announced. — A.M.
Valentine’s Day Remembered in Court
Despite scant evidence against two others who preceded her, a third person isscheduled to go to trial soon on charges stemming from last year’s Valentine’s
Day party on Cedar Avenue in East Austin. Evada Jackson is charged with assault
on a police officer and resisting arrest, although versions of what happened at
the party differ widely between police and party-goers. The results are
certain: 65 Austin police officers swarmed the neighborhood, macing and using
cattle prods on party-goers and residents.
Jackson is scheduled to stand trial on the charges February 19, but her
attorney, Terry Davis, says that a scheduling conflict might prompt him to seek
a delay for another week or two. The Austin Police Department’s previous
attempts to build cases against two other party-goers — David Jackson and
Bernie Durst — didn’t hold up in court, so it should be interesting to see
what tack police and prosecutors will take with Jackson. Attorneys for the
three, as well as for Ira and Charmaine Bedford, who hosted the annual
gathering for their children and their schoolmates, say they’re waiting for the
criminal cases to end before pursuing civil claims against the police
department. Should a third acquittal occur, the City of Austin could expect to
begin negotiating settlements, or else brace for a flurry of lawsuits.
Attorneys have already filed preliminary claims with the city.
Regardless of the legal outcome, the February 11, 1995 mel�e is not
likely to be forgotten on an emotional level. Friends and supporters of the
Bedford family met last weekend for a solemn first-year observance of the
incident.
A widely held opinion is that police officers on the scene that night used
excessive force for no other reason except that the crowd of party-goers
consisted of African-Americans. And black residents say the incident only
furthered their mistrust in the police — mistrust that persists despite the
fence-mending campaign the police department rolled out shortly after the
incident. —A.S.
Bon Voyage, Brigid Shea
“I came to this council with a mission of protecting the environment andtrying to give people their money’s worth from government,” said Councilmember
Brigid Shea last week, as she announced that she will leave the council on June
15. “And I did what I said I would do.”
The councilmember that everyone either hates or loves passionately says she
was personally affected by the combative nature of Austin politics, and cited
her family as a reason for not seeking reelection, but adds that she’s proud
that she stuck to her guns. “I did something that’s increasingly rare in
politics these days: I kept my word.”
Fullfilling her promises made her the lone voice on many issues, including her
unwavering opposition to even the slightest tax increases. She was also the
progressive faction’s most dependable vote, offering unflinching protection of
Barton Springs in the face of lawsuits from developer Freeport-McMoRan,
and pushing for campaign finance reform.
Shea plans to introduce two new proposals in her last days in office: a
conflict-of-interest law to prevent councilmembers from receiving city
contracts, and a growth-control ordinance that will require the city to get
voter approval before spending money outside the city limits.
Waiting thirstily in the wings are a slew of Place 4 candidates: Eric
Blumberg, Brian Kline, Randall “Mac” McKarkle, Gus Pena, and Rick Wheeler. — A.M.
Back to the Fold
The 21st Century Democrats, a fledgling political advocacy group seeking tobring wayward Texas Democrats back into the fold and expand the party’s base,
gathered on the eighth floor of the Omni Hotel in downtown Austin last
Saturday. The statewide meeting was a chance for Texas Democrats to talk about
redefining the goals of the party in the wake of last year’s Republican
sweeps at the federal and local levels. The new group wants to recast
its party’s image with mainstream America rather than with the liberal left.
In light of that mission, it was perhaps odd that the group invited
George Stephanopoulos, President Bill Clinton’s former communications director
and current senior aide, to address the crowd of more than 200 old-guard Dems,
party operatives, and state and local political candidates who showed up for
the event. But, judging by the standing ovation that followed his speech, he
couldn’t have been better received. Sprinkling his remarks were
Republican-bashing jabs and colorful campaign war stories, but the central
theme was politics and what it means. “[Politics] is the art of the impossible,
changing people’s lives for the better,” he said.
Stephanopoulos cast Republicans as all too eager to chop student loans,
Medicaid, Medicare, and other social programs in order to cut corporate America
some slack, and he targeted House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas Senator Phil
Gramm’s (now failed) presidential campaign for ridicule. Much of his speech was
dedicated to getting Clinton reelected, an ulterior motive with which the 21st
Century Democrats’ leaders — Houston trial lawyer Arthur Schechter and Dallas
attorney Steve Gutow — have no problem.
Shechter and Gutow, co-chairs of the month-old non-profit group, boast a long
history of activism within the Democratic party. Democratic National Committee
(DNC) member Schechter has served as a fundraiser for over 80 Democratic
candidates, and Gutow, who founded the National Jewish Democratic Council in
1990, was the principal fundraiser for former Governor Ann Richards that same
year. With seven field operators in Texas, the group, which has yet to
determine whether it will be a for-profit or non-profit entity, is more of a
grassroots organization than the DNC. According to its mission statement, the
21st Century Dems are attempting to refocus the party on “pocketbook issues
that face all Texans and Americans.” — J.R.
This article appears in February 16 • 1996 and February 16 • 1996 (Cover).
