Mabel Davis Pool Credit: Photo by John Anderson

1) Halloween Flood, Reprise

Onion Creek residents hadn’t all recovered from the 2013 flood when another horror show arrived at All Hallows’ – and the city’s earnest but slow response on buyouts evoked more neighborhood outcry.


2) Memorial Day Flood, Reprise

Austin wasn’t hit quite as hard in the spring (recalling the 1981 deluge), but Wimberley and elsewhere in Central Texas were heavily damaged, with loss of life.


3) It Never Rains, But …

The perennial fights over endangered water rights hit Hays County, where drilling for nearby cities threatened residential wells as well as the future of the Trinity Aquifer – new state restrictions offered temporary relief, but the fight goes on.


4) Highway From Hell

The planners’ determination to expand MoPac South from 10 lanes to as many as 16 (in various configurations) seemed undeterred by Austin opposition, not to mention city roads at clogged capacity and no real mass transit plan solutions.


5) Cracks and Fissures

Parks and Rec announced that 25 of the city’s 36 swimming pools are leaking, several seriously – amidst other budget woes. Patched for now, awaiting permanent solutions.


6) Solar City

As prices continued to fall, Austin expanded purchases of solar power, adding contracts for 450 megawatts and targeting 600 MW by 2019 – a leap forward for renewables, although another natural gas plant remains under consideration.


7) Closed System

In what might seem like a setback, Ecology Action closed its Ninth & I-35 recycling center after more than a decade of processing myriad commodities – but it was the spread of citywide recycling that enabled the decision. The good work continues.


8) Drop That Bag

Austin Resource Recov­ery reported that the two-year-old single-use bag ban dramatically reduced those bags – but multiplied “reusable” plastic bags that are being discarded instead of reused. Next: amendments, and a “culture change.”


9) Denialism Don

Not everybody applauded Austin’s climate action plans – City Coun­cil Member Don Zimmerman called it a government hoax, even haranguing Texas Tech climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe at Coun­cil, because she actually knows something about the subject.


10) We’ll Always Have Paris

Mayor Steve Adler, Council Member Leslie Pool, and County Commissioner Brigid Shea joined world leaders in a U.N. Conference on Climate Change that actually showed promise of concerted action against global warming: reason for hope.

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Contributing writer and former news editor Michael King has reported on city and state politics for the Chronicle since 2000. He was educated at Indiana University and Yale, and from 1977 to 1985 taught at UT-Austin. He has been the editor of the Houston Press and The Texas Observer, and has reported and written widely on education, politics, and cultural subjects.