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SAN ANTONIO — Money for expanding the city’s greenway trails, affordable housing, repairing failed streets, and building fire and police stations all made the final list of bond projects passed by San Antonio City Council on Thursday morning.
The five-year, $1.2 billion bond program will still need voter approval at the May 7 election. The 183 different projects are split between six propositions, which voters will take up separately:
Streets, bridges, and sidewalks – $471.6MParks and recreation – $271.9MDrainage and flood control – $169.9MAffordable housing – $150MPublic Safety Facilities – $78.3MLibrary and Cultural Facilities – $58.4M
The bond does not include a tax increase.
Some of the highlights in the bond include:
$103.5M for expanding the greenway trail system by another 21 miles$15.7M for public art – 1.5 percent of the whole bond (except housing)$44M for two replacement fire stations (D1 and D5) and one new police substation (D3)$100.5M to reconstruct failed streets around the cityImprovements to 30% of city’s parks, and includes 9 new park properties$150M for affordable housing
This is the city’s first bond to include affordable housing after voters approved a charter change in May 2021 to allow for it. The housing portion of the bond does not include individual projects, but rather, broad categories for using the funding, with a focus on helping lower-income households.
The committee also provided a set of parameters for determining if subsequent projects fit the intent of the housing bond.
A set of five committees, comprised of council appointees, considered which projects to include and presented their recommendations to council in January. Although the final project list was similar to what the committees had recommended, council approved about $20.6 million in changes.
District 5 Councilwoman Teri Castillo had approved swapping funding for a drainage project on Cumberland Road for one on Frio City Road, both of which are in her district. She also approved moving $2.5 million out of a street project in her district in order to fully fund a replacement fire station.
Meanwhile, District 10 Councilman Clayton Perry dropped $3 million worth of linear greenway trails funding for his district to pay for more drainage work in his district. He was absent from Thursday’s vote due to a family matter.
The controversial cuts to public art, recommended by some bond committees, were restored by freeing up $3.8 million in citywide bridge funding by using American Rescue Plan Act dollars to pay for that work instead.
That brought the funding for public arts back up to 1.5 percent across the infrastructure propositions, which council had originally set as the goal.
2022-2027 Bond Program Project List by Julie Moreno on Scribd