Quote:
Originally Posted by Scottolini
Cap Metro makeover approved
By Mike Ward | Tuesday, April 7, 2009, 01:17 PM
A bill that will makeover the Capital Metro board and amp up transparency and accountability in the Austin-area transportation agency was approved today by the Texas Senate.
Senate Bill 2015 was approved after brief debate.
http://www.statesman.com/blogs/conte..._approved.html
Any analysis M1EK?
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How much of an improvement is this over the existing scheme?
Existing scheme:
In May 1997, the Texas Legislature changed the structure of the Capital Metro Board. It replaced Capital Metro's seven-member appointed Board with a five-member interim Board appointed by the Austin Transportation Study which is now known as the Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization or CAMPO.
The Interim Board members were to serve until such time that a permanent Board of Directors could be constituted with
five elected officials and two (appointed) members-at-large. The permanent Board is composed of the following:
a) Two council members appointed by the Austin City Council;
b) One commissioner appointed by the Travis County Commissioners' Court;
c) One mayoral representative appointed by the mayors of the suburban cities of Travis County within the service area;
d) One representative appointed by a panel made up of the mayors of the suburban cities, the Williamson County Judge, and the presiding officer of each municipal utility district; and
e) Two members-at-large appointed by the Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization.
New scheme:
Under the bill, the seven-member Cap Metro board must includes:
a) One City of Austin elected official;
b) Three appointments from the Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization,
i) Two of which must live in the largest area city, one of which must be an elected official, another that must have at least 10 years’ experience in finance and accounting,
ii) And one that must have 10 years’ executive-level experience.
c) One appointment each must be made in joint appointments by Williamson County and Austin,
d) And Austin and Travis County, and small cities within Cap Metro’s jurisdiction.
The new scheme includes two elected officials, with five appointees. The existing scheme includes five elected officials and two appointees.
I don't understand why CapMetro can't adopt the very successful DART scheme?
Sec. 452.572. BOARD MEMBERSHIP; MUNICIPAL REPRESENTATION. (a) The subregional board is composed of 15 members appointed by the governing bodies of the municipalities in the subregional authority.
(b) The governing body of a municipality entitled to appoint more than one board member may appoint a number of members less than the number allocated to the municipality. Those appointed members may cast the same number of votes as the number of members allocated, but a member may not cast a divided vote.
Sec. 452.573. ALLOCATION OF MEMBERSHIP AMONG MUNICIPALITIES. (a) A governing body of a municipality in a subregion may make appointments to the subregional board in the same ratio as the population of the appointing municipality bears to the population of the subregion.
(b) A municipality the population of which entitles it to make a fraction of an appointment may combine that fraction with one or more other municipalities in the subregion to be entitled to make one appointment.
(c) Municipalities combining population under Subsection (b) must agree on the method of making the appointment.
(d) A municipality may not combine its population with another municipality for the purpose of minimizing the representation on the board of a racial or ethnic minority.
(e) A combination under Subsection (b) of two or more municipalities having insufficient population to receive an allocation of one membership must be made before the 61st day after the date for establishing or restructuring a board under Section 452.577.
Presently, here is the Dart municipal representations.
Dallas > 8 members
Garland > 1 member
Irving > 1 member
Plano > 1 member
Addison, Highland Park, Richardson and University Park > 1 member
Carrollton and Irving > 1 member
Dallas, Plano, Glenn Heights and Cockrell Hill > 1 member
Farmers Branch, Garland and Rowlett > 1 member.
Total = 15 members. The board represents every member city by it's population, guaranteeing one voter-one vote. No one is under represented.
With either CapMetro proposal, the new or existing, there's no incentive nor guarantee joining cities will get any representation at all on CapMetro's board. Any some wonder why these cities haven't joined, or have dropped from the district?
As a reminder, here's the latest population numbers of various cities in the Austin area.
Travis County: 974,365
Austin > 392,195 in Travis County (Total 743,074)
Bee Cave > 1,700
Briarcliff > 845
Creedmoor > 188
Jonestown > 1,681
Lago Vista > 5,573
Lakeway > 14,000
Manor > 5,500
Pflugerville > 40,003
Point Venture > 472
Rollingwood > 1,359
San Leanna > 476
Sunset Valley > 478
The Hills > 1,998
Volente > 394
Webberville > 315
West Lake Hills > 3,021
Williamson County: 373,363
Austin > 350,879 in Williamson County (Total 743,074)
Bartlett > 1,701
Cedar Park > 52,058
Florence > 1,054
Georgetown > 50,000
Granger > 1,331
Hutto > 17,120
Jarrell > 1,408
Leander > 20,451
Liberty Hill > 1,491
Round Rock > 86,316
Taylor > 15,014
Thorndale > 1,316
Thrall > 847
Weir > 637
Just looking at the county populations, Williamson County should have 1 in 4 representation on CapMetro's board, assuming all towns and cities join CapMetro. But that isn't true, but neither is it true for Travis County.
CapMetro members:
Austin > 743,074
Jonestown > 1,681
Lago Vista > 5,573
Leander > 20,451
Manor > 5,500
Point Venture > 472
San Leanna > 476
Volente > 394
Total = 777,621 (30k not within Austin with 20.5k from Leander and 5.5k from Manor
Large non members jurisdictions, including those who dropped CapMetro(*)
*Cedar Park > 52,058
Georgetown > 50,000
Hutto > 17,120
*Pflugerville > 40,003
Taylor > 15,014
Total = 174,195 (Over 92k withdrawing from CapMetro, another 82k not joining)
If a Dart 15 member board was used instead, and if all large cities (>5,000) from both counties joined, the split-up would look like this:
Total = 1,016,975; therefore each member would represent 68,000 people.
Austin > 10.9 members
Lago Vista > 0.08 member
Lakeway > 0.20 member
Manor > 0.08 member
Cedar Park > 0.76 member
Georgetown > 0.74 member
Hutto > 0.25 member
Pflugerville > 0.59 member
Taylor > 0.22 member
Rough Total = 11+.1+.2+.1+.76+.74+.25+.6+.22 = 13.97, leaving 1.03 members left.
My point is, Austin would still have an overwhelming majority representation on the CapMetro board.