logo
Austin city council to vote on animal services strategic plan Thursday

Austin city council to vote on animal services strategic plan Thursday

Yahoo26-03-2025
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Thursday, Austin City Council is expected to vote on a plan that would guide the city's Animal Services Office over the next five years.
The strategic plan will address issues previously brought forward in reviews of the city-run shelter.
'In alignment with out commitment to animal welfare and serving the residents of the City of Austin and unincorporated Travis County, the plan outlines six key focus areas: Humane Care, Spay & Neuter, Open Intake, Live Release, Public Health & Safety, and Staff & Volunteers,' the plan says.
'Hopefully we will make the kind of progress we've needed to make, this is one of those issues that I have felt like we have been behind on,' Austin Mayor Kirk Watson said.
Watson said he's had conversations with relevant parties about whether expanding the footprint of the Austin Animal Center belongs in the 2026 comprehensive bond package the city is working to send to voters in November of next year.
'Either improving the facility we're at, growing the facility we're at or having other facilities — or both,' Watson said.
Chief Animal Services Officer Don Bland — who played a central role in putting the strategic plan together — has been on administrative leave since Friday, March 7. Deputy Chief Animal Services Officer Jason Garza is currently serving as Acting Chief Animal Services Officer.
Don Bland, head of Austin Animal Center, on administrative leave
Garza indicated the city still intends to move forward with the strategic plan despite Bland's absence.
'Staff recommends adoption of the ASO's Strategic Plan which incorporates friendly amendments from the Animal Advisory Commission,' Garza wrote in a memo to council and the mayor. 'ASO will work with the City Manager's Office, ASO staff, Animal Advisory Commission, and community partners to develop a path forward to achieve the goals and implement the plan.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Escaped slave who became lawmaker will be first individual African American honored with statue at South Carolina State House
Escaped slave who became lawmaker will be first individual African American honored with statue at South Carolina State House

CBS News

time01-08-2025

  • CBS News

Escaped slave who became lawmaker will be first individual African American honored with statue at South Carolina State House

Inside a small art studio not far from Atlanta, 67-year-old Basil Watson is shaping history. The Jamaican-born artist is creating a sculpture of Robert Smalls, the historic South Carolina lawmaker who escaped slavery in Charleston by commandeering a Confederate ship. Smalls would go on to become a top Union naval officer during the Civil War, and is celebrated as a champion of civil rights and equality. "It's an honor to get to put this piece on the state Capitol in South Carolina," Watson said. His statue of Smalls will be the first monument honoring an individual African American on the State House's grounds. Currently, the statues surrounding the Capitol are all of White men, many with ties to the Civil War or the Jim Crow-era South. A bipartisan push from state lawmakers made Smalls' statue a reality. "It helps to complete the incomplete and unfinished story," historian John McCardell said. "Here is someone whose intelligence was recognized almost literally from birth," McCardell said of Smalls. "He was bold and courageous on that night in May of 1862 when he brought his family and others on board, and, almost miraculously, delivered that ship to the Union blockade offshore." Watson's plans for Smalls' statue depict the icon's journey from illiteracy to a pioneering statesman, using a stack of books as a platform symbolizing Smalls' elevation. The completed sculpture will be about 12 feet tall, Watson said. "I will fade into the background, but I want them to remember is Robert Smalls, what he did, and to understand where African Americans are coming from," Watson said.

Arkansas' prison plan is too big, board member claims
Arkansas' prison plan is too big, board member claims

Axios

time23-07-2025

  • Axios

Arkansas' prison plan is too big, board member claims

Arkansas doesn't need a 3,000-bed prison, a member of the state Board of Corrections wrote in an email sent to lawmakers Monday, the Arkansas Advocate first reported. Why it matters: The controversial proposed Franklin County project could cost $1 billion and would be one of the largest development projects in recent state history. The big picture: Locals and legislators critical of the project claim there are unclear construction costs, a lack of adequate workforce, and infrastructure challenges. Supporters say there's a need for more state prison capacity as inmates wait in overcrowded county jails. Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders is steadfast in her support of the proposed project and location. What he's saying:"Arkansas absolutely needs a new prison," board member Lee Watson wrote in the email. "Arkansas' incarceration of offenders has outpaced our facilities' capacity to house offenders for more than 45 years." But the Board of Corrections did not request a prison the size of the one proposed, nor has it been told it needed one that size, Watson wrote. "The Board has never been provided evidence that a 3,000 [bed] facility is needed," he wrote. "It is important to note that the county jail backup (i.e. prison overcrowding) in recent years has remained somewhat consistently around 1,600," he added. "If Arkansas had an additional 3,000 bed facility today, 1,400 beds would be empty." The other side: The opposition's math doesn't include outstanding warrants that can't be served due to lack of prison space, nor capacity issues that will get worse as truth-in-sentencing and parole restrictions in the Protect Arkansas Act begin to go into effect, Sanders spokesperson Sam Dubke pointed out in an email to Axios. Friction point: Watson wrote that a previously planned 500-bed expansion would now have been completed and able to alleviate some overcrowding had it not been stopped. He also said the state needs three to five 100- to 200-bed facilities in Northwest Arkansas and Fort Smith for nonviolent offenders and parole violators where they can get community support for substance abuse. The bottom line: Watson said he spoke for himself and not the board.

Interpol takes anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson off most-wanted list
Interpol takes anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson off most-wanted list

New York Post

time22-07-2025

  • New York Post

Interpol takes anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson off most-wanted list

Interpol said Tuesday it was removing a most-wanted designation for anti-whaling campaigner Paul Watson, who is sought by Japan over an encounter with a whaling ship and who was jailed for several months last year in Greenland. Watson, 74, is a former head of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, whose high seas confrontations with whaling vessels have drawn support from celebrities and featured in the reality television series 'Whale Wars.' Japan wants his extradition over an encounter with a Japanese whaling research ship in 2010, when he was accused of obstructing the crew's official duties by ordering the captain of his ship to throw explosives at the whaling ship. He and his team deny those allegations. 4 Interpol said it was removing a most-wanted designation for Paul Watson. Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images Starting in 2012, Watson had been subject to a 'red notice' of Interpol, the Lyon, France-based international police body. A red notice is a request to law enforcement worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest a person pending legal action, based on a warrant from the judicial authorities in the requesting country, in this case Japan. The Canadian-American activist — whose recent long white hair and beard give him a Santa Claus look—has long criss-crossed the world's oceans in an almost singular focus on defending whales, feeding his popularity among environmentalists, animal-rights activists, and others. Critics have questioned his often-combative methods. Watson was arrested and jailed on the Japanese warrant last year in Greenland, a semi-autonomous territory of Denmark, but released after five months. 'My first reaction is that the decision ends 14 years of politically motivated persecution and underscores the blatant illegality of Japanese whaling operations in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary,' Watson said in a brief statement provided by Sea Shepherd France. 4 Watson was sought by Japan over an encounter with a whaling ship and was jailed for several months last year in Greenland. AFP via Getty Images 'A small justice victory for me, a major justice victory for the whale,' he added. Denmark does not have an extradition treaty with Japan, where Watson's foundation said he could have faced a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison, and the Danish government declined to extradite him to Japan. At the time of his release, the Danish Justice Ministry said it had not received adequate guarantees from Japanese authorities that the time Watson had already served in custody would be counted against any sentence he would receive in Japan. 4 Watson, 74, is a former head of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, whose high seas confrontations with whaling vessels have drawn support from celebrities and featured in the reality television series 'Whale Wars.' Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images In a statement, Interpol said the decision to remove Watson from the 'red notice' list did not reflect any judgment on the merits of the case in Japan, but that it did take into account Denmark's refusal to extradite him. 'This is not a judgement on the merits of the case, or the events that occurred in 2010,' the Interpol statement said. The police agency said the decision was made by an independent body, the Commission for the Control of Interpol's File, which is tasked to ensure that the police body's processing of personal data adheres to its internal rules. The decision said Japan had 'vigorously engaged' with the commission during the review, which 'may be demonstrative of the existence of political elements around the case.' The decision noted that other countries, aside from Denmark, had refused to extradite Watson. Start and end your day informed with our newsletters Morning Report and Evening Update: Your source for today's top stories Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Watson, after his release in December, told the AP that he was planning to travel to Interpol to make his case in person. The move means that data about Watson held by Interpol will be deleted from its extensive databases, which track some of the world's most-wanted criminals and violent extremists. William Julie, a Paris-based lawyer for Watson, said the commission recognized the 'disproportionate nature of the charges' and 'the considerable passage of time' since the incident with the whaling research ship. 4 Sea Shepherd activists hold signs with 'FREE PAUL WATSON' written on them during a demonstration in support of Paul Watson, who is currently incarcerated in Greenland, in Lyon, France, September 29, 2024. Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images In a phone interview, Julie said he had informed Watson about the decision, and his response was: 'He's relieved … He had to be resilient like he always is. He's happy we won.' Lamya Essemlali, president of Sea Shepherd France, hailed the 'good news that this notice was finally cancelled,' but she noted that Watson still could be arrested and sent to Japan for prosecution. 'It does not give Paul Watson his freedom of movements because the Japanese arrest warrant is sufficient for a country to order his arrest,″ she said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store