Office of Mayor Annise D. Parker
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City of HoustonMedia ReleaseOffice of Mayor Annise Parker |
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: Janice Evans-Davis janice.evans@houstontx.gov 832-393-0800 (o) 713-376-0525 (c) Jessica Michan |
Mayor Parker Proposes $410 Million Public Improvement Bond Package
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Mayor Annise Parker today unveiled a $410 million public improvement bond package that she will ask City Council to place on the November 2012 ballot for voter approval. “I realize many Houstonians are still recovering from the economic downturn,” said Mayor Parker. “That is why it was important to me to present a plan that does not require a tax increase. It is also the smallest bond proposal in more than 30 years. It is a fiscally responsible approach that will create jobs and improve public safety, infrastructure and quality of life.” In addition to being the smallest bond referendum in 30 years, the mayor’s proposal is approximately $135 to $350 million less than the three previous bond referendums Voter approval would provide funding for city public improvements for the next five years. The needs range from roof and foundation repairs at city-owned buildings to entirely new police and fire stations as well as improvements to parks, libraries, health, trash and recycling facilities. There is also $100 million included in city matching funds for the Bayou Greenways Project, a $200 million initiative to complete a 100-year old vision of continuous public parks and trails alongside every major bayou segment in the City of “Mayor Parker’s commitment to seek the smallest bond measure ever while still ensuring that Houston moves forward with the Bayou Greenways Initiative demonstrates how a fiscally responsible public official can still deliver on key quality of life issues,” said Roksan Okan-Vick, executive director for the Houston Parks Board, a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating, improving, and protecting Houston’s parks. “By creating more parks and lining the bayous with walking and biking paths, The bond package also includes: $144 million for public safety needs, including: $63 million for health, sanitation/recycling, and general government improvements at city facilities not $15 million for affordable housing. These dollars will be used for demolition of blighted properties to $28 million for libraries, including: $160 million for parks, including the Bayou Greenways Project and: “I am committed to jobs, public safety, infrastructure, fiscal responsibility and quality of life because I want |
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