At its meeting commissioners discussed tangible steps to increase civic participation, focusing on nonpartisan voter registration at city events and expanded outreach to publicize existing services.
Commissioners suggested that when the city hosts community events—music in the park, library programming and other large gatherings—a nonpartisan voter-registration table could be offered and staffed by trained volunteers from Travis County or civic organizations rather than city staff. Staff cautioned about legal rules for nonpartisan registration and recommended the commission compile a list of events and potential partner organizations that already train and deploy volunteers to register voters.
Beyond registration, commissioners recommended using listening sessions to identify services residents do not know about and to collect information on how residents learn about city services. Examples raised included care kits offered at libraries and utility-assistance programs that went underutilized; commissioners proposed developing short handouts or QR-code materials and coordinating distribution through food pantries, churches and community groups.
Next steps: staff will provide a calendar of city events and a staff-recommended list of occasions that could host voter-registration tables; commissioners will identify groups they know that provide trained voter-registration volunteers and staff will plan a communications-team briefing to show current outreach methods.