The Austin‑Travis County Public Health Commission on Wednesday approved a recommendation by Commissioner Chris Crookham to direct a portion of projected property‑tax revenue tied to the I‑35 “cap and stitch” redevelopment toward a dedicated public‑health fund for Austin Public Health.
Crookham read the recommendation and cited a report he described as the "2025 Future 35 potential impacts" report that estimates annual property‑tax revenue associated with cap‑and‑stitch elements and nearby private‑property value premiums. In his presentation he proposed reserving 35% of that revenue as a symbolic allocation linked to I‑35 and said the fund would be available to Austin Public Health to spend based on professional judgment rather than be tied to a single program. "The idea…is to attempt to utilize a systemic physical barrier of I‑35, taking revenue from that cap and stitch to address the issues I‑35 had created in the first place," Crookham said.
The commission moved and seconded the motion and approved it unanimously by hand raise. Jacob Whitty moved the motion; Commissioner Anna Parker Ali seconded. The chair asked staff (Danny) to record the vote as unanimous.
Why it matters: Commissioners framed the measure as creating a sustainable, supplemental revenue source for public health to help address long‑standing harms tied to the I‑35 corridor. Crookham acknowledged the projected revenue would not cover a full Austin Public Health budget but said it could enhance available resources.
What happens next: Commissioners said they will finalize wording and formalize the recommendation for transmission to the appropriate next steps (staff recording and subsequent presentations as needed). The transcript indicates the report cited for revenue estimates as the "2025 Future 35 potential impacts" report; commissioners did not identify statutory language or ordinance text during the meeting.