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Tag: Austin

  • Austin Pets Alive! | The Future of Transport – A Note From Dr. J

    Austin Pets Alive! | The Future of Transport – A Note From Dr. J

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    Mar 25, 2021

    As we start to see the light of normalcy return with the release of COVID vaccines, we have a little break from what has felt like back-to-back emergencies to share our plans for the future at Austin Pets Alive!. Our board of directors and executive staff have been working hard on creating and starting to implement our 2021-2023 strategic plan.

    This plan brings our mission sharply into focus. If you need a refresher, our mission is to promote and provide the resources, education, and programs needed to eliminate the killing of companion animals. We recognize if we tighten our efforts, forget what we know as our “status quo” and really drill down on all the ways we, as a large lifesaving organization, can physically intervene in the deaths of shelter pets, we can actually find even more ways to save lives with what we have and know. Our eyes are set on making Texas No Kill and we’re not stopping there.

    After the recent snowstorm, we got a taste of what the animals are like who are still losing their lives in Texas as we madly transported more than 1,000 of them to other cities that wanted to help. These are sweet cuddly little kittens, small fluffy dogs, labs, huskies and so many more deserving lives that we know from our experience in Austin are among the easiest to save. One story in particular hit home–a sweet little chihuahua mix named Hamilton in Laredo who was scheduled to be killed. He was scooped up for this transport and now is happy and safe in a home in Jackson Hole, WY! We had never thought we could save thousands more per year until now, and dogs like Hamilton deserve our brainstorming and reassessing so that more lives are saved.

    Here is some food for thought:

    • It is estimated that 150,000 animals are still needlessly dying in Texas shelters every year.
    • In most northern U.S. communities, there is an overabundance of adopters, which is keenly felt by organizations which scramble to find adoptable pets to meet demand.
    • It costs a fraction of our total per animal to serve as a distributor to shelters and rescues as it does to take them all in and do all the work ourselves before adoption.

    So why haven’t we transported out all along? Over the last 12 years, we have steered clear of transport, except during Hurricane Harvey and then only for non-Austin animals, because Austin is the safest community in the country for pets. Sending pets from Austin to anywhere else is inherently more dangerous for them. Unfortunately, that thinking has gotten in the way of us taking a hard look at how we might be able to help pets still dying all over the state. While Austin is safest, only a tiny fraction of the 150,000 animals losing their lives each year in Texas can get into Austin. If we start to think of Austin instead as a pit stop in the journey from one very dangerous place in TX to a much less dangerous place in the north, even if that final destination is not at Austin’s level of No Kill experience, we start to open the door to making Texas No Kill.

    You might be thinking, “But taking some of your attention off of Austin-only animals makes you less effective for Austin!” We believe the opposite is true. We know that if we are able to save the masses of Texas lives more efficiently, we can ourselves focus on saving the few that truly need our specialized support more effectively. By helping more cities stop killing, we help more animals join homes both in Austin and beyond. By solving for the reasons animals die on a grander scale than just our own backyard, Austin continues as the beacon of hope for other cities and states. By ensuring that the money entrusted to us to save lives saves as many pets as possible, we give every animal, no matter its lineage, an equitable chance to not die in a shelter without the benefit of someone trying to help.

    Transport is one small piece of our strategic future. We will be sharing a lot more in the coming weeks. Thank you for being on this journey with APA! as we continue to push the lifesaving needle.

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! Hits Goal of 1,000 Shelter…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! Hits Goal of 1,000 Shelter…

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    Mar 23, 2021

    AUSTIN, TX — On Wednesday morning March 24th, Austin Pets Alive! placed 27 cats onto a private plane bound for Wichita, KS, culminating a weeks-long effort to transport 1,000 at-risk pets to safe shelters in the aftermath of Winter Storm Uri. This is the third transport flight that David Nelson, the owner and pilot of the plane, has donated on APA!’s behalf. By offering his plane, fuel, time and resources, David has played an integral role in APA!’s transport missions that began in late February.

    Charlie, the 1,000th animal transported.

    Upon landing in Wichita, the kitties will be met at the receiving airport by staff members from KC Pet Project, who will then drive the cats the rest of the way to their shelter to be put up for adoption. This feline-focused transport represents a significant milestone that was only made possible through the support of countless volunteers, donors, and animal welfare advocates.

    Map updated 3.23

    After the devastating winter storm that hit Texas just a few weeks ago, APA! responded to urgent pleas for help from small, rural shelters across the state that lacked resources to care for all the pets that were suddenly arriving through their doors. The APA! Town Lake facility became a central transport hub for these pets in need, while shelter partners across the country organized the next leg of transportation to reach their final destinations. From Florida to Washington to Massachusetts, animal shelter staff across the continental U.S. welcomed these vulnerable pets with open arms, providing safe shelter and care to get them ready for adoption within their respective new communities.

    Additional photos and videos of this transport are available for press upon request. Please contact [email protected]

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Texas Pets Alive! Celebrates House Bill 2510 by…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Texas Pets Alive! Celebrates House Bill 2510 by…

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    Mar 15, 2021

    AUSTIN, TX – Texas Pets Alive!, Austin Pets Alive!’s advocacy arm, is excited to announce that House Bill 2510, introduced by Representative Candy Noble (R-District 89), will ensure no nonprofit animal rescue will have taxes imposed on adoption fees. HB 2510 is a companion bill to SB 197, filed by Senator Jane Nelson (R-District 12).

    Texas Pets Alive! works to promote and advocate for those rescue and shelter organizations that save the most at-risk companion animals in Texas, understanding that rescues across the state often pull homeless pets with expensive medical cases from municipal and county shelters, and cover the costs for those procedures, saving taxpayer money and saving lives.

    “I’m proud to carry House Bill 2510. Families who are willing to open their homes to unwanted animals through pet adoption should be applauded by Texans, not taxed by the state,” said Representative Candy Noble. “The efforts of those who work in our rescue and shelter organizations should be rightly focused on the care and placement of the pets, not in the collection and paperwork associated with sales tax receipts.”

    HB 2510 clarifies that rescues are exempt in statute from the Texas Comptroller’s Office imposing taxes on adoption fees. The Comptroller’s office has reviewed this legislation and determined that the bill can be administered as written.

    “Rescue organizations are a lifeline for large municipal and county shelters, and ensure that animals have more options for leaving the shelter alive,” said Katie Jarl Coyle, Executive Director of Texas Pets Alive!. “Providing this sales tax relief for local organizations ensures they can easily continue to support shelters by pulling the most expensive animals and recouping fees for those costs through adoptions.”

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! Flies to Rural West Texas,…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! Flies to Rural West Texas,…

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    Mar 09, 2021

    AUSTIN, TX — Austin Pets Alive! coordinated the rescue and transport of 1 dog and 13 cats by plane today. With the help of private pilot David Nelson, the flight to Alpine, Texas and back to Austin saved the 14 pets at-risk of euthanasia from two shelters as part of APA!’s aim to save 1,000 pets in shelters facing tough times in the aftermath of the recent Texas winter storms.

    Map updated 3.8

    These pets are from Alpine Animal Services and Marathon Animal Shelter, both small, rural shelters lacking resources to care for all the pets that enter their doors. Austin Pets Alive!, through the generosity of donor Nelson, flew to the Alpine area to pick up these pets and return them to Austin before transporting them to shelter partners in Michigan, Chicago, and the DC area later this week.

    6-year-old pup George, who was brought back on the lifesaving flight

    This roundtrip, same day flight is crucial to lifesaving. Where it would normally be a 12-13 hour day of driving for volunteer transporters, the flight there and back will take just a few hours. Available vehicles, drivers, and funds have historically been major barriers to getting pets in these rural areas to safety, so David’s time, plane, and willingness is invaluable.

    This is David’s second lifesaving flight for Austin Pets Alive! in less than two weeks. In late February, David and APA! flew to Harlingen and Laredo in one day. On that rescue mission, David met and transported a dog named Wagon, who he fell in love with and had to add to his family.

    Jennifer from Alpine Animal Services loading two cats on the plane

    Texas shelters who need help getting pets out as well as shelters that are able to transport and/or receive cats and dogs should contact [email protected]. The biggest need at this time is for organizations that can safely transport pets. To help make these transports happen, people are encouraged to give to Austin Pets Alive! here.

    Additional photos and videos of this transport are available for press upon request. Please contact [email protected]

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Our Mask Protocols Aren’t Changing

    Austin Pets Alive! | Our Mask Protocols Aren’t Changing

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    Mar 04, 2021

    Austin Pets Alive! will continue to require staff, volunteers, shelter visitors, and APA! Thrift store shoppers to wear masks when on site at any APA! location, which includes its Town Lake campus, Tarrytown shelter, and all four APA! Thrift stores. We will not be loosening our safety protocols that have been in place for the foreseeable future, so please mask up when you come to see our pets and our people. We appreciate our community’s kindness, understanding, and commitment to keeping each other safe.

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  • The Zebra Named Best Place to Work by Austin Business Journal for Third Consecutive Year

    The Zebra Named Best Place to Work by Austin Business Journal for Third Consecutive Year

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    New Penthouse Suite, Growing Teams, Perks Including Maid Service Among Keys to Employee Happiness

    Press Release



    updated: Jun 26, 2017

    The Zebra, the nation’s most visited car insurance comparison marketplace, announced its recognition today as an Austin Business Journal Best Place to Work for the third consecutive year. Celebrating from its downtown headquarters, the company credits their employees with maintaining a unique, collaborative, and innovative culture rooted in core values such as expressing gratitude and creating amazing experiences for colleagues and customers alike.

    “The Zebra has always been a place where good vibes reign,” says The Zebra CEO Adam Lyons. “We want our employees to feel comfortable, ask questions, move fast, and break things. We want them to enjoy the place they devote so much time to every week and the people they share it with.”

    “The Zebra has always been a place where good vibes reign. We want our employees to feel comfortable, ask questions, move fast, and break things. We want them to enjoy the place they devote so much time to every week and the people they share it with.”

    Adam Lyons, Founder & CEO, The Zebra

    The Zebra recently marked the one-year anniversary of their move to a tricked-out penthouse suite in one of Austin’s most desirable downtown office buildings, complete with expansive patios. The space is an addition to the long list of employee perks, including an in-house barista, daily smoothies, ergonomic desks, unlimited paid time off policy, monthly personal maid service and a “Treat Yo’Self” allowance for employees to pursue their interests or unwind — be it with a Netflix subscription, rock climbing, or even calligraphy lessons. The company espouses values that make the office a space of collaboration, respect and innovation.

    The Austin Business Journal unveiled the list of 2017 Best Places to Work at its annual awards luncheon on June 23. The event brought together the 75 companies who received the highest employee-reported assessments in Austin. The winning companies embody positive values, offer competitive benefits and perks, and have high levels of employee satisfaction. At the ceremony, The Zebra won the coveted Spirit Award again for the third consecutive year, demonstrating company pride with the most energy and enthusiasm among all honorees.

    Source: The Zebra

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  • Ted Cruz awaits winner of Democratic primary after clinching GOP nomination

    Ted Cruz awaits winner of Democratic primary after clinching GOP nomination

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    FILE – Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, speaks to the media during a press conference on the border, Sept. 27, 2023, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democrats in search of flipping a U.S. Senate seat are watching Texas closely on Super Tuesday to see who voters nominate against Sen. Cruz.Mariam Zuhaib/AP

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas has officially locked up the GOP nomination for a third term and awaits the winner of a wide field of Democratic challengers.

    Cruz had no major primary opponent. Nine Democrats are running for the chance to unseat him in November, including U.S. Rep. Colin Allred and state Sen. Roland Gutierrez.

    Democrats see Cruz’s seat as one of their best chances to flip a Senate seat this year even though a Democrat hasn’t won a statewide race in Texas in 30 years.

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    Cruz’s last reelection campaign in 2018 ended in a narrow victory over Democrat Beto O’Rourke.

    THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Democrats in search of flipping a U.S. Senate seat were watching Texas closely on Super Tuesday to see who voters nominate against Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, whose underdog challengers have cast as vulnerable after a narrow margin of victory in 2018.

    U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, a former NFL player and three-term congressman from Dallas, and state Sen. Roland Gutierrez have drawn most of the attention in a primary that again finds Texas Democrats in pursuit of a breakthrough candidate. No Democrat has won a statewide office in Texas in 30 years, the longest losing streak of its kind in the U.S.

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    Despite that, Democrats believe Texas and Florida are their best shot for upsets in November as they try to preserve a slim 51-49 advantage in the Senate. That majority includes West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who is not seeking reelection and whose seat is likely to flip Republican.

    Seven other Democrats are also running in the Senate primary in Texas, including state Rep. Carl Sherman. The race heads to a May 28 runoff if no candidate wins a vote majority.

    Allred, who would become Texas’ first Black senator if elected, has raised more than $21 million since getting in the race. That’s significantly more than his primary challengers, whom the civil rights lawyer has largely ignored during the primary while keeping his attacks focused on Cruz.

    Allred, 40, made headlines in January when he was among 14 House Democrats who backed a Republican resolution in Congress that criticized President Joe Biden’s handling of the border. Gutierrez criticized Allred for the vote, accusing him of siding “with GOP extremists,” and Cruz spokesperson Macarena Martinez called the vote a “disingenuous attempt to posture on the border.”

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    Allred said he did not agree with all the language in the resolution but said he wanted to see more urgency at the federal level when it comes to the border.

    “For me, it was about sending a signal that, you know, what we have been doing is not working,” Allred said in an interview last week during early voting in Texas. “We have to change something.”

    Cruz only narrowly beat Beto O’Rourke for reelection in 2018 by less than 3 percentage points. It was the closest Democrats have come in decades to winning a statewide seat and happened during a midterm election that wound up being a strong year for Democrats nationally.

    Texas Democrats have struggled to recapture that momentum since then. O’Rourke lost by double digits when he challenged Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in 2022.

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    “Things are shifting in the state. It takes a long time,” said Jared Hockeman, the chairman of the Democratic Party in Cameron County along the U.S.-Mexico border. “We recognize that.”

    Murphy reported from Oklahoma City.

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    By PAUL J. WEBER and SEAN MURPHY, Associated Press

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  • State board to decide fate of historic UT-Austin school building

    State board to decide fate of historic UT-Austin school building

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    The social work school was once the home of University Junior High, one of the first integrated schools in Austin.

    Courtesy Hsiao-Ping Hsu

    The fate of one of the University Of Texas’s most historic buildings remains uncertain as a grassroots group puts out a last-ditch effort to save the legendary building from being turned into a Longhorns football training facility.

    The site of the first desegregated school in Austin, the Steve Hicks School of Social Work,  has delayed its demolition, but it still needs to obtain a State Antiquities Landmark status from a state board to survive. However, it could still be torn down even if it receives this status.

    Save the Past for the fUTure, a coalition formed to save the school recently applied for that designation; the Texas Historical Commission will consider the request in late July. But even if the 91-year-old building were to get the designation, it’s not fully out of the woods. UT could still push for demolition, but it would take an extra step—undergoing a state review—which could delay but not stop completely its plans to build a new football practice facility, said former UT professor Barbara Anderson.

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    “What we’re counting on is the cultural and racial history that building embodies,” Anderson told Chron. “It’s a marker for both the dark history of segregation and the power of education to create an integrated school.”

    UJH transformed itself from an all-white school into an oasis of diversity with nearly equal parts White, Black, and Latino students.

    UJH transformed itself from an all-white school into an oasis of diversity with nearly equal parts White, Black, and Latino students.

    Courtesy Save the Past for the fUTure

    The building, designed by the famous architect Paul Philipe Cret in the ’30s, was once the home of University Junior High, the first in the area to integrate students of different races. Inside, the building features a mural by beloved Austin artist Raul Valdez. For the last three decades, it has been the main learning facility of the College of Social Work. 

    Anderson says that the school’s origin as the first desegregated school by choice still resonates in the lives of its alumnae even decades after it closed in 1967. 

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    “I’ve talked to kids who went there before they headed to high school, and uniformly, the message is this was a place where the children’s squad, the student council, all those groups, blended all these different kids together,” Anderson said.

    The decision to demolish the school was announced last spring when the UT athletic department announced its plans to construct a new training facility at the location of the Steve Hicks School of Social Work building. The department shared renderings of the future facility. It justified its decision by stating that the team required a new facility as they were moving into the SEC this year, as reported by the Austin-American Statesman.

    Anderson, who had been teaching students in the building for over two decades, along with another retired UT professor, Kathy Armenta, are leading the initiative to preserve the historic Hicks building. Despite receiving the landmark designation, there is a possibility that the building may still be demolished if UT convinces the state to do so. Anderson jokingly said they would have to rip her out of the trees when asked what the group would do if that came to pass.

    “All of these things we’re trying to do take so much mental energy, that I think we just keep following any leads that we can get,” Anderson said. “How would it physically look like to have a 74-year-old woman up in a tree when the bulldozers come? UT has become so repressive about dissent.” 

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    Edwin Bautista, then a student, voiced his dissatisfaction with a plan to tear down the building in the Austin Chronicle. He was the one who, as a last-ditch effort, submitted a request to the Antiquities Advisory Board that would recommend the school for the landmark designation.

    “For the university to disregard [the University Junior High building’s history] is just so disappointing because they are turning their back on our history, and that is something that I’m not willing to accept,” Bautista told Austin-American Statesman columnist Bridget Grumet.

    Anderson claims that Hicks Dean Allan Cole informed the faculty that the demolition of a building was part of an offer that was difficult to decline. According to the offer, the athletics department would acquire the land to build a facility, and in return, the School of Social Work would receive $10 million to use as it wished. However, Anderson noted that no memorandum of understanding had been signed to finalize this agreement. 

    Athletics director Chris Del Conte said this February at a town hall event that the money would be used to solve homelessness.

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    Chron attempted to contact Cole but was directed to the school’s marketing representative, who did not answer multiple requests for comment at the time of this publication. A university spokesperson, however, did speak to Grumet.

    “We respect the process. There are multiple steps, and we’ll let it play out,” Assistant Vice President for University Communications Mike Rosen said.

    In response to a question about why the university is not prioritizing the restoration of the school, he explained to the outlet that the building would be too expensive to restore. He pointed to a master plan by UT in March 2015 that estimated the cost to be $52 million.

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    Despite the high costs, Save the Past for the fUTure is still looking for any avenue that might preserve the Hicks building.

    According to Anderson, the organization is in talks with Preservation Texas, a statewide organization dedicated to preserving historic structures. The group hopes to receive a designation for the most endangered places from this organization. Previously, the group has received support from Preservation Austin, a similar non-profit, but not a designation.

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    Janet Miranda

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