Morgan Witt for Austin City Council District 7 https://morganforaustin.com Morgan Witt for Austin City Council District 7 Tue, 27 Oct 2020 16:21:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 Inequity by design: What do we mean when we say “we need more housing”? https://morganforaustin.com/inequity-by-design-what-do-we-mean-when-we-say-we-need-more-housing/ Tue, 27 Oct 2020 10:16:30 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=1052 Read More]]> “Austin has recognized the fact that the building of a modern, efficient city is more than a mere accident and that the best advantages are available only when a good city plan has been adopted, and a program provided which will suggest certain re-adjustments and the co-ordination of the future improvements.” (A City Plan for Austin, Texas, 1928, pg. 6)

As kids, we’re presented with a common narrative: the middle class American dream. Go to school, graduate from college, get a good job, settle down and buy a house. Simply put, if you work hard, you can lead a comfortable life. But does that narrative hold true anymore?

In 1985 my parents got lucky. The US was in a housing slump, homes were affordable. Austin’s new land use code (we’ll revisit later) was only implemented the year prior. A nurse and an IBM support tech, they achieved the middle class American dream and bought a house in NW Austin for $99k. Just like my parents, I grew up hoping one day I too would have a house of my own. 

Fast forward 35-ish years: I went on to earn three degrees and made a successful career. Yet as a single, educated white woman with privilege, I still can’t afford to buy the childhood home I grew up in. The truth is that the American dream I was sold is merely that — a dream. The same work hard and can-do attitude that got my parents a home is now for some barely enough to make it. The name of the game is “luck”, and even that’s growing scarce. I didn’t get lucky, and if you didn’t already, chances are, neither will you. For ever increasing numbers of Austinites today, luck has run out. We must ask — why is something so fundamental to the American dream as buying a home based on luck, not hard work? Don’t we all deserve a chance? How can we fix it? Well, let’s start with how we got here.

How did we get here? By design.

There just isn’t enough housing in Austin to meet the demands of our growing city — and much of what we are building is high-end luxury housing, inaccessible to most buyers. At this rate, we’ll never catch up. Why? Well, there are many reasons. But the way we’re growing isn’t normal and we shouldn’t accept that this is just what happens as a city expands. 

“It is our recommendation that the nearest approach to the solution of the race segregation problem will be the recommendation of [a separate] district as a negro district… as an incentive to draw the negro population to this area.” Let’s go all the way back to 1928, when Austin implemented a city plan and land use policy specifically intended to segregate communities and exclude people of color from home ownership. They did this directly with relocation programs, redlining, and deed restrictions — and indirectly, by imposing minimum lot sizes to price out lower income residents. We see lasting effects of these practices today in the way our city continues to be segregated.

“If we don’t build it, they won’t come.” The 80s saw a big tech boom in Austin that sent our population through the roof. This was met by fierce opposition from neighborhood orgs and environmental protectio groups looking to put an end to city development and turn away the people flocking here in droves. The 1984 land use code rewrite actually resulted in more restrictive zoning — it illegalized duplexes and apartments in virtually all neighborhoods and implemented strict “compatibility” requirements that limited the height of buildings. Did it work in curbing Austin’s growth? Well, no, we continue to attract tech companies, music gurus, and nature enthusiasts alike — yet we refuse to build for them. Despite these restrictions, our population continues to explode but we haven’t updated our land use code since 1984. 

“Drive ‘til you qualify!” The other reason is our “drive ‘til you qualify” mentality. We don’t feel a sense of urgency to change that land use code because there’s so much space to grow. As Texans we see those limitless horizons and think we can go on building forever. Can’t afford to live in Hyde Park? Keep driving out of the city until you can afford a home! 

What could possibly go wrong? Like exclusionary zoning practices, it’s simply not sustainable. When I say unsustainable I don’t just mean the environment — I literally mean we can’t keep building like this. It costs more money to keep up with roadway, emergency services, and public amenities infrastructure. It costs more in housing for homeowners and renters alike as we consistently fall short of building housing to meet demand. And worst of all, our most marginalized communities pay the price for it as they get pushed further away from transit, job opportunities, and essential community services. 

A hundred years ago these decisions affected communities of color. Now, the decisions made by our predecessors are negatively affecting all of us — by design.

“Okay but Morgan, it seems like City Council has known about this problem for a long time. Why haven’t they don’t anything about it?”

Because they’re fine with the way things are. At the RNC national convention in August, the St. Louis couple who aimed guns at protesters warned of single-family zoning being abolished, worried that low income housing will creep into the communities they fought so hard to preserve. We associate this mindset with political conservatives, but in reality it exists all across the spectrum. In fact liberals tend to couch this fear in more ‘palatable’ language to make it more appealing — but it’s the same mentality that’s directly led to and perpetuates Austin’s housing crisis. In other words, until we overcome our fear of multi-family development and change our approach, our housing crisis is here to stay. 

So, what do we hear/see from the current Austin City Council, D7 rep that alludes to a desire to maintain the status quo? A few examples:

So, where do we go from here? That depends on us.

The greatest irony of the “getting lucky” narrative is that my dad, now retired, wants to move back to Austin to be close to me, but he can’t afford to buy a house here. Austin’s reached a crossroads where even getting lucky is becoming a thing of the past. 

We can change course now and keep up with our city’s pace of change, or we can continue down the same path and turn into San Francisco — and the outcome of the 2020 City Council races may very well determine our fate. This decision is about much more than building more houses. It’s about choosing for ourselves — and for our entire community. For the present, and for generations to come. We have to tackle this problem in a comprehensive way that ensures future generations can buy into it and present generations can stay.

Changing course: A vision of success 

My vision of success is an Austin where people who work hard, like my parents did, are able to achieve the middle class American dream of buying a home. An Austin where people can “age in place” — an Austin where you can navigate different stages of your life in one district. Graduate, get a new job, start a family, get divorced, or retire. I envision a city where we live close to diverse transit options and schools and jobs and our favorite local businesses, and our most vulnerable communities aren’t displaced from their homes because of rising costs. 

Thing is, achieving my vision doesn’t mean eliminating single-family homes and building big commercial apartment towers. It simply means ending our housing shortage by easing zoning restrictions, diversifying housing options in all Austin neighborhoods, equitable city planning that mitigates gentrification, and streamlining our permitting process. 

Keeping the status quo: Austin, the second San Francisco

In a recent Austin Independent questionnaire, District 7 council member Leslie Pool opposed reducing minimum lot sizes. This is an example of leadership choosing to preserve a system designed to exclude. It calls into serious question her commitment not only to making Austin a better place to live, but also to systemic reform. You see, the current minimum lot size requirement was specifically designed, in the 1928 city plan, to keep lower income home buyers (see: people of color) out of Austin’s most desirable neighborhoods.

It’s now been 36 years since our last land use code update. If it worked, we wouldn’t have a housing crisis. So what happens if we continue down this same path? Well, we’re on track to become the next San Francisco.

San Francisco is well known for its iconic culture and booming tech industry, just like Austin. But it’s also suffering a severe housing shortage and notorious for not only huge income disparities, but rampant homelessness… just like Austin. Right now, Austin’s houses are valuing at a faster rate than San Francisco’s are. We look at the Bay area with abhorrence, but really it’s a looking glass into our near future. 

Concluding Thoughts

The funny thing about change is, it happens whether we want it to or not. We can’t control whether things change, because they will one way or another. We only have control over how they change. For decades now, Austin’s leaders have taken the bury-your-head-in-sand approach to responding to growth and we’re paying the price for it.

But there’s still hope, it’s not too late to turn things around. We can make Austin more affordable, for everyone, and we have to start now. The choices you make on the ballot this election season aren’t just for yourself — but for everyone in your community. Those same choices don’t just impact us now, but will determine whether the generations that come after us will be able to achieve the middle class American dream. 

So — are you okay with the way things are right now and what’s looming on the horizon? Or do you think it’s time for a change of course?

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AIC Political Forum https://morganforaustin.com/aic-political-forum/ Wed, 14 Oct 2020 20:00:58 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=1016 A discussion on housing issues with City Council Candidates Morgan Witt (D7 Candidate) and David Chincanchan (D2 Candidate).]]> A discussion on housing issues with City Council Candidates Morgan Witt (D7 Candidate) and David Chincanchan (D2 Candidate).

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Back to Basics: Building the Austin We All Deserve https://morganforaustin.com/back-to-basics-building-the-austin-we-all-deserve/ Fri, 09 Oct 2020 14:24:48 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=908 Read More]]> Howdy, Austin. 

Let’s face it folks, we’re actin’ like a $6 can of Lone Star at a Snow Patrol concert: Too much money, too little fizz. Between a global pandemic and a modern day civil rights movement, it’s become undeniable that the ‘Austin’ experience we so often rave about isn’t everyone’s experience. We’re not just going in the wrong direction; we’ve been heading this way for quite some time and we’re about to go the way of Thelma and Louise.

Sure, we may be ‘weird’, ‘musical’, the ‘blue island in a red sea’… but upon closer examination, Austin consistently falls short of its progressive ideals. We remain one of the most economically segregated metro areas in the country, and our schools the most segregated in the state. Even as we grow, Austin’s Black community shrinks. While we tout our successful response to COVID-19, the Latinx community endures the disproportionate impact of infection and death. Austin brags about its welcoming vibe and booming economy, while also being ranked the worst city for the minimum wage workers.

Now as a proud born and raised Austinite, these are difficult facts for me to face. I grew up in this town, and let me tell you, it was great. I remember the first rock concert my dad took me to at La Zona Rosa. We’d spend summers eating snow cones and playing putt putt at Peter Pan, or the afternoon out on the lake. I dreamed of living the comfortable middle class life my parents had. But fast forward two decades, I’ve learned that Austinites face challenges just making a living, accessing essential services, or engaging with their representatives. 

I eventually came to realize that even I’ve been affected. I guess there’s something to be said about the decidedly American “martyr” complex. We have a tendency to silently endure hardship and make do with poor circumstances, often not demanding better or even considering it as a possibility. It took years to dawn on me that it doesn’t have to be this way. There are cities in the US that solved these problems, and we can, too. 

As the possibility of a better life dawned on me, I started to get frustrated. I’m getting pushed out of my own hometown… and didn’t even know it. I was simply adapting to being a teacher, and now tech professional, who rents in a district — a city — I can’t afford to buy in. I assumed steady rent increases and frequent moves were the norm. I resigned myself to never living in central Austin. I didn’t really consider a world without the soul-sucking commute. It never occurred to me I could live in a community where I feel heard and represented by my City rep.

What I find most infuriating, though, is that Austin’s had years to solve these problems. 2020 has no doubt exposed and worsened many of Austin’s long-standing issues as small businesses and residents alike face an economically uncertain future. But looking back a few decades, we clearly see these problems have been kicked down the road for future generations to handle. Well, the future has arrived and it’s kicking down our front door. 

“In the midst of chaos, there is also opportunity.” (Sun-Tzu) In this time of anger and confusion, fear and frustration, there’s also hope and opportunity. Despite the chaos, time spent cooped up at home has given many of us the chance to reflect on our city, our nation, our values in ways we wouldn’t have otherwise. As division grows both here and across the country, our rights as US citizens and as human beings all seem to be a matter of contentious debate — with heated disagreement from all sides. 

How did we get here? After intensive reflection of my own, I’ve arrived at some conclusions. 

First, we get what we think we deserve.

We shouldn’t just suck it up and deal with crappy circumstances. We’ve lost sight of our rights as humans, and as residents. We’ve been fed a bunch of bull about how hard city leaders fight for all of us — nah, they can do better. We’ve been told basic necessities aren’t realistic — nah, actually they are. Struggling to afford rent or utilities, not having access to affordable healthcare (or any at all), a 50-mile commute… none of these are normal. We shouldn’t put up with it. Say it with me: This isn’t normal, and we shouldn’t put up with it. 

Secondly, the basic right to a decent life shouldn’t be up for political debate.

This is an objective truth that ought to serve as the underpinning for every policy or law we make. As the Founding Fathers did for our nation, what rights will we hold as self-evident for everyone who lives in our city? Not just for ourselves, but for our neighbors — not just for the present, but for generations to come. We have to set the standard by which all legislation will be measured. We must document our commitment to these basic rights by drafting our own bill of rights. To that end, I present to you my drafted proposal for Austin’s very own

Bill of Human Rights for the 21st Century

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ATXN 2020 City Council Candidate Forum District 7 https://morganforaustin.com/atxn-2020-city-council-candidate-forum-district-7/ Wed, 07 Oct 2020 20:00:25 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=977 ]]>

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KUT Austin City Council Candidate Forum — District 7 https://morganforaustin.com/kut-austin-city-council-candidate-forum-district-7/ Wed, 30 Sep 2020 20:00:41 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=924 KUT and the Austin Monitor host a forum with the candidates running for a seat on the Austin City Council in District 7, which covers north central Austin.]]> KUT and the Austin Monitor host a forum with the candidates running for a seat on the Austin City Council in District 7, which covers north central Austin.

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Statesman Endorsement Interview: Austin City Council District 7 https://morganforaustin.com/statesman-endorsement-interview-austin-city-council-district-7/ Mon, 28 Sep 2020 20:00:24 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=926
Statesman endorsement interview: Austin City Council District 7: Council Member Leslie Pool and challenger Morgan Witt

Austin City Council Member Leslie Pool and challenger Morgan Witt met Sept. 28, 2020 with the Austin American-Statesman’s editorial board. They are competing for the District 7 seat in North Austin. More: https://www.statesman.com/elections

Posted by Austin American-Statesman on Tuesday, October 6, 2020
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Statesman endorsement interview: Austin City Council District 7: Council Member Leslie Pool and challenger Morgan Witt

Austin City Council Member Leslie Pool and challenger Morgan Witt met Sept. 28, 2020 with the Austin American-Statesman’s editorial board. They are competing for the District 7 seat in North Austin.

]]> A Conversation on Challenging the Incumbent https://morganforaustin.com/challenging-the-incumbent/ Wed, 23 Sep 2020 17:28:10 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=897
A Conversation on Challenging the Incumbent

Join us on Wednesday, September 23rd @ 7 PM CT for a conversation on challenging the incumbent with Pooja Sethi (For Austin City Council District 10) and Morgan Witt (For Austin City Council District 7).

Posted by Zohaib Qadri on Wednesday, September 23, 2020
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A Conversation on Challenging the Incumbent

Join us on Wednesday, September 23rd @ 7 PM CT for a conversation on challenging the incumbent with Pooja Sethi (For Austin City Council District 10) and Morgan Witt (For Austin City Council District 7).

Posted by Zohaib Qadri on Wednesday, September 23, 2020

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LAD and Stonewall Dems – Candidate Forum https://morganforaustin.com/lad-and-stonewall-dems-candidate-forum/ Mon, 14 Sep 2020 22:00:04 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=894 ]]> Liberal Austin Democrats and Stonewall Democrats Austin City Council Candidate Forum

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AURA Candidate Forum: District 2 and District 7 https://morganforaustin.com/aura-candidate-forum/ Sun, 06 Sep 2020 18:44:20 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=875 ]]> AURA’s first candidate forum for Austin City Council elections on 8/26/2020 – with candidates David Chincanchan for District 2 and Morgan Witt for District 7. Cesar Acosta, Board President, was the moderator.

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Live Q&A with WiseUp TX https://morganforaustin.com/august-30-live-qa-with-wiseup-tx/ Sun, 30 Aug 2020 18:31:34 +0000 https://morganforaustin.com/?p=861
Central Texas Candidate Forum: Austin City Council Candidates

Hear from Austin City Council Candidates on why you should elect them in November! Please post your questions in the comments section! South Asian Bar Association of Austin Indian American Coalition of Texas IACT Greater Austin Asian Chamber of Commerce Korean American Association of Greater Austin - KAAGA Austin Chinese-American Network Austin Asian Communities Civic Coalition APAPA Austin Texas Chapter

Posted by WiseUp TX on Saturday, August 29, 2020
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Central Texas Candidate Forum: Austin City Council Candidates

Hear from Austin City Council Candidates on why you should elect them in November! Please post your questions in the comments section!

South Asian Bar Association of Austin Indian American Coalition of Texas IACT Greater Austin Asian Chamber of Commerce Korean American Association of Greater Austin - KAAGA Austin Chinese-American Network Austin Asian Communities Civic Coalition APAPA Austin Texas Chapter

Posted by WiseUp TX on Saturday, August 29, 2020

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