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Austin Moves Forward with Plan for Faster Building Permits

Miguel Gutierrez Jr.
/
KUT
Construction site at the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Alexander Avenue on July 16, 2016.

Builders in Austin have long complained about the city’s notoriously slow permitting process. Now, the city is set to launch a new program that will offer a faster option - but it comes with some costs. 

Building in Austin typically means getting a permit from the city's Development Services Department. But as recent reports have shown, that process can be slow and convoluted. The city’s new expedited permit program offers a faster review process in exchange for a fee. Along with the additional charge, developers who take the faster route will have to ensure certain protections for construction workers, like providing safety training, workers compensation and paying a living wage – that’s $13.03 per hour in Austin.

Bo Delp is with the Workers Defense Project, a group that advocated for the worker protections. He calls the requirement a “huge win for working families.”

“It really sends a clear message that the City of Austin will incentivize and reward businesses that are willing to invest in working families in this city and ensure that they have enough money in their pocket at the end of the day to go home safely to their family to live in the city that they build,” Delp said.

Delp sees the new program as a win for both workers and developers, and he thinks Austin’s approach could be a model for other cities to balance the two interests. But not everyone agrees. Drew Scheberle is with the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce. He takes issue with a clause in the council resolution that requires expedited projects to recruit 30 percent of their workforce hours from Department of Labor-registered apprenticeships.

“Those are programs that are union programs,” Scheberle said. “There’s nothing that’s demonstrated that you’re better prepared or you’re more effective if you’ve gone through one of those.”

Scheberle thinks that requirement would give unfair preference to workers who go through training programs affiliated with labor unions.

“You have union apprenticeship that gets significant priority in hiring, and it disadvantages graduates from Austin Community College, area school districts, Goodwill and other kinds of local training programs,” he said.

Scheberle said the business community has no problem with offering protections for employees, but stipulations like these don’t belong in the conversation. The expedited permitting process is set to launch in March. 

This story was produced as part of KUT's reporting partnership with the Austin Monitor. 

Syeda Hasan is a senior editor at KUT. Got a tip? Email her at shasan@kut.org. Follow her on Twitter @syedareports.
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