Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Message from Mayor Turner


City Government is Working Better Than Ever
Watch as we Move Houston Forward
A message from Mayor Sylvester Turner
When I arrived in the mayor's office five short months ago, the City was facing a projected budget shortfall of $126 million for the fiscal year that begins July 1, 2016.  In the weeks that followed, the shortfall grew to $160 million.  Cost increases, a voter imposed cap on our revenue growth, a broken appraisal system and the economic downturn combined to create the worst financial challenge the city has faced since the Great Recession when more than 700 City workers had to be laid off in 2011 and services were cut. 
The budget approved by City Council on Wednesday is balanced.  Thanks in part to an Executive Order put in place last January that helped identify targeted departmental cuts and savings, the shortfall has been eliminated and there is a plan in place to continue the positive progress into the future. We have even cut overall spending in this budget by $82 million in comparison to the current budget.  This was accomplished without putting hundreds of hard-working City employees in the unemployment line or cutting critical services that Houstonians rely on and deserve.  Instead, it was done via shared sacrifice and laser fine attention to fiscal management.  As a signal to the credit rating agencies that have an eagle's eye on the City's finances and to assure Houstonians that we are keeping an eye on the things that matter most, it was also done a month earlier than usual, a feat no one can recall happening in more than 20 years, if ever.
Each City department, the employee unions, City Council and various other parties worked together to identify cost savings and efficiencies while also preserving the City's healthy savings account, minimizing employee layoffs and maintaining the critical City services our residents rely on and deserve.  We did not balance the budget on the backs of our library and park users,  nor did we balance it by laying off police and fire fighters.  In fact, this new budget includes funding for an additional police cadet class, for a total of five classes, the most in recent memory.  In addition, I am working with the police chief to find ways to streamline operations to get more officers back on the street.  For the first time in years, the number of police officers at HPD is starting to inch up. This is good news for neighborhoods, some of which are understandably unsure about their safety these days.  I want no one to feel unsafe. 
Passing the new budget occurs on one day but the impact of that day is felt for the next year and beyond.  With this budget, we have put in place a foundation that will support us for the next several years as long as we continue to make progress in other areas that are impacting our pocketbook.
We will attack the problems that lie ahead with the same aggressive approach we took in balancing the budget.  Again, everyone will need to be at the table sharing the work.  This is imperative because if we fail, there will be dramatic cuts in city services, hundreds of employees will have to be laid off and our credit rating will likely suffer.
City government is functioning in ways we have not seen in modern memory. The "pothole crisis" is in the rear view mirror.  Likewise, the administration and city council - Democrats and Republicans alike - agreed to share the sacrifice and passed a balanced budget in record time. Everyone is in the boat and rowing in the same direction.  It's a model that is working well today and can continue to work well tomorrow.
Keeping a promise to fill potholes by the next business day was not easy, but we did it.  Closing a $160 million budget gap was not easy, but we did that too.  I know solving our other problems will not be easy either, but I am confident we will get there if we utilize the same collaborative approach that has gotten us this far.  Just watch us!

Houston Emancipation Park Juneteenth Events -Share on Social Networks

www.EmancipationUSA.com





 
Friends of Emancipation Park’s
2016 JUNETEENTH 
EMANCIPATION CELEBRATION
Celebrating the abolition of slavery in the United States of America
and the legacy of the park where the world's Juneteenth Celebrations began!

 

 

 

 
THE 2016 EMANCIPATION PARK CELEBRATION IS A HISTORIC ONE!  
 
153rd anniversary of the signing
of the Emancipation Proclamation; 
 
     151st year since the slaves in Texas were informed of their freedom;
    
144th Emancipation Park celebration
and the 
    
43rd year of Inner-city Houston
Juneteenth Parades! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
EVENT LOCATION CHANGE:
Recent flooding has caused major  delays in construction at Emancipation Park, so Friends of Emancipation Park’s Juneteenth Events have relocated to nearby venues...
 
Trinity United Methodist Church 
2600 Holman/Live Oak, Houston TX 77004...MAP 
 
Third Ward Multi-Svs Center
3611 Ennis, Houston TX 77004 ...MAP
 
Project Row Houses
 2521 Holman/Live Oak, Houston TX 77004... MAP
 
 
 
Join Us!  
It's not too late to get a vendor booth, be a sponsor,
a contestant or be in the parade
!
 
 
SCHEDULES, APPLICATIONS, ONLINE REGISTRATION AND PAYMENT FORMS ARE AT:  www.EmancipationUSA.com

 

 

 

 
A Brief History of...
 
 JUNETEENTH...
Celebrate Freedom!
________________________________
 
This official Texas holiday, pays tribute to the announcement of the abolition of slavery in Texas by Union General Gordon Granger in Galveston, TX in mid-June of 1865 --nearly 3 years after Abraham  Lincoln had declared all slaves be freed.
 
THE PARK...  In 1872, Freeman's town residents Jack Yates, Elias Dibble, Richard Allen & Richard Brock purchased 10 acres of land at Dowling & Elgin and dedicated "Emancipation Park"--the first public park in the state of Texas-- as a place to celebrate Juneteenth.
 
THE PARADE... Nearly 100 years later, in 1973, Reverend C. Anderson Davis, founder of The National Emancipation Association, initiated Houston's  Juneteenth Parade--initially going down Dowling Street to Emancipation Park. This year celebrates the 39th year of Juneteenth Parades. 
 
THE HOLIDAY... In 1979, State Representative Al Edwards sponsored the bill that made June 19th a Texas State holiday beginning in 1980.  The holiday is now celebrated in over 36 countries!  
 
 
THE PARADE... 
In 1973, Rev. C. Anderson Davis initiated the Juneteenth Parade marching north up Dowling Street to a festival in Emancipation Park. The parade route celebrates the legacy of Third Ward and Freedmen's Town as part of Houston's Black Historic Districts.
 
THE RENEWAL... in 2014, work began on a much anticipated renovation of this park-- with renovations totaling 33 million dollars.  This is a bold investment by our city and "friends"  in honor of all who would celebrate freedom in America and the world.
 
Fall 2016: Grand Opening of the 
"NEW" Emancipation Park