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The Human Rights Commission of Austin (Texas) was established on October 5, 1967, by the City of Austin Ordinance 671005-B. The current version of the ordinance can be found at Section 2-1-148 [ 1 ] of The Code of the City of Austin, Texas .
In response to the plan, City Council adopted a resolution defining new city limits and establishing Austin's first zoning code. [6] Later in 1928, Austin voters approved a municipal bond package providing $4.5 million (equivalent to $80,000,000 in 2023) in funds to implement many of the city plan's recommendations.
In 1985 the City of Austin adopted a corresponding Capitol View Protection Ordinance, [8] so that the majority of the corridors are protected under the Austin Code of Ordinances Chapter 25-2 Appendix A, entitled "Boundaries of the Capitol View Corridors", as well as under state law. [9]
An ordinance approved Thursday, dubbed DB90, is largely the same as VMU2, according to a statement from Paul Books, senior planner with the city's planning department. Read more: City of Austin ...
A legal code is a body of law written by a local, non-sovereign government authority, such as a municipality. Whether authored or merely adopted by a municipality, it is typically, though not exclusively, enforced by the municipality, as the Authority Having Jurisdiction.
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A. Austin City Council; Austin City Council District 1; Austin City Council District 2; Austin City Council District 3; Austin City Council District 4; Austin City Council District 5