Rally against lawsuit that could undo Austin code changes aimed at affordability
HomeHome > Blog > Rally against lawsuit that could undo Austin code changes aimed at affordability

Rally against lawsuit that could undo Austin code changes aimed at affordability

Aug 13, 2023

by: Grace Reader

Posted: Aug 28, 2023 / 11:36 AM CDT

Updated: Aug 28, 2023 / 05:05 PM CDT

AUSTIN (KXAN) — Roughly 50 people gathered outside of the Travis County Civil and Family Courts facility Monday to protest a lawsuit that could result in the overturning of several Land Development Code (LDC) changes aimed at affordability.

The lawsuit claims homeowners’ protest rights were violated, which was enough to overturn a previous overhaul of the LDC several years ago.

Though a hearing for the suit was scheduled for Monday according to court dockets, that hearing was postponed, according to Douglas Becker, the attorney representing homeowners against the city. There is no rescheduled date yet, he said.

The rally was in response to a lawsuit filed earlier this year against the City of Austin and city council members which asks the court to strike down changes made to Austin’s Land Development Code (LDC) including:

“Affordability Unlocked has allowed for the creation of more than 8,200 units, including those still in development, of which more than 6,200 have affordability restrictions. The nature of Affordability Unlocked means that many more of these units have been built in high-opportunity and central Austin neighborhoods than would have been possible without the program,” the coalition said in a release.

The lawsuit is brought forward by the same group of homeowners — the Acuña plaintiffs — that filed, and won, a 2020 lawsuit which undid the first overhaul of the Land Development Code the city had done in more than three decades.

The homeowners argued the rewrite violated property owners’ protest rights.

“State law and fundamental fairness mandate that property owners — big and small — receive notice before their property is rezoned. The city must respect people’s property rights,” Becker said in a statement when the 2023 lawsuit was filed.

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.