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After a year of negotiations, the City of San Antonio and San Antonio Police Officers Association have reached a tentative agreement on a union contract. Although negotiations have finished, the city council and union membership will have to vote before its final.
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City and community leaders have announced details for the 26th annual César E. Chávez March for Justice on Saturday, March 26, 2022, which marks its return for the first time since the pandemic began.
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The Grand Hyatt Hotel next to San Antonio’s Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center is going up for sale — and there’s already a potential buyer.
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San Antonians are passionate about their neighborhood identity, and for people on the city’s far West Side, returning a stretch of road to its original name has been a six-year fight. They won that long-awaited victory Thursday as the San Antonio City Council voted to return Enrique M. Barrera Parkway back to its original name of Old Highway 90.
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The City of San Antonio’s sales-tax funded job training program “SA: Ready to Work” will begin taking job applications in the summer, and several dozen local and national businesses have pledged to work with the city in its development.
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In a 9-1 vote, the San Antonio City Council gave the green light to spending for more than $212 million over the next four years. The majority — about $200 million — comes from the American Rescue Plan Act on Thursday.
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San Antonio and Bexar County officials, CPS Energy and SAWS held a joint virtual news conference on Tuesday as a strong cold front is expected to arrive Wednesday afternoon.
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The $43 million Broadway project from the 2017 city bond is in jeopardy after the Texas Transportation Commission voted Thursday to retain control over Broadway.
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The City of San Antonio says Broadway, a portion of which is part of the state highway system, was transferred to the city by the state in 2014, but the state and the Texas Department of Transportation now claim that transfer was never completed.
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The 3.85% increase would generate about $73 million per year for the utility which officials said would go towards weatherization, technology, staffing, and growth for the utility. It’s a substantial decrease from more than 10% proposed earlier this year.