SAN ANTONIO – A monumental change to how San Antonio residents vote for their future mayor and city council representatives will be a topic of discussion outside and inside City Hall on Thursday.
During Thursday’s city council meeting scheduled for 9 a.m., Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones and the city’s 10 council members are expected to decide whether or not they will move those elections from May to November in odd-numbered years.
KSAT plans to livestream Thursday’s San Antonio city council meeting at 9 a.m. in this article and on KSAT Plus. Delays are possible; if there is not a livestream available, please check back at a later time.
Their vote was made possible by a change in state law that went into effect earlier this year.
The law change was aimed at allowing the City of Dallas to shift its election date. San Antonio and other cities can also take advantage of it without changing their city charters, but they would have to act by Dec. 31.
Jones, who has voiced support for the election calendar change, has also scheduled a news conference at 8 a.m. on the City Hall steps.
According to a city news release, Jones is expected to discuss the potential election shift with Dolores Huerta, a civil rights activist who co-founded the United Farm Workers labor union alongside César Chávez.
KSAT also plans to livestream the 8 a.m. Thursday news conference with Jones and Huerta in this article and on KSAT Plus.
City staff estimated that an election change from May to November could save the city between $800,000 and $1 million.
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