Two Kyle council members vie to be mayor

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Two Kyle council members vie to be mayor

Johnson and Lopez have different ideas on city’s growth

By Patrick George

AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

Lucy Johnson wants to cut debt load

Lucy Johnson wants to cut debt load

Michelle Lopez wants better infrastructure

Michelle Lopez wants better infrastructure

SAN MARCOS — The two Kyle City Council members running for mayor in Saturday’s special election have different visions on how the future of Kyle the fifth fastest-growing city in Texas should take shape.

District 1 Council Member Michelle Lopez and District 5 Council Member Lucy Johnson are running for the mayor’s seat vacated by Mike Gonzalez, who resigned to run for a spot on the Hays County Commissioners’ Court. Early voting ends today. Election Day voting is from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Kyle City Hall, 100 W. Center St.

The dominant issue for both candidates is how to best manage the city’s growth.

Lopez, an administrator at Texas State University, is also the chair of Kyle’s Economic Development Committee. She’d like to create an industrial park to attract more manufacturing and production jobs and improve infrastructure, city services and the community’s involvement in government, she said.

Johnson, a graphic designer, bills herself as the “more fiscally conservative candidate” and wants a more comprehensive growth plan and trims to the city budget.

With the addition of new retailers, restaurants, bars and the Seton Medical Center Hays, the bedroom community is rapidly changing.

Since 2000, the population of Kyle has increased almost fivefold, from 5,314 in 2000 to 26,103 in 2008, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That growth has come with a few headaches.

Kyle’s police department is dramatically understaffed compared with similarly sized cities. At the same time, the city has a relatively low crime rate, with 141.9 violent and property crimes per 10,000 residents. The statewide average is 449.4 per 10,000; the rate in Cedar Park and Georgetown is about 160 per 10,000, according to Texas Department of Public Safety reports.

The department is housed in an old post office building that is too small and fails to meet current needs, city officials said. The city’s five-year capital improvement plan includes a new station, but no funds have been set aside for it.

Johnson said the city carries $73 million of debt because of efforts to address rapid growth. She wants to push that down and keep the tax rate from rising.

She’s against a proposed $20-million recreation center, which the city probably will finish planning for in the next few months. The council would need to approve the project, before asking voters to approve a bond election to pay for it, something Johnson doesn’t think voters will support.

“We just can’t afford it right now,” she said. “Kyle is in a possibly difficult period with the economy.”

Lopez supports the recreation center, as did many residents before the economic downturn. But she wants to wait to bring it before voters until after November, when the election was originally planned, she said.

Johnson said she was the only council member who voted against the city budget in 2008, saying it had too many programs the city didn’t need. She also voted against a $100,000 plan to add an electric trolley service.

Lopez supported the trolley purchase — which is running one route — calling it a progressive step toward public transportation and reducing the city’s carbon footprint. “Most cities our size do not have trolleys, but it is a good step for us,” she said.

Lopez said she wants to see more citizen-based committees to advise the council. She also wants the city to have more civic events, such as Veterans’ Day parades and Martin Luther King Jr. Day festivities, so residents don’t have to go to Austin or San Marcos.

While he said he’d stay out of the race and wouldn’t endorse a particular candidate, Hays County Commissioner Jeff Barton , whose precinct includes Kyle, said both candidates were smart and hard-working members of city government.

“Kyle’s lucky to have two strong choices,” Barton said.

pgeorge@statesman.com; 512-392-8750

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Pd. Pol. Adv by Michelle López for Mayor Campaign, Rudy Cedillo, Treasurer