The Parks and Recreation Board on Sept. 29 voted to recommend City Council approve revisions to Parks and Recreation s concessions policies to create a legacy-concessionaire designation for long-running vendors, and asked Council to consider whether minority-owned or women-owned businesses should be included in related policy revisions.
The board s recommendation stems from a policy update drafted by department procurement staff and reviewed in the board s concessions and contracts committee. Under the draft legacy definition presented to the board, a concessionaire would qualify if it had been continuously owned and operated in the same location by the same family for at least 30 years. During public comment, Rowing Dock representatives asked the board to expand the criteria to include businesses that have operated for at least 20 years and hold a current MBE or WBE certification, arguing the 30-year, same-family rule would exclude some long-serving minority- and women-owned businesses.
Board members debated the appropriate threshold and whether the policy should explicitly consider minority- and women-owned enterprises. The board accepted a friendly amendment to the recommendation asking Council to "consider how MBEs and WBEs may fit into possible revisions." Several board members said they lacked data to unilaterally change the numerical threshold and preferred Council review and stakeholder consultation. One board member suggested 25 years could be a reasonable alternative; others urged caution about opening the policy to multiple simultaneous changes.
The board voted 9-0-1 to approve the recommendation as amended. Motion: "Approve revisions to Austin Parks and Recreation's policies and procedures for concessions to include legacy concessions; ask Council to consider how MBEs and WBEs may fit into possible revisions." Mover: Board Member Merritt. Second: Board Member Flowers. Tally: yes 9, no 0, abstain 1. Outcome: approved and sent to Council for Oct. 9 agenda.
Public commenters urged the department to include environmental, public-safety and financial oversight in concession updates. Chris Flores, who testified against the item as written, asked that risks raised in a Sept. 18 interagency memo on lake safety be included in concession policy updates affecting lakefront vendors.