
Josh Peck
City Hall Reporterjosh@tpr.org
Josh Peck is the City Hall Reporter for Texas Public Radio.
He was most recently the Technology & Entrepreneurship Reporter at TPR for a year and a half before beginning the City Hall Reporter role in 2024.
Josh has produced stories heard nationally on National Public Radio, interned at the investigative nonprofit ProPublica, and covered the Robb Elementary mass shooting in Uvalde for the New York Times.
As TPR's City Hall Reporter, Josh plans to focus on how city policies impact regular San Antonians and will also report on policing and labor issues.
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Nirenberg reflected on his last eight years as San Antonio's mayor — what he's accomplished, where the city's fallen short, and what he sees for the future for San Antonio and himself.
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The Ethics Review Board will hear allegations that Kaur violated two sections of the city's ethics code brought against her by one of the candidates hoping to take her District 1 council seat in May.
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The suit accuses the City of San Antonio of 'circumventing Texas's pro-life protections' and calls for a temporary restraining order and injunctive relief.
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The 6-5 vote launched an expedited procurement process that will end with the city council deciding in June which organizations and services receive portions of the $100,000 allocation.
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Defense attorneys said the allegedly withheld evidence could prove that the warrant to arrest the three former SAPD officers was improperly obtained.
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An inaugural report on homelessness from the city's Department of Human Services showed that Bexar County recorded the highest number of unhoused individuals in the last decade during a survey in January, despite a stable homelessness rate over the same period.
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Federal Emergency Management Agency's letters threatened to withhold millions of dollars in reimbursement funds if the city and Catholic Charities didn't share migrant information. Catholic Charities said sharing that information has already been standard operating procedure.
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Los miembros del concejo municipal están abogando por el nuevo poder como una forma de lograr que los propietarios morosos cumplan con las normas y evitar cortes de agua en los complejos de apartamentos que perjudiquen a los inquilinos que pagaron adecuadamente sus facturas.
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San Antonio Water System may soon have the power to impose liens on major delinquent property ownersCity council members are advocating for the new power as a way to bring delinquent property owners into compliance and avoid water shutoffs at apartment complexes that hurt tenants who properly paid their bills.
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The 65-unit complex filled up within three weeks, the fastest of any such project in San Antonio.