The City Council approved a $12,500 reimbursement grant from hotel‑occupancy‑tax (HOT) funds to support a large mural proposed for the side of the Wimberley Cafe building, after extensive discussion about precedent, budget limits and whether the work primarily benefits the public.The Wimberley Cafe applicants and mural artist described a roughly 55‑by‑9‑foot mural the cafe and artist said would be hand‑painted on archival materials to last a decade or more. The Hotel Occupancy Tax Advisory Committee reviewed the $25,000 grant request and concluded the proposal, as submitted, was not supportable because the requested amount exceeded typical mural awards, the property is private, and the committee did not have evidence of a matching contribution from the owner. The applicant told the council the property owner is willing to partner on improvements and the owner previously planned fence and site improvements.The council debated HOT fund rules, customary award levels (committee members noted typical mural grants historically have been around $5,000), and the location’s public visibility and marketing value. Several councilmembers said they would support a larger award for a high‑quality, durable artwork in the square; several also stressed fiduciary caution given HOT revenue pressures. The mayor and council settled on a $12,500 reimbursement award, with the expectation the final design and any property owner commitments would be coordinated through city staff and the HOT committee. Council approved the allocation by voice vote.Nut graf: The council balanced competing priorities — public benefit from an eye‑catching downtown mural, precedent for HOT awards and limited funds — and approved a partial HOT contribution while leaving details (design and maintenance agreements) to staff. Ending: Staff and the grantee will finalize design, funding breakdown and maintenance expectations and process reimbursements through the city HOT program.