Parks staff present annual concessions report amid questions over revenue flows and Trail Conservancy ties

Austin Parks and Recreation Board · February 2, 2026

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Summary

APR staff delivered the FY25 annual concessions report and explained legacy concession updates and revenue allocations to conservancies. Board members pressed staff for clearer accounting of payments routed to the Trail Conservancy and asked for more transparency after audit findings and POMA assignment actions.

Austin Parks and Recreation staff presented the department’s FY25 annual concessions report on Feb. 2 and described contract extensions, capital improvements by concessionaires, and changes in revenue routing to park conservancies under Parkland Operation and Maintenance Agreements (POMA).

Staff outlined current contract extension terms for Rowing Dock, Lone Star Riverboat and Austin Rowing Center, and explained the revised legacy concession policy (20 years continuous operation, same name, cultural contribution). Karen Charles and Denisha Cox said the department requested extensions in some cases to preserve public access while long‑term solutions are finalized.

The presentation also summarized FY25 capital investments (for example, Texas Rowing Center reported roughly $172,000 in improvements; Austin Rowing Club reported approximately $55,803) and described compliance work including an internal audit of APR’s POMA with the Trail Conservancy. Staff said the city received an Austin Public Health internal audit report in January 2026 alleging lack of transparency and financial management problems related to the Trail Conservancy, and that APR is reviewing the audit and drafting formal responses.

During questions, board members asked how the concessions payment line was calculated and how revenue designated to the Trail Conservancy affects APR’s maintenance obligations. Staff said some revenue shares (Epic SUP and Texas Rowing Center) are now routed to the Trail Conservancy and that a net distribution plan for Zilker Eagle is still under review. Several members requested a follow‑up presentation showing detailed money flows between APR, conservancies, and project budgets.

A motion to approve the annual concessions report failed after board members expressed concerns and asked for clearer documentation of revenue flows and spending related to conservancies and mitigation funds.

APR staff said they will provide a written joint report to the Parks Board and Environmental Commission per City Code and noted the board’s recommendations will be forwarded to City Council.