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San Antonio council recognizes Texas Biomed, National Library Week and Second Chance month; residents urge action on housing and reentry
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Summary
Council members honored Texas Biomed’s 85th anniversary, proclaimed National Library Week and April as Second Chance month, and heard public comments urging clarity on affordable housing spending and reentry supports.
The San Antonio City Council used part of its April 16, 2026 meeting to recognize local institutions and community programs and to hear public concerns about housing and reentry.
The council acknowledged Texas Biomed’s 85th anniversary, with institute representatives and councilmembers praising its global research contributions and local educational outreach. The mayor also proclaimed April 19–25 as National Library Week; the city’s public library director (identified in the record as Suani) described more than 185 programs planned for the week and emphasized free access to books, technology and community resources.
Councilmembers proclaimed April as Second Chance month, highlighting workforce training, mentoring and reentry programs aimed at helping people returning from incarceration secure employment, housing and support services. Speakers from community organizations, employers and reentry programs described job fairs, employer partnerships and mentoring models that aim to reduce recidivism by connecting returning residents with meaningful work and supportive services.
Public comment addressed affordable housing and program transparency. Antonio Díaz asked for more detail about how housing funds would be allocated and whether presentations would specify income thresholds and spending plans. Diana Flores Uriegas and others described barriers people with criminal records face when seeking housing and work and urged city action to remove those barriers.
Separately, presenters from a local housing trust and Habitat for Humanity described preservation and development projects, including a proposed Rancho de Verano subdivision and trust efforts to preserve low-income housing and engage community contractors.
The ceremonial recognitions were followed later by substantive council action on ordinance 0.19 (detention facilities), which was considered separately and approved in the same meeting.
