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San Antonio council proclaims Second Chance Month, celebrates libraries and Texas Biomed

San Antonio City Council · April 16, 2026

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Summary

At its April 16 meeting the council honored Texas Biomedical Research Institute’s 85th anniversary, declared National Library Week, and proclaimed April as Second Chance Month; speakers emphasized workforce, reentry services and library programming.

San Antonio — The City Council used the April 16 meeting to recognize local institutions and programs that serve the community, issuing proclamations and hearing testimonials from nonprofit partners and employers.

Mayor Gina Ortiz Jones read congratulations to the Texas Biomedical Research Institute on its 85th anniversary; Dr. Schlesinger told the council the institute will continue to prioritize talent and partnerships with UTSA and local research institutions. "Going forward, we're gonna continue to focus on talent. That's number one," Dr. Schlesinger said.

The council also proclaimed April 2026 as National Library Week in San Antonio. Sukrit Goswami, director of the San Antonio Public Library, outlined more than 180 free programs the system will offer citywide next week and described family-friendly activities from golden-egg hunts to technology classes. Jaspreet Kaur, chair of the Library Board of Trustees, thanked the council for the proclamation and said such visibility helps connect residents to library resources.

Council members used the ceremonial portion of the meeting to highlight local programs: donations and donor-registration outreach for Donate Life Month; student artwork winners for Fiesta contests; and community recognition for the Autism Community Network and Any Baby Can during Autism Awareness Month.

On Second Chance Month, Council member Castillo introduced advocates and program leaders who outlined workforce and reentry supports. A Unity Recovery representative told the council the recognition is meaningful for people rebuilding their lives after incarceration and urged continued policy and employer engagement to reduce barriers to housing and employment. A panelist representing Toyota Texas described the company’s hiring model and said Toyota had hired more than 300 justice-impacted individuals since 2018, offering it as an example for other employers.

Public commenters and nonprofit leaders also urged council support for proposed affordable housing awards and community land trust funding later on the agenda; Habitat for Humanity and Esperanza Community Land Trust speakers described planned infrastructure and rehab projects to preserve and create homes for low- and very-low-income families.

The council adjourned at 11:56 a.m.