An Indiscriminate Monster
By Jessica Meza My name is Jessica Meza and I have lived in San Antonio for 5 years. I am a hometown native of Laredo, Texas. On February
By Jessica Meza My name is Jessica Meza and I have lived in San Antonio for 5 years. I am a hometown native of Laredo, Texas. On February
By Hannah Monroe, SA2020 Neighborhoods Liaison at SAHA Post 1 | Series Archive Welcome to the first installment of the San Antonio Housing Authority’s “First Friday” blog
A local blogger and social media manager with a passion for justice, education, health, faith, and family. A local business owner who isn’t afraid to stand up for
By Lorenzo Gomez How do you tell your story or sell your idea in seven words or less? In the start-up world the ability to distill your idea
By Brittany Sharnsky, SA2020 team member and Ambassador for Downtown Development Here’s the thing—Millennials get a bad rap, but they’re kind of my favorite people (and not just
Today the San Antonio City Council will make a decision regarding the proposed Non Discrimination Ordinance. After setting aside the complexity of unwritten inferences, and cultural, religious, or
By David Nungaray (Haga clic aquí para leer en español) There are many firsts that are clear in my mind when I think about our beautiful city of
By Laura Carter As a longtime resident of San Antonio, blogger and nonprofit enthusiast, I have been aware of SA2020 since the beginning. I watched the NOWCastSA live
By Katie Hoovler, SA2020 LEE Fellow Two years and a couple months ago, when I told people in Ohio that I was moving to San Antonio they usually
By Hannah Monroe, SA2020 Trinity Mellon Fellow in Neighborhoods and Growth Management I’m going to confess something that you hopefully agree with: I think parks are wonderful! Yep.
After 12 years of driving progress toward a shared community vision, SA2020, the nonprofit organization, is dissolving. We believe this is the most visionary thing we can do. We made this decision with the greatest care for our organizational values of leadership, community, and accountability, and we hope you’ll read more about it on our blog.
Our website is live with our final data release, showing where San Antonio stands on reaching the shared community vision. The data release is accompanied by our final call to action—a policy agenda for City government based on our unique bird’s-eye view of San Antonio.
While SA2020’s operations ended March 28, these resources, along with the last twelve years of our research and stories, will be available to download from our website through September 2024.
– Team SA2020