Overview
A neighbor's guide to Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone (TIRZ) board meetings. TIRZs control significant infrastructure dollars in your neighborhood — road repairs, drainage, streetscaping, and development incentives. If you live in a TIRZ (and many Houstonians do without knowing it), this is where decisions about your neighborhood's physical future get made. Here is how to show up and be heard.
What is a TIRZ?
A Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone captures the growth in property tax revenue within a geographic area and reinvests it into infrastructure improvements in that same area. Houston has 26 active TIRZs. If your property is inside one, a portion of your property taxes goes to a local board that decides how to spend it on roads, drainage, streetscaping, parks, and sometimes affordable housing.
Find out if you are in a TIRZ: Visit houstontx.gov/ecodev/tirz.html for a map.
The basics
When: Most TIRZ boards meet monthly. Schedules vary by zone — check your TIRZ website or the Granicus portal at houston.granicus.com.
Where: Meeting locations vary. Some meet at City Hall, others at community centers or offices within the zone.
How long: Usually 1-2 hours.
Cost: Free. Open to the public.
What happens at the meeting
TIRZ boards are appointed (not elected) and have authority over significant budgets. They decide:
- Capital projects — which roads get rebuilt, where drainage is improved, what streetscaping happens
- Development incentives — tax abatements and infrastructure support for developers
- Affordable housing — some TIRZs fund housing programs (required by state law for certain zones)
- Budgets — annual spending plans, sometimes tens of millions of dollars
- Contracts — construction, engineering, and professional service contracts
How to give public comment
- Check the meeting agenda — most are posted on the TIRZ website or Houston Granicus portal.
- Attend in person. Most TIRZ boards allow public comment at the meeting.
- State your name and address. Mentioning that you live within the zone carries weight.
- Be specific about the project or issue: "The drainage on [your street] has not been addressed and I am asking the board to prioritize it."
Tips for first-timers
- TIRZ meetings are small. Your presence and voice are proportionally more powerful than at City Council.
- Board members are appointed by City Council and often include local business owners and community leaders.
- Ask about the project list. Every TIRZ has a capital improvement plan — knowing what is already planned helps you advocate for changes or additions.
- If your street or neighborhood has an infrastructure problem, a TIRZ meeting may be more effective than calling 311.
- Bring neighbors. Three residents showing up to a TIRZ meeting about a specific street is hard to ignore.
- TIRZ dollars are YOUR tax dollars working locally. You have standing to ask how they are spent.
After the meeting
- Meeting notices and agendas at houston.granicus.com
- TIRZ project information at houstontx.gov/ecodev/tirz_info.html
- Contact your City Council Member if you have concerns about TIRZ board appointments or spending priorities
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