Candidate Guide: Mayor 2024

Overview

Two candidates are running for Mayor in 2024: Joe Herring, Jr., and Roman Garcia. Both are currently serving as city councilmembers — Roman Garcia in Place 1 and Joe Herring, Jr., in Place 2.

Herrring’s term expires in 2024, whereas Garcia’s current term wouldn’t expire until 2025. However, since Garcia has chosen to run for Mayor, according to City Charter rules, he must resign his seat on Place 1 after the election regardless of the outcome. Therefore, Garcia will either serve as mayor or will be completely removed from council in May 2024. Herring, similarly, will also either serve as Mayor or not at all.

Age

Joe Herring, Jr., is 62 years of age. He was the youngest mayor in Kerrville history when elected to office in 1992.

Roman Garcia is 22 years of age. When he was seated on council in 2021, he was the youngest city councilperson in Kerrville’s history.

See the section below about each candidate’s experience in office.

Residency

Both candidates are residents of Kerrville.

Career

Joe Herring, Jr., owns and operates his family’s business, Herring Printing Company, which was established in 1964. Herring is also the author of three published books about the history of Kerrville featuring numerous rare historical photographs of the city and the area.

Roman Garcia works with his father in the IT field.

Higher Education

Joe Herring, Jr., graduated with a BBA from the University of Texas in 1982.

Roman Garcia has not received any degrees from institutions of higher learning. In March, Garcia appeared to claim that he had already received a college degree on his campaign website. When the media reported that he was enrolled but not yet graduated, Garcia amended his website to show his true academic status.

Experience in Elected Office

Herring served as the city’s youngest mayor from 1992-1994. He served on city council from 1990-1994. Herring was elected to City Council Place 3 in 2022 and currently serves in that position. Herring has a total of roughly seven years experience in local elected office.

Garcia was the youngest elected official in Kerrville’s history when he began his service on City Council Place 1 in 2021. He was re-elected to the seat in 2023. He has three years experience in local elected office.

Property Tax Rolls

Herring owns property in Kerrville and is current on his property taxes.

Garcia has never owned property in his name and has not paid any ad valorem property taxes.

Leadership and Nonprofit Service

Garcia, as far as we can tell, serves on one nonprofit board — Kerrville Little League — where his father is the president of the board.

Herring has served on numerous nonprofit boards and received various awards and accommodations — too many to list here. Visit this link to see an extensive list of Herring’s local community involvement: https://www.kerrvilletx.gov/1973/Place-3—Joe-Herring-Jr

Kerrville Forward’s Endorsement

Garcia has consistently been a contrarian on City Council, with numerous votes going against him by a vote of 4-1. He routinely belittles staff, lobs accusations of impropriety without evidence, and bickers with other members of the council. He often changes his position on issues as they come up for votes at different times, sometimes voting against something and then later voting in favor of the same question. Garcia is endorsed and supported by extreme elements of the Kerrville political landscape.

Herring has been a humble public servant during both of his periods in public service — in the 1990s and today. He works closely with staff and other members of the council to learn about the issues and to express his opinions clearly. He has supported many of the recent positive initiatives in Kerrville such as housing, the public safety complex, and quality of life improvements.

Kerrville Forward proudly endorses Joe Herring, Jr., for Mayor of Kerrville.

Former Mayor Bill Blackburn addresses Kerrville’s water challenges

There are some people in Kerrville with “their hair on fire” claiming,
“Kerrville’s out of water!”

Kerrville’s no stranger to drought conditions, including the historic
Seven Year Drought in the 1950s. We should always be vigilant about water.
Water is life and is a limited resource. Conservation is critical.

Here are the facts: We have a limited amount of water to draw from
the Guadalupe River, ten ground wells (eight currently producing water), two
ASR (Aquifer Storage and Recovery) wells that hold almost a billion gallons
of water, and a reuse pond that holds 95 million gallons of treated
wastewater used for irrigation.

As former mayor, I attended Texas Municipal League conferences,
where other municipal officials expressed their envy of Kerrville’s water
resources.

Bernie Bruns, a Tivy graduate who earned an engineering degree from
Texas A&M and worked with the Army Corps of Engineers, headed the Upper
Guadalupe River Authority upon his retirement. He persuaded the city to
create an ASR well – the first in Texas and the second in the nation.
During my first term, the city hired specialists in water issues across
Texas to bring us a report on our water resources, particularly in the worst
case scenario. That plan is being carefully implemented.

We stand on the shoulders of citizens, elected officials, and city staff
who have prepared us for wet times and dry times.

So, listen to warnings, but evaluate those in light of the facts.

Bill Blackburn
Mayor, 2018-2022