Travis County Today
272K
Adults with low literacy
~50%
3rd graders below grade level
43%
Low-literacy adults in poverty
40th
TX rank in adult literacy (U.S.)

Phase 1: Where we work now.

LitBridge is building its initial programs in Southeast Travis County and Del Valle. These are communities where literacy need is real, documented, and where organized reading programming has been scarce.

Southeast Travis County ETJ

Unincorporated SE Travis County • Austin ETJ
Rural Poverty Limited Services Rapid Growth Corridor

The unincorporated communities in Austin's Southeast Extra-Territorial Jurisdiction sit at an awkward threshold — too rural for city services, too close to Austin to be served by county infrastructure built for sparse population. Growth has outpaced investment here for decades.

These communities lack the density of tutoring centers, after-school programs, and public library branches that Austin proper offers. Families who can't afford private enrichment have few alternatives. The literacy gap compounds early and compounds silently.

LitBridge targets this corridor because the need is acute and the organized response is minimal. We go where the gap is, not where it's convenient to be.

272K
Adults with low literacy across Travis County — many concentrated in the unincorporated southeast corridor
~50%
Of Texas 3rd graders reading below grade level — the pipeline gap starts early in underserved ETJ communities
Low
Density of tutoring centers, after-school literacy programs, and public library access in the ETJ corridor
25%+
Of Del Valle ISD residents live below the poverty line — well above the Travis County average of 10.9%
$47K
Median household income in Del Valle ISD — less than half the Austin metro median
17%
Population growth in Del Valle ISD between 2010–2017 — investment in educational programming has not kept pace

Del Valle

Southeast Austin • Del Valle ISD
High Poverty Rate Working-Class Families Growing Community

Del Valle sits southeast of Austin proper, anchored by Del Valle Independent School District. It's a working-class community of longtime Latino families, recent immigrants, and families priced out of Austin's rapidly appreciating core. Poverty rates are significantly above the county average — over 25% of residents live below the federal poverty line.

Del Valle ISD schools serve a student population where educational enrichment outside school hours is largely out of reach financially. After-school tutoring, home libraries, and reading programs that are plentiful in wealthier zip codes are scarce here.

LitBridge embeds directly in Del Valle — working with families, schools, and community centers to build the reading infrastructure that public investment hasn't provided.

Anticipated Expansion Areas

The following communities are planned for inclusion in Phase 2 of LitBridge's work — pending additional financial and organizational resources. The literacy need in each is well-documented. The timeline is determined by our capacity to serve them well.

Northeast Austin

Northeast Travis County • 78653, 78660 • Phase 2
Fastest Growing Infrastructure Gap City–County Equity Target

Northeast Austin and the surrounding Travis County corridor have grown faster than almost anywhere else in the metro. Population growth without commensurate investment creates new underserved communities — and that's what's happened here.

The City of Austin and Travis County identified this area in a joint equity plan acknowledging historic underinvestment. Schools are newer but the after-school infrastructure — reading programs, tutoring, enrichment — hasn't materialized at the same pace as population growth.

Fast
Fastest-growing area in Travis County — services and literacy infrastructure have not kept pace
Joint
Subject of City of Austin / Travis County joint equity investment plan
31%
Families living below the poverty line — nearly 3× the Austin city average
82%
Students in Dove Springs AISD elementary schools qualify for free or reduced lunch

Dove Springs

Southeast Austin • 78744 • Phase 2
High Poverty Limited After-School Access Diverse Community

Dove Springs is one of Austin's most culturally diverse neighborhoods — longtime Mexican-American families, recent Central American immigrants, and working-class households. High poverty rates and minimal access to educational enrichment make it a clear future target for LitBridge's programs.

Rundberg

North Austin • 78753 • Phase 2
Multilingual High Immigrant Population Underserved Corridor

The Rundberg corridor is one of the most linguistically diverse stretches in Central Texas. Over 40% of families speak a language other than English at home. Multilingual literacy challenges compound the already significant gap — and require specialized programming that LitBridge intends to develop as it scales.

40%+
Households speak a language other than English at home
25+
Languages spoken across the corridor, per Austin ISD data

How we got here: the map that shaped Austin.

Understanding Austin's literacy gap requires understanding Austin's history. The neighborhoods with the lowest literacy rates today are the same neighborhoods that were deliberately cut off from opportunity for generations.

1928
Austin's Master Plan segregates the city
The City of Austin's 1928 Master Plan designates a "Negro district" in East Austin, concentrating Black residents in one area and withdrawing city services from those who remained elsewhere. This policy concentrates poverty and limits investment for decades.
1930s–40s
Federal redlining locks in disinvestment
The Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) draws redlining maps of Austin, rating Black and immigrant neighborhoods "hazardous" in red. Banks refuse mortgages, insurance is denied, and businesses won't locate there. Neighborhoods without capital cannot build schools, attract teachers, or invest in libraries.
1962
I-35 becomes Austin's racial dividing line
The completion of Interstate 35 through Austin's urban core physically reinforces racial segregation. East of I-35 becomes synonymous with Austin's Black and Latino communities — and the resource gaps that policy created remain embedded in the city's geography.
1970s–2000s
Decades of underinvestment compound
Schools in redlined neighborhoods receive lower per-pupil funding, libraries are sparse, after-school programs are chronically underfunded. Families who couldn't build wealth through homeownership cannot privately fund tutoring or enrichment for their children. The gap compounds across generations.
2025
Texas reading scores hit lowest levels in decades
Texas 3rd-grade reading proficiency reaches its lowest recorded level. The neighborhoods carrying the heaviest burden are the same ones that were redlined 90 years ago. The map changed. The outcomes didn't.
Now
LitBridge goes to the neighborhoods
We don't wait for families to find us. We embed programming in the communities that policy ignored — building reading skills, providing books, and training local tutors where the need is deepest. Not charity. Repair.

Ready to help close the gap?

Volunteer in Southeast Travis County or Del Valle, donate books, contribute financially, or just tell us you're interested. LitBridge is early — your involvement shapes what we become.

Get Involved →