Community Impact Highlights
Our independent analyses utilize public data and equity-focused methodologies to uncover critical gaps across transit, housing, and infrastructure. These insights empower community-serving agencies to identify risks and hidden opportunities through a rigorous, data-driven lens.
We are dedicated to increasing transit accessibility and rider safety within high-need areas to foster equitable connections across the region.
Bridging regional gaps and linking neighborhoods to vital public services and career paths.
We drive fiscal accountability and ensure fairness in public investments through rigorous, equity-based infrastructure analysis to benefit diverse communities.
Technical Transparency & Reproducibility
We believe that all analysis should be open and auditable to the public. Ameritech shares its GitHub code and raw data to ensure that city staff, engineers, and data scientists can verify our methodology independently. By providing full documentation and open-source models, we guarantee that our safety analysis numbers are not just real, but reproducible.
Disclaimer: ACG is an independent entity. The analyses and insights provided on this website, including work related to the City of Austin’s CapMetro system and other municipal data, are the independent work product of Ameritech Consulting Group. While Tiffany Moore represents District 1 as a Commissioner on the Community Development Commission (CDC), the views, data models, and conclusions expressed here are solely those of Ameritech and do not represent the official position, policy, or endorsement of the City of Austin or the CDC.
Case Studies
Ameritech Consulting Group (ACG) partners with government agencies, nonprofits, and mission-driven organizations to solve complex challenges. The case studies below highlight how we use data-driven analysis, community engagement, and practical implementation support to provide results.
Human Services
Capital Texas Food Bank Operations & Governance Analysis
Central Texas Food Bank (CTFB) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit serving 21 counties across Central Texas, distributing food through a network of approximately 250 partner agencies to over 610,000 food-
insecure individuals annually. As of June 1, 2026, CTFB is merging with Shepherd’s Heart in Waco,significantly expanding its footprint.
This analysis identified six governance concerns — two rated high severity — arising from vendor relationships, dual employer representation on the board, and structural self-dealing between the organization and its affiliated Foundation. The most urgent findings involve (1) a potential auditor conflict with Deloitte holding both the Chair and Treasurer board seats, and (2) the COO’s direct prior employment at CTFB’s most publicly praised food distribution vendor.
Government
Community Advancement Network (CAN) Operations & Governance Analysis
Community Advancement Network (CAN) was founded in 1995 as Community Action Network and renamed in 2013. It
describes itself as “a partnership of governmental, non-profit, private and faith-based organizations which leverage mutual
resources to collectively improve social, health, educational and economic opportunities” in Austin/Travis County. CAN
operates as a civic coordination and data body representing approximately 25 member organizations. Its primary
public-facing product is the CAN Community Dashboard — an annual data publication tracking community indicators across
health, housing, education, and economic stability.
Human Services
Austin’s Homeless Outreach & Encampment Strategy Analysis
Austin’s Homeless Outreach & Encampment Analysis examines how current policies and services impact people living without stable housing across the city. By combining field observations, spatial data, and stakeholder input, this work highlights service gaps, equity concerns, and opportunities to better align outreach, shelter, and long‑term housing strategies.
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Phone
+1 (737) 346-8057
tiffany@a-techconsulting.com