 Catch up and get ahead with the edge for the week of August 10th. San Antonio welcomed Google Fiber with its 4,000 miles of gigabit fiber optic cable and proposed a framework to return the ride booking company Lyft. But neither company is getting a free ride. Mayor Ivy Taylor and Google Fiber promised not to ignore the poor, the 40% who can't afford even slow internet. And Councilman Roberto Trevino said the deal with Lyft will show customers right in the app whether a driver has passed a fingerprint background check. Police say the fingerprint check catches identity thieves and dangerous criminals often missed by the company's screening. What we really feel good about is that Lyft has been very collaborative in this process and while they're not endorsing our process, they're not going to work against it. City Council still needs to approve the agreement with Lyft and Mayor Taylor says the community still needs a plan to tackle the digital divide. More than 40 people spoke at the August NEISD school board meeting in response to Kayla Wilson's petition to rename Robert E. Lee High School. Kayla has gained support from current and former Councilman, Precinct Four County Commissioner, the San Antonio NAACP, and Congressman Joaquin Castro. I'm here today to request the consideration of renaming Lee High School along with removing all Confederate symbols that are on campus. Those against her proposal include many alumni of the school that was built in 1958. Despite everyone's call to action, NEISD trustees declined to add the matter to their next agenda. Stay tuned to Nowcast SA, where we're continuing to have a community conversation about Confederate history, slavery, and race. August scorching heat can be deadly for our most vulnerable neighbors. You can make a difference by sharing our mobile-friendly maps. Save a senior's life by donating a fan at any fire station. Help hungry kids find food with our free summer meals map. Keep cooling the pool with our map of free city pools and find free school supplies and shots with our kiss map. Empower someone with information. You'll be glad you did. San Antonio wants your ideas about the city budget and we've collected all the tools you need to speak up. You can do it in person, online, or in a video on Facebook or Twitter. Even cooler, Nowcast SA will webcast five budget open houses so you can ask your councilperson questions live straight from your computer. Go to nowcastsa.com where you can see a community conversation about Confederate history, symbols, and race. But share a map with somebody who needs it. Find out the terms that Google Fiber is coming in and Lyft may be coming back. Speak up about the city budget. Thanks for watching The Edge.