Update: Updated at 5 p.m. with comment from HUD Secretary Ben Carson

Irving Mayor Beth Van Duyne is going to work for the Trump administration.

She didn't say what her role would be, but told a gathering Thursday at the AT&T Byron Nelson kickoff luncheon that an announcement could come next week.

"I keep saying next week because I've been told the paperwork is going to be done next week," Van Duyne told about 300 people at the Momentous Institute in north Oak Cliff. "But next week, I'll actually be able to make an announcement."

Earlier this year, Van Duyne opted not to seek a third term as mayor. That led to speculation that she would join Donald Trump's administration, either under Housing Secretary Ben Carson or in another role.

Carson, who was in Dallas Thursday on a "listening tour," said he would talk about appointments to the Housing Department in the coming weeks. But he added that he liked Van Duyne.

"She's terrific," he said.

Van Duyne, one of the few large-city mayors in America to back Trump's presidential campaign, has long expressed an interest in helping the federal government navigate urban affairs.

Van Duyne, who has been mayor since 2011, gained notoriety for her strong positions against Sharia law and sanctuary cities for unauthorized immigrants. Earlier this year, she asked lawmakers at the Texas Homeland Security Forum to help investigate the legality of an Islamic tribunal in North Texas.

Her stance as what she terms a "limited-government conservative" has won her raves from conservatives and criticism from those who call her intolerant.

Van Duyne began her political career at age 33 from her Las Colinas home, where she and her then-husband co-owned a market research firm and raised their two children.

She became a City Council member in 2004 and served two three-year terms. In 2011, she was elected mayor in a race against incumbent Herbert Gears.

During her tenure as mayor, Irving has gone through myriad changes, including seeing the Dallas Cowboys move its headquarters from Valley Ranch to Frisco and the Byron Nelson golf championship announcing plans to leave Irving for South Dallas.

Van Duyne has said she helped bring hundreds of new residents to the city, pushed through a half-penny tax cut and brought new business to Irving, including the headquarters of 7-Eleven.

Staff writer Brad Townsend contributed to this report.