At 10:24 a.m. on March 8, peace settled on Central Texas, and the peace was announced in an official email from Mayor Steve Adler.

Austin Eater published a story on Feb. 19 pinpointing Austin as the birthplace of the name “breakfast taco.” Soon after the Austin Eater story was published, a San Antonio resident started a petition to kick the writer of the Austin Eater article out of Texas. And then, on Feb. 27, Mayor Adler declared taco war on San Antonio after the San Antonio Express-News published the listicle “10 reasons to hate Austin beyond its breakfast taco arrogance.” But it seems now that the mayors of both cities have decided to solve the conflict once and for all.

Mayor Adler sent out an advisory “For Immediate Release” (because it is urgent):

Mayors Adler, Taylor Announce Cease Fire in Great Breakfast Taco War 2016

Taco Summit to take place in Austin on Thursday morning

In recognition of the unanticipated toll that the Great Breakfast Taco War of 2016 has taken on their communities, Mayors Steve Adler of Austin and Ivy Taylor of San Antonio today announced a cease fire and are negotiating a taco treaty that they hope to formalize at a taco summit this Thursday. It’ll be like Taco Tuesday, but on a Thursday.

“When it comes to the loyalty that our cities have for the infinite possibilities created when you put scrambled eggs into a warm tortilla, there is more that unites Austin and San Antonio than could ever divide us,” said Mayor Adler. “I am confident we will reach a mutually satisfactory agreement on the I-35 Accords. We will have guac in our times.”

What: Breakfast Taco Summit

Where: room 619 on the 6th floor of the Hilton Austin Downtown

Who: Mayors Adler and Taylor

When: Thursday, Mar. 10, 2016, at 9am

Why: Because these hostilities are threatening breakfast’s status as the most important meal of the day

Let’s break down this press release:

“In recognition of the unanticipated toll that the Great Breakfast Taco War of 2016 has taken on their communities…”

The taco war has a name, and it is Great. Hopefully local historians will mark today as the day Austin and San Antonio committed to taco resolution.

“Hoping to negotiate a taco treaty”

The only things that Google pulls up with the search “taco treaty” are some crazy taco recipes, so this would be the first peace treaty of its kind.

“It’ll be like Taco Tuesday, but on a Thursday.”

FACT CHECK: This will only be true if tacos are actually served at the summit. We will see.

“We will have guac in our times.”

Is this spinning off of “peace for our time?” Which is frequently misquoted as “peace in our time?” The phrase that British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain uttered after signing the Munich Agreement with Adolf Hitler allowing Germany to annex parts of Czechoslovakia??

The Breakfast Taco Summit will hopefully end one of the biggest food wars that Austin has suffered in the past two months. We’ve been calling for peace since the Express-News wrote their article advocating for sharper division between the two cities, and we are thankful the two mayors have come to a solution.