No, and this particular rumor follows a pattern that repeats inside federal facilities with remarkable consistency and remarkable inaccuracy.
Federal parole was eliminated over 25 years ago under the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 and it is not coming back. The current political and institutional environment makes a return to federal parole even less likely than it has been in recent years. Incarceration at the federal level operates on a $7 billion annual budget, it is deeply embedded in the institutional infrastructure of the country, and the Bureau of Prisons has no financial or operational incentive to reduce its population through mass early release.
The specific claim about Huntsville and Austin and 20,000 releases per region follows the same arc as dozens of similar rumors that have circulated through federal facilities for decades. Every few years a new version emerges, usually tied to overcrowding concerns, a pending bill in Congress, or a change in administration. Families send in copies of proposed legislation. Jailhouse lawyers declare it a certainty. The bill dies in committee and nothing changes.
Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee introduced versions of sentence reduction legislation repeatedly over the years to her Texas constituency. Not one of those bills made it out of committee. That is the consistent fate of early release proposals, regardless of how much momentum they appear to have inside.
The only legitimate paths to early federal release are RDAP completion, substantial cooperation with federal prosecutors, or a presidential commutation. Everything else is 85% of the sentence on the Judgment and Commitment Order, period.
Rumors of early release have real psychological value inside. Hope is a survival mechanism and it gets people through hard stretches of time. But acting on those rumors financially or emotionally is a mistake that sets families up for repeated disappointment.