Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Check out @DaleaLugo's Tweet: https://twitter.com/DaleaLugo/status/764238715610918912?s=09

Friday, August 12, 2016

Analysis: Texas Legislator Wonders if a New School Tax Might Bring Less Pain

Editor's note: If you'd like an email notice whenever we publish Ross Ramsey's column, click here.

James Frank is swimming in dangerous waters — another way to say he’s talking about policy in a way that might seem politically risky.

Frank, a Republican state representative from Wichita Falls, wrote to his constituents last month about school finance and used these phrases along the way: statewide commercial property tax, consolidated funding districts, and statewide property tax.

Yikes.

He’s got two points to make. Frank says taxpayers in Texas spend about $10,750 per public school student in federal, state and local money. He thinks that’s probably enough, although he knows that is a point of contention in the Legislature. It’s an economic tug-of-war: Some think that’s too much per student, some think it’s not enough.

His questions about how the money for schools is raised are provocative, too. Like other current and past Texas lawmakers, Frank is frustrated by the rich-and-poor divisions in the state’s schools, and he thinks it could be simplified by distributing the money from one place.

He was prompted by the Texas Supreme Court’s recent decision on school finance that said, in short, that the state’s method of paying for public education is screwed up — but not unconstitutional. The court didn’t order lawmakers to fix it, which is what Frank and his colleagues were expecting.

Still, it set them to thinking.

Instead of raising money from local property taxes and from the state and federal governments, Frank has been pondering ways to have all of the money come through the state, distributed, as he puts it, “strictly based on the number of students that they are educating and the educational needs of those students.”

That’s where he gets into those three phrases — three alternatives for a new school finance system — that have been batted around in education circles for years.

Texas voters — prompted by their legislators — made a state property tax unconstitutional decades ago. Among other things, that means the state can’t set a single property tax rate that applies to everyone and that raises money for all of Texas’ public schools. With more than 1,000 school districts, there are more than 1,000 property tax rates.

The local tab varies, depending on the value of real estate, the number of kids in schools, their educational needs and so on.

The price and quality of public schools vary greatly in Texas, depending on where you live.

Easy remedies have eluded Texas lawmakers for a long, long time.

The statewide commercial property tax idea would leave local districts with residential properties in their tax bases and put everything else into a statewide group taxed at a statewide rate. Like the other options Frank mentioned, this one is full of pluses and minuses. It would be easy to understand, but many businesses don’t want to be put in a separate class from homeowners, for fear that it would be easier to raise taxes on them if all of those homes full of voters were pulled out of the mix.

They prefer the protection of an all-for-one, one-for-all approach.

The consolidated funding districts would redraw school district lines — for financial purposes only — to try to ease the fiscal differences between rich and poor districts. Past runs at consolidation prompted fights over local controls and local priorities, like whether and when to build school buildings and how much to pay teachers. It’s possible, but also runs the risk of trading an old set of political problems with a new set.

The statewide property tax would leave the districts intact while taking all of the real estate in Texas and taxing it to pay for public schools. It has the advantage of making the rate the same for everyone, and the political disadvantage of making state officials responsible for setting the tax rates that so reliably anger voters.

All of those ideas share one political shortcoming with the current one: Taxpayer money from places with a lot of valuable property gets used in places without that kind of wealth.

The current system requires the richer ones to send money to the state to share with the others; so do the various statewide taxes Frank, among others, is talking about.

“Do I think we’re going to do something?” he said in an interview. “No. But I think we’re going to talk about it.”

He’s working on it, he says, to make sense of the system in his own head. It’s complicated. “School finance is so complex, the schools have full-time people trying to maximize their revenues,” he says. “We have the school systems bobbing for dollars.”

Read more columns from Ross Ramsey:

Donald Trump and everyone’s reaction to him might turn out to be unimportant in the next couple of election cycles. If the Republican wins the presidency, he’ll be a factor in the 2018 mid-term elections. If he doesn’t, he’ll be a memory.

A lot can happen when you're distracted by presidential politics. The past week offered a few relatively local reminders of why politics matters.

It’s routine for top state leaders to ask government agencies to tighten their belts, but don’t get the kooky idea that the state budget will shrink. This is just an exercise.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2016/08/12/analysis-texas-legislator-wonders-if-new-school-ta/.

Open House for Educators

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Analysis: Legal Matters Could Temporarily Expand Abbott’s Power

Editor's note: If you'd like an email notice whenever we publish Ross Ramsey's column, click here.

Texas doesn’t have a cabinet form of government, but in Gov. Greg Abbott’s case, it might soon have the next best thing.

Two of the state’s relatively new elected officials — Attorney General Ken Paxton and Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller — are in deep political trouble at the moment. If worst comes to worst for either or both of those fine gentlemen, Abbott would appoint their replacements.

That’s a lot more say than he had when they won the positions in 2014.

State officials in Texas don’t run on tickets of their own choosing. What looks to the voters like a team — with candidates for governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and so on — is really just a collection of unrelated candidates who happen to belong to the same political party.

They don’t have to get along any more than the dachshunds in a wiener dog race. Candidates picking the pockets of rich partisans and seeking the support of Texas voters work solo, not in packs.

In other states, governors and lieutenant governors get elected together, like presidents and vice presidents. Many states have cabinet governments where, as in the federal government, the chief executive chooses the state’s top lawyers, finance officials and other high officials. The governor runs the government, gets the credit and takes the blame.

Texas governors get some of the credit, most of the blame and none of that power: The 18 judges who sit on the state’s highest civil and criminal courts and the eight officials who run other executive departments are elected in their own right — sometimes from opposing political parties or factions. Photo ops are the only Kumbayah moments.

Abbott can’t control the comptroller, steer oil and gas regulators, decide whether and how the state jumps into lawsuits, or run the Senate, the agriculture or land offices. He didn’t hire them. He can’t fire them. And replacing them is left to the voters.

Usually.

But if the wheels of justice turn against Paxton or Miller or both, forcing or prompting one or both of them to leave office, the governor would have vacancies to fill — just as he would in a cabinet form of government.

The new occupants wouldn’t be under his control, but they would probably remember how they got those great jobs. It’s a subtle difference, but a real one: Are they going to check in with the governor’s office on big decisions and announcements or follow their own political stars?

The jockeying and conversation about the attorney general’s post has been active for months. It dates back to last summer, when Paxton’s legal troubles escalated from campaign issues and a relatively small fine for failing to register as a securities agent to official charges of first- and third-degree felonies. Now the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has added civil fraud charges in federal court, and the talk of who might succeed Paxton has picked up again.

Since the longest-serving AG in state history is the governor himself, an appointment to that office might be of particular interest. A couple of Texas Supreme Court justices have been mentioned — Eva Guzman and Don Willett. Star attorneys from his own circles might be on Abbott’s list, as might Dan Branch and Barry Smitherman, the former Republican state officials who gave up their posts to run unsuccessfully for the job in 2014.

Talk of a successor for Miller is even more muted. The head of the Texas Department of Agriculture is a less important office than AG, for one thing, and silence is the best sign that the agency is running like it is supposed to run. It makes news once in a while, but that was the exception until Miller took over.

Now, after a couple of out-of-state trips that were initially billed to the state and later determined to be more personal in nature, Miller is under investigation by the Texas Rangers. The governor, through a spokesman, said last week that the investigation is warranted.

An assistant could take over for Miller if the need arose and if the governor said so. An outsider could be named; Miller was one of four Republicans who sought the office in 2014, and one or more of his opponents might be interested.

Either appointment would be rare. Two in one governor’s tenure would be unheard of. But Abbott, unlike most Texas governors, might get a whiff of what it’s like when the state’s chief executive actually has control over the executive branch of government.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2016/04/16/analysis-legal-matters-could-temporarily-expand-ab/.

https://www.texastribune.org/plus/health/vol-2/no-8/abbott-names-new-leaders-child-welfare-agency/?mc_cid=9456627950&mc_eid=b9e99c7e3f

Teach in Hawaii!!!!!

Monday, April 11, 2016

The Texas foster care system has been throwing off increasingly desperate distress signals for months. It falls to...

Posted by Texas Tribune on Monday, April 11, 2016

Event - Movies at Miller – Big Hero 6 Miller Outdoor Theatre

Event - Movies at Miller – Big Hero 6 Miller Outdoor Theatre

Sunday, April 10, 2016

No need to carve time out of your busy calendar to hit the gym! We’ve rounded up some nifty ways to incorporate fitness into your daily routine: http://bit.ly/Fit-NEA

Posted by NEA Deals and Discounts on Saturday, April 9, 2016

“Concentrated poverty, race and systemic discrimination, sometimes unconscious bias, come into play and affect the allocation of resources, both financial and personnel.”

Posted by HuffPost Politics on Sunday, April 10, 2016

Thursday, April 7, 2016

The fight near the campus of Katy's Taylor high school disturbing to watch. And it's been a crazy day chasing down...

Posted by Andrea Watkins FOX 26 on Thursday, April 7, 2016

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Now more media is picking up on the Magnolia ISD story. I say good. Let's air out this policy and if there's "nothing to...

Posted by Andrea Watkins FOX 26 on Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Monday, March 28, 2016

Over 1,000 drivers have been cited for failing to stop for AISD school buses. Rudy Koski on FOX7 has the details.

Posted by FOX 7 Austin on Monday, March 28, 2016

Monday, January 11, 2016

Better Late Than Never: HISD AUDIT FINALLY UNDERWAY - Late last year, #HISD agreed to hire an outside auditor to figure out how the $1.9 Billion bond program got in a $212 million hole. The bosses said inflation, the in-house auditor was unsure. The audit finally got started with a signed contract today - 8 weeks + after the board gave approval. Why so long and who won't be here when the results come out this spring or summer? #abc13

Posted by Ted Oberg on Monday, January 11, 2016