Skip to main content

Texas' legislative leaders say they have a deal on school finance and property tax reform


By Cassandra Pollock and Aliyya Swaby

Texas’ top three political leaders declared Thursday that the Legislature had reached agreements on its three main 2019 priorities: A two-year state budget, a comprehensive reform of school finance and legislation designed to slow the growth of rising property taxes.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott broke the news on the lawn of the Governor’s Mansion in Austin, just a few days before the Legislature is scheduled to gavel out. Both chambers will need to sign off on the three negotiated bills — House Bill 1, the proposed budget; Senate Bill 2, the property tax bill; and House Bill 3, the school finance bill — before the regular session ends Monday. Language for the compromised legislation, much of which was worked out behind the scenes between lawmakers from the two chambers, had not yet been made public as of Thursday afternoon.

“We would not be here today, making the announcement we are about to make, without the tireless efforts of the members of the Texas House and Senate,” said Abbott, flanked by Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, House Speaker Dennis Bonnen, R-Angleton, and other House and Senate members who played key roles in negotiating the three pieces of legislation. Almost five months beforehand, as state lawmakers began tackling the issues before them, Abbott, Patrick and Bonnen had pledged from that same spot in front of the Governor’s Mansion to work together and deliver on meaningful school finance and property tax reform.

“Frankly, we’re more together than we’ve ever been,” Bonnen said. “The people of Texas are those who win.”

Thursday’s presser maintained the “kumbaya” theme that the three leaders have worked hard to set this session as the Legislature tackled reforms on some of the state’s most complicated and thorny policy issues. And, though the conference was light on policy specifics, Bonnen told reporters that the House would vote on the trio of updated legislation “as soon as it’s available.”

According to a flyer detailing some of the components of the compromise reached Wednesday night, the school finance bill will include funding for full-day pre-K and an increase in the base funding per student, which hasn’t changed in four years. It also pumps in $5.5 billion to lower school district taxes up to 13 cents per $100 valuation on average by 2021 — though leaders dodged questions Thursday on exactly how and where the extra money would come from.

The compromise bill, Bonnen said, would reduce recapture payments that wealthier districts pay to shore up poorer districts by $3.6 billion, about 47%. But he also said the state could not afford to completely eliminate recapture, also known as “Robin Hood,” because it would cost too much to completely reimburse school districts from state coffers alone.

The bill will include funding for districts that want to create a merit pay program, giving more to their higher-rated teachers. Though the House decided to nix this from its initial version of the bill, the Senate put it back in and apparently won the fight to keep it in.

Teachers associations and unions argued a merit pay program would open the door to school districts using the state standardized test to decide which teachers receive bonuses. The bill does not require districts to use that standardized test.

It also would include additional funding for “dynamic teacher compensation” tied to the base funding per student. But it was unclear exactly how much school districts could expect for these raises or how they would be required to allocate them for teachers, librarians, counselors, nurses and other school employees.

Bonnen, asked by a reporter after his remarks about how the two chambers had handled differences on the teacher pay issue, said he was going to “shut it all down right now” before diving into a football reference.

“We won the Super Bowl today,” he said, “and we’re not going to talk about whether the quarterback or the running back had more success in our win.”

This article originally appeared at The Texas Tribune.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Biden's connections to Chinese money under scrutiny

President Joe Biden is under investigation for holding on to classified documents from his time in the Obama administration, but now lawmakers have a new question: did Chinese money influence Biden’s policies? The question arose when news broke that some of the classified documents were reportedly found in a closet at the Penn Biden Center, which House Oversight lawmakers say has taken millions of dollars from “anonymous Chinese sources.” “The Penn Biden Center appears to have acted as a foreign-sponsored source of income for much of a Biden Administration in-waiting,” House Oversight Chair Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., said in a letter to Mary Magill, the group’s president. “Between 2017 and 2019, UPenn paid President Biden more than $900,000, and the university employed at least 10 people at the Penn Biden Center who later became senior Biden administration officials. This level of access and opportunity raises questions about who had access to the classified documents found at the Penn

Randall County gives update on area flooding and road closures

According to the National Weather Service, rain is likely for the Central and East Texas Panhandle this afternoon, and will affect Randall County and the City of Canyon. The severe storm threat will be from 1:00 pm to 10:00 pm today, which will bring flash flooding, golf ball size hail, and strong winds. Because rivers are high and soil is saturated, there is an elevated chance of flooding due to these storms. The flood watch is expected to last from 1:00 pm today until 7:00 am Saturday morning. Randall County and City of Canyon officials, including leadership from the Villages of Lake Tanglewood, Timbercreek Canyon, and Palisades, are currently working to remove debris near dams and waterways in an effort to keep spillways working as designed, mitigate damage to these structures, and keep floodwaters from pooling in areas where property damage or hazardous conditions could result.  Due to a large amount of debris, high water levels, and swift-running water, all lakes will remain clo

Texas House adjourns special session after passing property tax, border legislation

The first special session of the 88th Texas Legislature lasted one day for the House as it adjourned sine die after expediting filing and passage of its property tax and border-related bill. Gov. Greg Abbott called a special session immediately after the regular session ended Monday evening without a property tax bill having passed. He placed two items on the call: provide property tax relief solely through compression of school district Maintenance & Operations rates, and pass an criminal penalty increase for human smuggling and operating a stash house. Both chambers expedited their priority bills on the two issues, passing them to their opposite chamber. But whereas the Senate adjourned until Friday after passing its pair, the House adjourned sine die, ending its first special session this year after one day. “When Governor Abbott declared a special session yesterday evening, we had every intention of gaveling in this morning, fulfilling the Governor’s call, and gaveling out,” S

APD investigating Sunday morning shooting

Early Sunday morning, Amarillo police officers responded to a shooting the 3100 block of Westhaven Drive. When officers arrived, they found one person had been shot with a shotgun. The victim was taken to an area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. APD violent crime detectives and patrol officers obtained statements from witnesses on the scene and this incident. No arrests have been made and this shooting is still under investigation.

Guess what? People want affordable energy

So how is Joe Biden’s war on conventional energy and “things that work” shaping up so far? If you ask the people in the administration and the various climate alarmists around the country, things are going swimmingly.  Bans on gas-powered vehicles are being enacted in multiple states and issuance of drilling permits for oil and gas remain locked up in bureaucratic red tape. Wind farms and solar arrays funded by massive and unsustainable subsidies that burden taxpayers continue to be erected.  But how is this all sitting with the public in general?  According to the most recent polling presented by the American Energy Alliance, not very well at all: The American Energy Alliance and the Committee to Unleash Prosperity recently completed a nationwide survey of 1000 likely voters (3.1% margin of error) executed in the first two weeks of May.  A full slide deck of the results can be found here. As Mike McKenna of MWR Strategies notes, there are a few salient points worth noting. “First, and