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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Accurate or Inaccurate? What do you think? re: Governor Perry's Quote from his 5/30/11 Press Release on the Special Session

Monday, May 30, 2011:  Governor Perry Press Release     Austin, Texas
 
Gov. Rick Perry tonight announced a special session of the Texas Legislature will begin at 8 a.m. Tuesday, May 31.
 
"We have taken great strides this session to strengthen Texas' economic environment and protect private property rights, victims of human trafficking and the unborn, but critical work remains to ensure we have a balanced budget that provides essential services without raising taxes, while protecting the Rainy Day Fund for future emergencies," Gov. Perry said.
 
"I urge lawmakers to work quickly to complete the important work Texans expect us to finish."
 
The special session will consider the following issues:

• Legislation relating to fiscal matters necessary for the implementation of House Bill No. 1 as passed by the 82nd Legislature, Regular Session, including measures that will allow school districts to operate more efficiently.

• Legislation relating to healthcare cost containment, access to services through managed care, and the creation of economic and structural incentives to improve the quality of Medicaid services.
 

Monday, May 30, 2011

Republicans Voting No - Why This Budget is a Fraud

Dear Take Back Texas Alliance Members and Supporters:  

Here is a story in the Texas Tribune that is worth reading.  The Rs and Ds who crossed party lines were asked to explain their positions.  Of particular interest are the comments made by 4 of the 5 Republicans who voted against the budget, such as the $500M in special interest money contained in it and the accounting gimmicks which will cause Medicaid to run out of money in February 2013 (David Simpson of Longview), Will Hartnett (Dallas), who lamented the lack of Rainy Day spending, observing that most of it will be spent anyway, and Raul Torres (Corpus Christi), stating that the accounting gimmicks are probably unconstitutional and will simply create a monstrous problem for the next Legislature to address. 

In closing, let's give three cheers for Senator Wendy Davis, D-Ft. Worth, whose filibuster caused the death of SB 1811, the school finance bill that was brought to a vote for the first time in either body after having little more than a day to read it.  By the way, this bill had a rider attached to it that would allow the DPS to deny anyone a driver's license without even having to give a reason.  It's such a great thing to know that the Republicans believe in due process and individual liberty!   

http://www.texastribune.org/texas-legislature/82nd-legislative-session/hb-1-apostates-explain-themselves/

 

Tom Archer

President – Take Back Texas Alliance

 

"No New Texas"- Kids Well Texas Video

As the session wraps up, Kids Well Texas reminds us what is at stake. Watch for yourself as the story of damages from budget cuts unfolds:
 
Info taken from a posting on the "Progress Texas" Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/ProgressTexas?sk=wall
 
 

Texas Capitol SOS (Save Our State)!

A sign of the times!
 
 
Post by Lesa R. Walker, MD, MPH
 
 

Defending Our Freedom: DON'T MOURN...ORGANIZE

-----Original Message-----
From: bob.adapt@sbcglobal.net
Date: Sun, 29 May 2011 02:11:47
To: Bob Kafka. sbc<bob.adapt@sbcglobal.net>
Reply-To: bob.adapt@sbcglobal.net
Subject: Texas Legislature Passes Budget | The Texas Tribune

Advocates:
Confused about what they did in passing the budget. Join the crowd. It is confusing and HHSC and DADS will have to calculate what they finally did. What is clear that nobody on a waiting list will get services because of new funding.  There will be reductions in state funded programs and some waivers. Durable medical equipment rates have been reduced. How this effects services remains to be seen.
Attendants wages will not improve and reductions are inevitable.

People will be harmed.

The only way to know how people on current services are effected is if we start collecting these stories now. We need to document how real people's services are reduced. If individuals are forced into an nursing home, ICF MR or State Institution we must file an Olmstead complaint. We must fight back. The way we do this is by documenting what real harm Gov Perry, Lt Gov Dewhurst, Speaker Strauss, Sen Ogden and Rep Pitts orchestrated on families, seniors and people with disabilities. 

We fought the cuts with statewide campaigns (INVEST IN COMMUNITY, LEMONS TO LEMONADE).
We joined Texas Forward to broaden the coalition

ADAPT and Community Now folks engaged in Direct Action and folks got arrested fighting for our rights.

We did make a difference.

Could we have done more?  Yes!  We needed more people with passion and focused anger. We intellectualize too much when the "enemy" repels logic for idelogical purity.

Sometimes lobbying the old fashioned way needs to be coordinated with an aggressive well funded statewide grassroots effort. And targeted Direct Action.

I asked a month ago what gets a Texan angry? I'm still not sure. Maybe the effects of this budget will spur us to Action before next session so we can say NEVER AGAIN. 

Kafkaesquely yours


http://www.texastribune.org/texas-taxes/budget/liveblog-texas-legislature-considers-budget/?utm_source=texastribune.org&utm_medium=alerts&utm_campaign=News%20Alert:%20Subscriptions

Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T

Texas Cuts Essential Services While Giving Tax Breaks So Rich Can Buy Yachts

Texas is cutting public education, health care, & community-based service options for people with disabilities, but giving a tax break so rich can buy yachts:

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/fikac/7536992.html#ixzz1NoKSxPtw

STATEMENT: Rodriguez Stands with Sen. Davis



--- On Mon, 5/30/11, Emily Amps <Emily.Amps@senate.state.tx.us> wrote:

From: Emily Amps <Emily.Amps@senate.state.tx.us>
Subject: STATEMENT: Rodriguez Stands with Sen. Davis
To: "Emily Amps" <Emily.Amps@senate.state.tx.us>
Date: Monday, May 30, 2011, 12:11 AM

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                          

May 29, 2011                                     

 

CONTACT: Emily Amps Mora                                                                           

512.463.0129 O

254.715.1127 M

 

STATE SENATOR JOSÉ RODRÍGUEZ'S STATEMENT SUPPORTING SENATOR DAVIS STANDING UP FOR TEXAS SCHOOLCHILDREN

 

AUSTIN -- Today, State Senator José Rodríguez released the following statement regarding the filibuster by State Senator Wendy Davis of S.B. 1811, the fiscal matters bill:


"Senator Davis is not only standing up for the children of her district, she is standing up for all of the children in this state who will suffer as a result of the $4 billion in cuts to public schools. For El Paso ISD alone, the cuts will equal
$39.5 million during the next two years. Other El Paso County school districts will also stand to lose millions, including:

 

Anthony ISD: $475,000

Canutillo ISD: $3 million

Clint ISD: $6 million

Socorro ISD: $38 million

Ysleta ISD: $22 million

 

"Under this plan, there will be fewer resources in the classrooms, fewer teachers to instruct, and ultimately fewer opportunities for the children of our state. Over and over, the people of Texas have urged lawmakers to use the Rainy Day Fund to make up these cuts, and time and time again, the people were ignored. Instead the leadership chose to use accounting tricks to defer a $2.3 billion payment to the Foundation School Program, leaving our children and our schools in a deeper financial hole.

 

"In addition to standing up for the children of this state, Senator Davis is fighting for veterans, victims of abuse, and the elderly, many of whom may have lost their access to the courtroom. As a result of the choices made by the conference committee, my amendment to create a funding mechanism for legal aid services and indigent care was stripped. This choice denied over $32 million in legal aid and other services to Texans in need."

 

-30-

 

Sunday, May 29, 2011

CPPP STATEMENT ON STATE BUDGET FOR 2012-13

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 26, 2011
Contact: F. Scott McCown, mccown@cppp.org
900 Lydia Street • Austin, Texas 78702-2625 • T 512/320-0222 • F 512/320-0227 • http://www.cppp.org/

CPPP STATEMENT ON STATE BUDGET FOR 2012-13

(AUSTIN, Texas)─Center for Public Policy Priorities Executive Director F. Scott McCown released the following statement today in response to the budget committee conferees agreeing on the state budget for 2012-13.

"If the Legislature adopts this budget, the Legislature will have failed to meet the needs of Texas.

"The far right’s demand that our state’s revenue crisis be addressed by cuts alone instead of through a balanced approach that uses the Rainy Day Fund and adds new revenue has forced damaging cuts to essential state services. For the present biennium, 2010-11, the state’s general revenue budget totals $90 billion (roughly $82 billion in state general revenue and $8 billion in federal recovery dollars). To provide the same public services in 2012-13, because of more people and higher costs, the Legislature would have to spend at least $99 billion in general revenue. The conferees’ budget deal (with HB 4) would appropriate just under $80.7 billion, leaving the state short more than $18 billion—about $5 billion of which would have gone to public education. at least $99 billion in general revenue. The conferees’ budget deal (with HB 4) would appropriate just under $80.7 billion, leaving the state short more than $18 billion—about $5 billion of which would have gone to public education.

"A balanced approach was the better choice.

"The Legislature could easily have written a 12- or 18-month budget, giving the economy time to improve. Or the Legislature could have taken a balanced approach to the state’s traditional 24-month budget—one that included cuts, but also used much more of the state’s $9.7 billion Rainy Day Fund and added new revenue. Rather than use the Rainy Day Fund to protect Texans during an economic downturn (the fund’s constitutional purpose), the far right demanded that Texans "protect" the Rainy Day Fund. This irrational demand was merely a tactic to force the Legislature to gut education and rip our state’s safety net. In the face of our revenue crisis, refusing to add new revenue—not even revenue from closing unwarranted tax loopholes—is unconscionable. The Legislature could easily have written a 12- or 18-month budget, giving the economy time to improve. Or the Legislature could have taken a balanced approach to the state’s traditional 24-month budget—one that included cuts, but also used much more of the state’s $9.7 billion Rainy Day Fund and added new revenue. Rather than use the Rainy Day Fund to protect Texans during an economic downturn (the fund’s constitutional purpose), the far right demanded that Texans "protect" the Rainy Day Fund. This irrational demand was merely a tactic to force the Legislature to gut education and rip our state’s safety net. In the face of our revenue crisis, refusing to add new revenue—not even revenue from closing unwarranted tax loopholes—is unconscionable.

"The next Legislature will face a fiscal mess in 2013.

"Even with strong economic growth, the next Legislature will face a fiscal mess in 2013. The Texas population will continue to grow. Costs for goods and services will continue to go up. Yet our state’s major tax will still be a sales tax on goods, a tax designed for yesterday’s economy. And our state’s business tax will still be flawed in design, again producing a $10 billion per biennium structural deficit. And, of course, all the steps taken to balance this biennium’s budget will make balancing the next budget even harder, for example, one-time accounting adjustments, unrealistic cost-saving assumptions, and a projected $4.8 billion Medicaid deficit.

"Texans must insist on a tax system that can meet the state’s needs.

"Texas has the resources in its trillion-dollar economy to meet today’s needs and to build a prosperous future, but until our state fixes its tax system, it will never have adequate revenue to do so. Instead, Texas will spiral downward session after session with one round of cutting after the next. Between now and 2013, we must all work together to build the public will for responsible tax reform.


The Center for Public Policy Priorities (CPPP) is a non-profit, non-partisan policy institute committed to improving public polices to better the economic and social conditions of low- and moderate-income Texans. We pursue this mission to achieve our vision for a BETTER TEXAS. You can learn more about CPPP at www.cppp.org.