Health care in Texas prisons is already so abysmal it borders on being unconstitutional, according to a report released today by the Texas Civil Rights Project. The cuts lawmakers are now considering, they said, will almost certainly spark lawsuits that could cost Texas more money than it would spend to simply improve the system.
February 2011
The Midday Brief: Top Texas Headlines for Feb. 9, 2011
Your afternoon reading: House committees announced; eminent domain bill moves through Senate; abortion sonogram testimony under way
House Committees Named
Speaker Joe Straus appointed members to committees today, shuffling the assignments in a Texas House where one in four members is a freshman and where Republicans have a two-to-one numerical advantage.
Doctor Loan Repayment Deal in Jeopardy
More than 100 Texas doctors made a deal with the state: For four years, they would practice in underserved communities and treat the neediest patients — in return for having their med school debt forgiven. But now state officials may be backing down from their side of the bargain.
Sonogram Bill Reworked
Even before state Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, tweaked a bill requiring a woman seeking an abortion to have a sonogram performed, he said lawmakers and the media had misunderstood his intent.
Students Rally for UT Funding
Cries of “Texas fight” and “It’s 8:45, and we’re still underfunded” rang across a crowd of nearly 100 students, who marched to the Capitol this morning to rally for adequate funding for the University of Texas.
The Brief: Top Texas News for Feb. 9, 2011
Gov. Rick Perry’s glass-half-full view of the state’s affairs was on full, defiant display on Tuesday.
Senators Call Tuition Set-Aside Theft, Secret Tax
One state senator calls it “a 20 percent backdoor secret tax” on those paying for college. Another argues that eliminating it would help create a Texas with a “have-and-have-not culture.” And some students say the the tuition set-aside program mandated by the state in 2003 is just plain theft.
Texas Democrats Blame Republicans for Budget Blues
Gov. Rick Perry’s State of the State speech on Tuesday was part pep rally, part budget proposal, with a dash of national politics. And, as Ben Philpott of KUT News and the Tribune reports, Democrats weren’t charmed.
Who Profited Most in the Fall Campaign?
We already know that the major-party candidates in the governor’s race spent more on advertising than others on last year’s ballot, thanks to the cost of television. But some other ad vendors also received lucrative business from the competitive state House races, with mixed results.


