The 86th Legislature runs from Jan. 8 to May 27. From the state budget to health care to education policy — and the politics behind it all — we focus on what Texans need to know about the biennial legislative session.More in this series
Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar on Tuesday dropped a half-billion dollar gift into the laps of budget negotiators.
The news comes as a relief to legislative budget-writers, who are in the midst of closed-door meetings about how much state lawmakers should spend on public schools, property tax cuts and thousands of other line items in their two-year budget.
Lawmakers will have an additional $518 million to spend on public programs thanks to more robust tax collections, according to a revised fiscal forecast Hegar unveiled in a letter to Texasโ Republican leadership.
โSome of the increased revenue projected for fiscal 2019 is attributable to upwardly revised estimates of oil and natural gas production taxes,โ Hegar wrote. As a result, the stateโs oil-fed savings account, also known as the rainy day fund, is expected to grow by nearly $300 million in additional revenue.
The revised revenue estimate comes on top of a relatively rosy prediction Hegar made in January about the stateโs tax collections over the next two years. At the time, the comptroller โ who oversees the state treasury and is charged with predicting volatile state revenues so that lawmakers can craft a state budget that spans two years into the future โ thought state coffers would end the fiscal year on Aug. 31 with about $4.2 billion in the bank. Tuesdayโs revision brings that figure to $4.7 billion.
Hegar also noted in his letter that lawmakers are likely to grow the stateโs treasury by another $550 million if they pass a bill to streamline online sales tax collections on out-of-state sellers.


