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Posted inState Government

Redistricting Reboot

Eight days isn’t much of a cooling off period, but the Legislative Redistricting Board will convene on Wednesday to start up to 60 days of work drawing political boundaries for the 2002 races for Texas House and Texas Senate. That start date puts the deadline for the LRB in the first week of August.

Posted in Health care

Out Like a Lamb

The dramatic peak of the 77th legislative session came several weeks ago, when the House was trying to redistrict itself and the Senate was trying not to self-immolate on the hate crimes bill and its own redistricting maps. The end of the session, by contrast, seems as gentle as a receding tide.

Posted in Health care

Real Men Don’t Need Maps

Remember the burning map that used to open the TV show Bonanza? That might as well have been the plans for new political districts in Texas. At our deadline, it was impossible to say with any hope of certitude whether legislative redistricting plans were alive or dead. They weren’t moving, but they had time to move if lawmakers found a compromise, and if they hurried.

Posted in Health care

A Biennial Power Surge

The powers of state officeholders ebb and flow with the calendar. The end of the legislative session is when the governor’s powers peak, when the comptroller has one last moment of leverage, when budgeteers’ prospects are in bloom and when the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the House bring their full powers over the legislative agenda to bear. If you see legislative supplicants standing in line to plead for something, chances are the line will lead to one of those people.

Posted in Health care

The Moment We’ve All Been Waiting For

Three weeks from the date at the top of this edition, the Legislature will gavel to a close and go home. That’ll be a relief, to be sure, but the 21 days that lead up to Sine Die will be hectic and the issues that have dominated the conversations in the Pink Building since January are finally coming to a head.

Posted in Health care

Mapmaker, Mapmaker, Where is the Map?

The state is cut into 150 pieces for purposes of electing members of the Texas House. It’s chopped into 15 chunks for purposes of electing members to the State Board of Education. The head of the House Redistricting Committee, Rep. Delwin Jones, R-Lubbock, thinks those numbers should sync up. He says he’ll draw the SBOE maps to exactly include ten House districts each.

Posted in Health care

Easter Bonnets or Hard Hats?

Lawmakers will get ready for the Easter break by kicking the budget out of the House and lining up for copies of the redistricting “working” maps they’ve been promised by the two chairmen in charge of political cartography. Even without redistricting, the remaining seven weeks of the session will be kinda hairy. Still on the list of things to do: The House-Senate conference on the budget, teacher health insurance, Medicaid funding, campaign finance reform, major water and air bills, a number of Sunset bills affecting major agencies, a handful of controversial criminal justice bills, transportation bills and any number of things we’ve left off. There’s a stack of stuff to do and not much time to do it. But the focus isn’t on that stuff: It’s on the maps.

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