The legislative session is reaching a point that’s as reliable as the lunch horn in a factory: That moment when it appears that everything is definitely-for-sure-absolutely-certainly going to fall to pieces. Or not.
High Noon
Three Big Bills and a Bucket of Lint
You got your budget. You got your school finance/reform bill. You got your tax bill. And then you have everything else. If there’s a notable feature to this legislative session, it’s that those three pieces of legislation have sucked the oxygen out of the room. There are other bills of note — appraisal caps, workers compensation insurance, the water bill, some sunset bills, and so on — but the report card on this Legislature will focus on the three big deals.
Blink
The House will vote on a statewide property tax proposal before the Senate gets to it, a vote likely to kill a key provision of the Senate’s school finance package.
Snake Eyes
Democratic leaders in the House say they’re against gambling as a way to finance public education or to fill holes that might appear in the state budget. They said they’ll oppose it during the current legislative session.
Somebody’s Lying
A week after the Texas House passed the largest tax bill it has ever considered — a measure intended to replace some local school property taxes with new state taxes — Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn stunned lawmakers by saying the bill spends three dollars for every two it raises.
Begin the Beguine
It takes two to tango and two to tax, and the Senate isn’t dancing with the House on revenue for school finance. Their bottom line numbers are similar. Both houses started with the idea of lowering local school property taxes by 50 cents, and that sets the size of the project. But their methods of getting to the bottom line are as different as Mars and Venus.
If It Was Easy, It Wouldn’t Be News
Tax bills are difficult to pass, and it never goes smoothly. Gov. Bill Clements signed a tax bill in 1987 that still holds the state record, and he did it over the objections of some of his fellow Republicans. In 1991, the political ambitions of then Ways & Means Chairman James Hury ended on the floor of the House when his fellow Democrats disassembled a multi-billion tax bill and left it to Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. That one finally got passed, and is the second-place finisher on the state’s all-time list.
The Session in a Nutshell
It’s usually best to take your medicine fast, in one ugly gulp, like mom used to say. But House leaders, apparently confident they can pass a major tax bill and an ambitious rewriting of the state’s school finance system, decided to let both measures sit unprotected over a long weekend.
Wobbly, but Still in Motion
The specifics keep moving around, but House management still wants to see the tax and school finance bills on the floor for debate by March 7 or 8. That means the committees in control must move the bills next week.
The Ides of March
Mention March 2006 to political people in Texas, and you’ll trigger a conversation about the top of the ballot. But March 2006 — the month of the primaries and, in particular, the Republican primaries — is on the minds of a fair number of legislators who want to remain in office after this term.


