Corrections and Clarifications

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Our reporting on all platforms will be truthful, transparent and respectful; our facts will be accurate, complete and fairly presented. When we make a mistake — and from time to time, we will — we will work quickly to fully address the error, correcting it within the story, detailing the error on the story page and adding it to this running list of Tribune corrections. If you find an error, email corrections@texastribune.org.

Posted in Health care

Your Money or Your Kids

State District Judge John Dietz, ruling on the heels of closing arguments, said the state’s system of funding public schools is unconstitutional and ordered the Legislature to fix it within a year. His detailed ruling won’t be out for a couple of weeks, but if you do a quick calculation of what he said so far, it’s easy to argue that the state will have to spend another $3 billion or so each year on public education. That’s in addition to any money that would be used lowering local property taxes. (Click here for a copy of Dietz’s bench ruling.)

Posted inState Government

Off to the Races

With Labor Day behind us and the finish line on the horizon, at least a dozen Texas House races should be handicapped as serious contests. Mark another nine or so as contests that could turn if conditions change significantly or if an incumbent slips or underestimates the problem.

Posted in Health care

The Guns of August (and September)

Political journalists are often called fight promoters — people who’ll try to start a contest where there isn’t one — but the state’s senior senator and the governor are making the job easy. They’re even giving us facts to play with, and starting the fights without much prompting from the likes of us.

Posted in Health care

A Special Case

Rep. Jim Dunnam, D-Waco, is in a pretty safe district for a Democrat, as these things go. In the last election against his current opponent, Jeffrey Hibbs, Dunnam pulled 60.2 percent of the vote. And with the exception of Tony Sanchez Jr., who lost by a little in this House district while losing by a lot statewide, the Democrats running for statewide office in Dunnam’s district swept in 2002.

Posted inState Government

Gig ‘Em

Here’s a question somewhere in the minds of people watching the congressional race between Democrat Chet Edwards of Waco and Republican Arlene Wohlgemuth of Burleson: Is the average voter in Brazos County more likely to vote for an Aggie or a Republican?

Posted inState Government

School’s Out for Summer

School finance didn’t move an inch while we were on summer break. Not an iota. In early July, Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, was showing a plan she hoped would get some support, the idea being that if lawmakers liked it, the Lege could come back to Austin for a quick special session. They’d do something to lower property taxes and increase the state’s share of public school funding with a combination of sales, business and tobacco taxes, and could frost that cake with money from slot machines if enough legislators would go along.

Posted inState Government

Wake Everyone When You’re Ready

Judging from the reaction to the latest solution to the school finance mess, a special session on the subject would come as a huge surprise to legislators and lobsters alike. Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, is proposing a combination of business, sales, and tobacco taxes to raise money for education and to buy down local school property taxes. If lawmakers and voters are willing, they could increase the size of the property tax cut by allowing slot machines in Texas.

Posted in Health care

Money for Nothing

State auditors say managers of the Children’s Health Insurance Program let about $20 million slip away in the form of “unnecessary or excessive payments to Clarendon National Insurance Co.,” the company that had a provider contract for CHIP. The payments, the auditors wrote, “constitute an abuse of the commission’s fiduciary responsibility to oversee and manage” the contract. CHIP is administered by the Health and Human Services Commission, which is in the midst of a massive reorganization and an investigation of lapses in protective services for adults and children.

Posted inState Government

Window of Opportunity

Aides to Gov. Rick Perry tell us he hasn’t changed his tune on the likelihood of a special session. Perry told a reporter in Tyler that he doesn’t see any reason to call members back if they can’t reach a deal in the next few weeks, but didn’t back down from his plans to call one if there’s any way to do so. By the time that news reached the mainland, it had morphed into a story saying Perry had lowered the alert level on a special session by a couple of notches, and was maybe even leaning against it.

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