If Texas lawmakers and budgeteers make the right dance steps in the next few weeks, they’ll have $800 million available to add to next year’s spending — without a tax or fee increase.
Health care
In-depth reporting on public health, healthcare policy, hospitals, and wellness issues shaping communities across Texas, from The Texas Tribune.
Let’s Make a Deal
Anything could go wrong or go unexpectedly well at this point in a legislative session. It could have been the budget, or insurance, clean air, or a government reorganization bill. The first mess involved the tort reformers, who went down to the wire with their impasse showing.
Springtime in Austin
Every remaining day of the legislative session is a deadline for something and at the end of Wednesday, May 28, every bill that hasn’t won approval in some form in both chambers is dead. The mop-up that follows will reconcile differences in the bills–or not–and it’ll all be over a week from Monday, maybe for a while and maybe not.
What Will You Say When You Get Home?
Imagine you’re a House member and the Senate has handed you a chance to vote to cut school property taxes in half, to replace them with a penny-and-a-half addition to the state sales tax and an expansion of that tax to a bunch of stuff that’s not taxed now, and to kill the Robin Hood system of finance that’s so unpopular with voters. Fast-forward to a town hall meeting after the session. Somebody asks why you didn’t fix school finance while you were in Austin. The senator says she voted to kill it and halve property taxes, and then hands the microphone to you.
Scarce Resources, Abundant Discord
Budgets are unhappy things, even when oodles of money are available: They’re designed to put a collar and a leash on spending. It’s worse when there is no money, because you can’t feed the dog on the other end of the leash. Even if you don’t like dogs, that is unpleasant business.
Feeding the Bears
And now, a non-surprise: If you keep doing things that are interesting to prosecutors, prosecutors will stick around. If prosecutors are hanging around, people will begin to talk about it, and start noticing things that might be interesting to prosecutors. The same dynamics drive good soap operas. You soon have an environment where everything looks like it might be a piece of the puzzle and where everybody is lurking about, talking to each other, trying to fit pieces together.
Sinking the Titanic
A rules-breaking private meeting upended a massive rewrite of Texas’ tort laws, leaving supporters of the effort scrambling to get back on schedule. The bill was well on its way to passage in the House. But after two days of debate, Rep. Jim Dunnam, D-Waco, called a point of order to say that bill was fatally flawed by a secret meeting after a committee hearing. The bill was discussed out of public hearing by more than half of the committee. After two hours of private consultation, House Speaker Tom Craddick announced he would leave the decision to a vote of the House. But after more confused consultation and some speechifying by members, he decided to sustain Dunnam’s objection.
Chicken Little Economics
The details are always tougher than the general idea of budget-cutting when you’re talking about government programs that have a direct effect on people’s lives. That’s why discussions about health care in any form–Medicaid, CHIP, whatever–eventually come to fit the headline above.
Get ’em While They’re Hot
You can’t keep weeds out of buffalo grass. Beer and soda pop taste better when cold. Somebody prominent always gets arrested when the Legislature is in Austin. And if the state deregulates college tuition, it’ll go up.
Bumps on the Fast Track
The newest obstacle to medical malpractice liability legislation is this question: Would limits on liability increase the availability and number of abortions done in Texas every year?

