Special session likely to end with no voucher deal
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As the clock ran down on the Legislature’s third special session, Texas House and Senate leaders exchanged barbs over Gov. Greg Abbott’s school choice bill and border security proposals, the Austin American-Statesman reported.
In a social media post, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said House Speaker Dade Phelan “wasted another special session” as that chamber failed to even consider Abbott’s measure to use public money for private tuition, commonly known as vouchers.
The Senate, early in the session, passed a school choice measure that has gone nowhere in the House, where a combination of Democrats and rural Republican lawmakers have stood firm in opposition to vouchers since the regular session began in January.
Caught in the rift between the two chambers’ leaders is a House border security bill that originally allowed law enforcement officers to expel anyone who illegally crosses the border. Patrick led efforts in the Senate to change the bill to require officers to hand over illegal migrants to federal authorities.
“The Speaker is desperate to improve his border credentials with conservatives and sent the House version of HB4 over to the Senate,” Patrick said. “The bill’s author claimed it’s the toughest border bill ever, but it is simply a Texas-sized catch-and-release bill.”
Phelan called the Senate’s revamped version “a long-term, state-funded hospitality program for illegal immigrants” and said the House would not accept the Senate’s version, the Statesman reported.
Abbott is considered likely soon to call a fourth special session.
Paxton’s securities fraud trial set for April 15
More than eight years after being charged with securities fraud, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton will go to trial in Houston on April 15, according to the Texas Tribune. State District Judge Andrea Beall scheduled the trial during a hearing last week. Paxton is accused of trying to solicit investors in a McKinney technology company without disclosing the company was paying him to promote its stock, a charge he has denied.
Paxton was acquitted in September in an impeachment trial in the Senate.
Beall also ruled last week that Collin County must pay special prosecutors $300 an hour for their work in the case. The county had attempted to limit their pay to $2,000 total, according to The Dallas Morning News. The judge called that amount “wholly unreasonable” and “arbitrary and capricious.” The legal fees have been estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Paxton could face up to 99 in years in prison if convicted of the most serious charges.
State funding doesn’t cover school security mandates
New laws that require school districts to enact a number of safety measures in the wake of the Uvalde school shooting are costing school districts far more than the $1.4 billion that was allocated, superintendents across the state told the Texas Tribune.
A measure that would have allocated an additional $4.5 billion died because of squabbling over voucher programs, and the same appears to be likely in the latest special session.
Hearne ISD superintendent Adrain Johnson said his rural district has been forced to spend its own money on new safety measures.
“It’s disappointing that we didn’t get the funding to do it at a level that doesn’t hurt the district and allows us to keep most of our funding dedicated to the education of children,” he said.
