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Showing posts with label Spending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spending. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Truth about Local Government Debt in Texas

Posted on 08:19 by Unknown

Over at City Journal, Steve Malanga has a fantastic primer on local government debt in Texas:
While Texas’s state government debt is relatively modest—just $40 billion, or $1,577 per resident—local government debt is more than four times higher: $192 billion. That’s $7,505 per capita, according to Combs’s report—the second-highest sum in the nation, behind only New York’s municipalities and far ahead of third-place California’s. Over the last decade, moreover, local debt has increased 144 percent, much faster than the rate of population increase plus inflation.

Some of this debt stems from voters’ willingness to spend their prosperity on municipal-finance baubles, bangles, and beads. In Texas, that means huge expenditures by local school districts on athletic facilities. When I attended a legislative conference in Texas last summer, the talk was all about the $60 million high school stadium just opening in Allen, a Dallas suburb of 83,000 residents. The 18,000-seat facility, which boasts a massive, high-definition TV screen, was built with funds from a $119 million bond offering in a state where high school football is a consuming passion.
....

Not surprisingly, debt owed by public school districts constitutes the biggest chunk of the state’s soaring local obligations. Over the last decade, it has increased 155 percent, even as the state’s student population has grown just 21 percent. And the fastest-growing part of Texas school budgets is debt service, which has gone up by 126 percent in ten years, to $5.5 billion. Payments on debt now constitute 10 percent of school spending, up from 7 percent a decade ago.

Debt is also growing rapidly among the state’s 81 retirement systems for local-government workers. Not only are these systems poorly funded; it isn’t even clear how much some owe, since they haven’t disclosed the financial information necessary to verify their financial position, even to state oversight officials. After an extensive survey of municipal pension systems, Combs determined that none of the local plans was fully funded and that only 19 percent had 80 percent of the funds on hand to meet future obligations.

....

Facing this growing debt load, some state officials are urging reform. Combs worries that residents don’t understand how much debt is piling up. She advocates greater transparency and has proposed that ballot initiatives seeking voter approval for new debt include comprehensive information about the obligations that government already owes. She has also pushed for laws limiting government uses of the types of debt that don’t require voter approval. [Emphasis Ours]
 In a separate piece, Malanga details common shenanigans:
As in Cook County, so many different levels of government in Texas can issue debt that taxpayers, bewildered by the complexity of it all, let overlapping districts keep on borrowing. As an example, Combs describes how the residents of a single Houston block must repay debt incurred by the county, the city, the city’s school district, and Houston Community College, among other entities. “I went to dozens of town hall meetings around the state, and when I asked, not a single member of the public knew just how much people in their towns were on the hook for,” she says.

Texas, like New York, amassed all this debt by pushing the limits of the law. Though taxpayers must approve most government borrowing, Texas provides an exception for localities that need to issue debt quickly: a “certificate of obligation,” borrowing that doesn’t require approval unless 5 percent or more of local voters petition to have a say on it (a rare occurrence, since most don’t even know that they have that power). Since 2005, Texas localities have issued nearly $13 billion worth of these certificates, often for dubious ends. In 2010, for instance, Fort Worth borrowed nearly $35 million through certificates of obligation to build a facility for horse shows.

Texas school districts have made use of another controversial financing technique: capital appreciation bonds. Used to finance construction, these bonds defer interest payments, often for decades. The extension saves the borrower from spending on repayment right now, but it burdens a future generation with significantly higher costs. Some capital appreciation bonds wind up costing a municipality ten times what it originally borrowed. From 2007 through 2011 alone, research by the Texas legislature shows, the state’s municipalities and school districts issued 700 of these bonds, raising $2.3 billion—but with a price tag of $23 billion in future interest payments. To build new schools, one fast-growing school district, Leander, has accumulated $773 million in outstanding debt through capital appreciation bonds. [Emphasis Ours]
 Both pieces are worth reading, here and here.

(h/t American Spectator)
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Posted in Boondoggle du Jour, New York, Spending, Texas, Transparency | No comments

Monday, 5 August 2013

Travis County Taxpayers Union announces August 13th Moneybomb!!!

Posted on 06:32 by Unknown

The ongoing saga of the Austin ISD lawsuit continues:
If we can take this case to the third Court of Appeal, we can win. The law is on our side. If we win we will, at a minimum, save taxpayers $500 million; this lawsuit, however, could restrict financial shenanigans that local governments can pull across the state of Texas.

Unfortunately, lawyers cost money; we need to raise $6000 to keep our guy out of the poorhouse as the appeal works through the system.

Normally, in politics, you need large sums of money to make things happen. Not this time. This $6000 investment on the front end could save taxpayers in Austin Hundreds of Millions of Dollars and (in a best case scenario) could save BILLIONS across the state.
 Pledge your support here.

Join the Facebook event here.
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Posted in AISD, Boondoggle du Jour, Education, Spending, Travis County Taxpayers Union | No comments

Saturday, 3 August 2013

History Lesson: The Texas Water Boondoggle of 1968

Posted on 21:51 by Unknown

The more things change, the more they stay the same:
Politicians and engineers have long come up with grandiose plans for moving water from one place to another....[including]...Texas' biggest water boondoggle to date – the 1968 Water Plan.
They were ambitious:
The 1968 plan involved developing an astounding supply of water- enough to submerge Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Rhode Island and the District of Columbia to a depth of one foot (with some left over).  The key features of the plan included a canal that would have tapped the Mississippi River below New Orleans, bringing 12 to 13 million acre - feet (one acre - foot is 325,851gallons of water) hundreds of miles to Texas.
Get this:
Once in Texas, the Mississippi River would enter two cement - lined aqueducts called the Coastal Canal and the Trans-Texas Canal. These canals were to snake 1,200 miles across the northern and southern portions of Texas.
 Making matters better:
The second canal, the Trans-Texas, would have transported the Mississippi River water to northeast Texas, then uphill to Lubbock, with one spur veering off to New Mexico and another to the Trans-Pecos and the El Paso. The water would be pumped uphill more than 4,000 feet from the Mississippi River to Lubbock to meet the irrigation needs of the Texas High Plains....To pump the water to its final destination, the project would have required 7 million kilo-watts of electricity – more than a third of the generating capacity in Texas at the time.
 Also, a giant land grab:
In addition to the canals, 62 new reservoirs, mostly in East Texas, would have been constructed to capture another 4 million acre-feet of water for eventual shipment to Lubbock and the Rio Grande Valley.
 What was the price tag?!?
In 1968 the cost to Texas for the plan was projected by the TWDB to be $3.5 billion, with an additional $5.5 billion to come from the federal government. Some estimated that the project would ultimately have cost close to $14 billion in 1968 dollars.
 And, finally, how did things turn out?!?
For the plan to proceed, an amendment to the Texas Constitution was needed for the state to finance its share of
the project. In the end, the plan was defeated at the ballot box – by only 6,000 votes.  Thus it became the plan that never was, and thankfully so.
 Read the whole thing here; may history repeat itself this November!!!
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Posted in Boondoggle du Jour, Spending, Texas | No comments

Pornography, Fiscal Discipline, and the Texas Legislature

Posted on 13:45 by Unknown

Over at Texas Observer, Olivia Messer publishes an "expose" of alleged "sexism" in the Texas Legislature; the otherwise hysterical article contains one gem:
Some told of senators ogling women on the Senate floor or watching porn on iPads and on state-owned computers. [Emphasis Ours]
This helps explain the budget.

One of our recurring themes at Cahnman's Musings is that discipline in your sexual 'expression' begets discipline in finances, and that lack of discipline in sexual matters begets profligacy.

It should surprise no one that Texas Legislators who lack the discipline to refrain from viewing pornography on the chamber floor also lack the disciple to act as prudent stewards of the people's money....
Read More
Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Marixsm and Sex, Spending, Texas House, Texas Senate | No comments

Monday, 29 July 2013

More Transportation Shenanigans from Texas House Republicans

Posted on 07:25 by Unknown

A couple of must read pieces from Empower Texans on transportation shenanigans currently playing out in the Texas House; from Transportation U-Turn:
As the Wall Street Journal and the Texas Public Policy Foundation have independently verified, the legislature went on a wild spending spree in 2013 – spending approximately 25% more than in the 2011 session. And they just can’t stop.

The current special session features a call to provide better funding for transportation. Legislators are instead just creating new diversions for spending without any real protections. (Sensible policies, like ending the 25 percent gas-tax diversion to public education, or dedicating the vehicle sales tax to roads, are being ignored.)

Meanwhile, lawmakers want to start diverting half of the money flowing into the Economic Stabilization Fund (the so-called “rainy day” account) over to TxDOT. In the first special session, conservatives successfully inserted a constitutional “floor” ensuring the ESF couldn’t be drained and left for dead.

Yet for all practical purposes, the new compromise in the current special would do away with the idea of a protective floor. Rather than constitutionally protect the Economic Stabilization Fund by a establishing a defined floor, spendoholic legislators want to give the Legislative Budget Board – comprised of the House Speaker, the Lieutenant Governor and their appointees – the authority to set it.

Not a sound idea, unless the goal is to never have a meaningful floor.
 From 'Optional' ESF Protection:
You may recall the legislative members of the LBB are also charged with picking the “spending limit” for budgetary purposes. Of course, the LBB has always exceeded the “population-plus-inflation” figure, using a fictional “projected personal income growth” as their unlimited limit  – essentially allowing them to set a moving target depending on their spending appetites for the upcoming session.
 Whatever happens in the next few days, we're going to have to beat this crap at the polls in November....
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Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Boondoggle du Jour, Crony Capitalism, Spending, Texas House | No comments

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Debra Medina's Super Crappy Fundraising

Posted on 14:10 by Unknown

Cahnman's Musings found an interesting nugget in the fundraising chart Must Read Texas posted yesterday:

In the comptrollers race, Debra Medina has only raised $55,000.  That's worse than disappointing.  It's pathetic.

This is shame. Being comptroller plays to Debra Medina's strength in a way being Governor never did and never will.  Debra Medina is notorious for being a pain in the you-know-what and asking unpleasant questions of government agencies.  They hate when she does this.  Asking fiduciary questions of governmental entities is a major component of the Comptroller's job.

Debra Medina could be a really good Comptroller; Cahnman's Musings urges her to step up her game!
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Posted in Debra Medina, Election 2014, Spending | No comments

Saturday, 29 June 2013

JoAnn Fleming: We have forgotten the meaning of Stewardship

Posted on 11:28 by Unknown
Last Saturday, before the chaos erupted at the Capitol, Cahnman's Musings attended the Our Nation Campaign Prayer and Unity event at the Texas Capitol.  JoAnn Fleming was one of the speakers.  This is a message every believer needs to hear:



Highlights:
  •  "As Christians, we have forgotten what stewardship means."
  • God doesn't care how right you are on an issue if you don't speak the truth in the right way at the right time and in the right spirit.
  • "Stewardship is about understanding that everything we have belongs to the Lord; the tax dollars they spend in this building [the Texas Capitol] belong to the Lord.  So when politicians waste money, they're wasting God's money.  Until you understand what stewardship is, you really can't understand the right way to make decisions about spending other people's money."
  • We've got to demand more of our elected officials based not on politics, but on stewardship.
  • God is greater than any giants that get in the way.
  • "I would ask you today to pray for our state.  Out state is not nearly as strong as people would lead you to believe.  We have abandoned the principle of living debt-free in the state of Texas.  We will probably end this special session without the pro-life legislation being passed because of games by the people who put the political games together...God have mercy on us and on those men.
  • We are to pray for those in authority over us; there is no fine print that says 'if they agree with you.'
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Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Chaos, Economic Growth, Faith, JoAnn Fleming, Spending, The Bible | No comments

Thursday, 13 June 2013

What will Governor Perry Veto?!?

Posted on 12:21 by Unknown

Cahnman's Musings spent some time around the Capitol this afternoon.  A source who was in the room informs us that, during an unrelated bill signing ceremony, the Governor told a reporter "you'll find out when everyone else does" about his plans for the budget.  The Governor seems to be enjoying the suspense.

-----

Personally, Cahnman's Musings doubts the Governor would be stupid enough to build up this decision unless he plans a veto; but the Governor has disappointed before....

-----

All we can do at this point is pray, tweet, and call.

On that note, we'd just like to say: Lord, we leave it all to you.  We CAN'T do it on our own.  We pray you convict Governor Perry with a spirit of financial righteousness.  And we pray it in Jesus' name.  Amen.

You can read the full list of bills to veto here.

Phone: (512) 463-2000
Twitter: @GovernorPerry
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Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Jesus Christ, Rick Perry, Spending, Vetoes | No comments

Monday, 10 June 2013

Veto these Bills: An Open Letter to Governor Rick Perry

Posted on 09:44 by Unknown

The Honorable Rick Perry

Dear Mr. Governor,

During its general session, the 83rd Texas Legislature passed a lot of terrible legislation.  It deserves to be vetoed in a reprise of your so-called 2001 "Father's Day Massacre."  The following list is incomplete, but it would be a darn good place to start:
  • SB 1 AND HB 1025 -- These disgraceful bills increase Texas' state spending by 26% over 2011 levels that were already too high.  This budget would alter the trajectory of state spending with disastrous but predictable consequences.  As the Wall St. Journal explains: "nearly everything from mental health to family planning to Medicaid...won fat funding increases....The danger is that Texas will repeat the fiscal mistake that California has made repeatedly: spend during the glory days and, once the economy slows, raise taxes to cover the deficit. The Texas oil patch is riding high on $95 a barrel oil and a doubling in production in four years. But Texans shouldn’t forget the lesson of the 1980s and late 1990s that oil prices are volatile and a decline can be painful and prolonged."
  • HB 5 -- This bill would gut accountability in Texas public schools that have proven they cannot be trusted.  Standardized testing is imprecise, but it holds big education somewhat accountable.  Until Texas structurally reforms education, end of course testing the least bad way to keep the current system under control.
  • SB 15 -- Cahnman's Musings wrote you about this bill last month.  It takes the authority to appoint University regents out of the hands of an elected Governor and places it in the hands of University bureaucrats.  Similar to HB 5, the status quo isn't great, but it's better than the proposed alternative.
  • HB 866 -- This is a companion bill for HB 5 and deserves to be vetoed for the same reasons.
  • HB 1675 -- "Educational Service Centers" are a bureaucratic sinkhole that launched and promoted CSCOPE.  Under current law, those ESC's are scheduled to appear before Texas' Sunset Commission in 2015; HB 1675 would punt this appearance to 2019.  Given everything we've learned about the ESC's during the past few months, this type of accountability cannot come soon enough.
  • SB 1730 -- This bill creates places tolls on existing roads without corresponding reforms to existing transportation authorities.
  • HB 2013 -- Enables Common Core style data collection in Texas schools; need I say more?!?
  • HB 2824 -- Another companion bill for HB 5; also deserves to be vetoed for the same reasons.
  • HB 2836 -- This bill would gut the elected State Board of Education and place curriculum standards in the hands of educational bureaucrats.
The 83rd Texas Legislature passed A LOT of bad legislation during its general session.  Mr. Governor, the ball is in your court.  We urge you to act.

Sincerely,
Adam Cahn
Austin, TX
June 10th, 2013

-----

Contact Governor Perry:

Phone: (512) 463-2000
Twitter: @GovernorPerry

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Update: Governor Perry signed HB 5 on Monday afternoon.
    Read More
    Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, CSCOPE, Education, Rick Perry, Spending, University of Texas, Vetoes | No comments

    Friday, 24 May 2013

    ACTION ALERT: Stop Texas' 26% Spending Increase

    Posted on 06:50 by Unknown

    The disastrous 83rd Legislature comes down to this, from the Tea Party Advisory Caucus:
    Fellow Patriots:
    THIS IS AS URGENT AS IT GETS.
    PLEASE SPREAD JOANN'S MESSAGE FAR AND WIDE AS SOON AS YOU CAN.
    ___
    Spending Up 26%! Texas Legislature Takes Wild Left Turn & Spends like there’s No Tomorrow
    Alert from: JoAnn Fleming, Chairman, TX Legislature's TEA Party Caucus Advisory Committee; Executive Director, Grassroots America
    The news is bad – very bad. A majority in the Texas House and Senate (yes, a majority of Republicans) have gone on a wild spending spree! We have one last chance to stop it. Please help us kill HB 1025 and SB 1 to force a special session. We believe we can get a more conservative budget when all the focus is on spending.
    It is time for YOU to come to the aid of Texas! Call, e-mail, text, FaceBook, and Tweet your state representative as soon as possible! Melt the phone lines starting at 8 AM Friday and call all day! Call your representative’s district offices and Capitol office. Tell him/her you do not support the budget and you support a special session to get it right. Ask them to vote down HB 1025 & SB 1.  Be firm and employ the Golden Rule.  Yelling and cursing doesn't make them hear you, in fact, it can have the opposite effect.
    To find your state representative click here.
    For good measure, call your state senator & declare you don’t support the budget, click here.
    Call Governor Perry’s office & ask him to veto the budget if it passes!(512) 463-2000
    Special thanks to Texas Public Policy Foundation for its help in putting together the numbers that follow...
    The bad news - if HB 1025 (supplemental spending bill) and SB 1 (budget) pass, this happens:
    ·        The $1.8 billion in tax relief called for by the Governor is slashed because a majority of the legislature went on a spending spree. The Legislature includes about half of the Governor’s request (about $900 million) and wants to count $631 million in a one-time electrical ratepayer fee rebate for about 80% of Texans as a tax cut—which it isn’t.
    ·        The budget will exceed the state’s constitutional spending limit. They will bust the spending cap! The big spenders seek to circumvent the spending limit through SJR 1, the constitutional amendment to be approved by voters in November. They are changing the definition of “busting the cap” so they can say they didn’t…sounds just like Washington, DC!
    ·        Though they had more than $13 billion in new general revenue (GR) on hand for the 2014-15 budget, House & Senate budget appropriators did not include money in the budget for “pay as you go” highway funding or provide taxpayers with a meaningful tax cut. Instead, they spent it all and want to raid the Rainy Day Fund too!
    ·        The Legislature has decided to raid the state’s Economic Stabilization Fund (Rainy Day Fund) for almost $4 billion. The ESF was intended to protect against the pressure for a tax increase during an economic downturn. Instead, this budget uses the Rainy Day Fund to explode spending during a time of plenty, cutting the fund balance in half—from $8 billion to $4 billion. This leaves Texas vulnerable if the national economy continues to falter or we have a natural or manmade disaster.
    ·        The Legislature will appropriate approximately $106 billion in General Revenue and Rainy Day funds. This is an increase of $22 billion, or 26%, over last session! (This is a session to session, not a budget to budget, comparison.)
    ·        The total of all funds (including federal funds) in the new budget looks to be about $214 billion, an increase of about $38 billion, or 21%, over what was appropriated in 2011. (This is a session to session, not a budget to budget, comparison.)
    ·        This level of spending is proof most legislators are tone deaf (94% of 2012 Republican primary voters signaled they wanted spending cut). They willingly ignore the unstable national and global economies. This is a threat to a strong Texas and should be treated as an assault on liberty.
    ·        This spending repeats the mistake of the 79th TX Legislature (2005). After the 78th Legislature (2003) held the line on spending, the 79thLegislature went on a spending spree that led to the 2011 $15 billion budget shortfall. It could happen again. Are the big spenders setting the stage for gambling and/or and income tax next session?
    ·        This spending rejects principles of fiscal conservatism in exchange for a big-gov’t approach like those of the other big-five states: CA, NY, IL, FL.
    ·       This budget is a threat to the economic prosperity of Texas citizens, families, and communities. It is a threat to Texas – the best hope for enduring freedom in these United States. 
     The Legislature appears determined to spend the State of Texas into becoming the next California, and the Governor is sucking his thumb.  The situation is dire.  Call and Tweet your legislators AND the Governor.

    -----

    Contact Info:

    Governor Rick Perry:
    Phone: (512) 463-2000
    Twitter: @GovernorPerry

    Lt. Governor David Dewhurst:
    Phone: (512) 463-0001
    Twitter: @DavidHDewhurst

    House Speaker Joe Straus
    Phone: (512) 463-1000
    Twitter: @SpeakerStraus

    Find your own legislator here.

    -----

    Update: Continuing the pattern of this bizarre session, Lt. Governor Dewhurst NAILS it!!!

    Update II: Empower Texans has more here; money quote: 
    There is $13 billion of additional general revenue sitting in the state treasury than two years prior. But that wasn’t enough to satisfy the Legislature’s appetite for more spending. They say they need $4 billion more from a fund constitutionally created to backfill budget shortfalls.

    There are many aspects of the current version of the budget that should be of serious concern to voters (like throwing $4 billion extra into public education to appease Democrats, the lack of substantial tax relief, a pension increase for legislators… etc.). Arguably the biggest though is the reckless disregard for the original purpose of the Rainy Day Fund.

    Legislators should hit the reset button and pass a better budget in a special session. Getting it right is far more important than just getting it done.
     Update III: Chuck DeVore Tweets this diagram:

    Read More
    Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Boondoggle du Jour, Chuck DeVore, David Dewhurst, Economic Growth, Joe Straus, Rick Perry, Spending, Tea Party, Texas House | No comments

    Saturday, 11 May 2013

    Austin Bond Result: We Need Your Prayers

    Posted on 20:06 by Unknown
    Folks have written in asking how the bond election went.

    We need prayers.

    I hope this helps.


    Read More
    Posted in AISD, Boondoggle du Jour, Education, Props 1-4 (AISD; 2013), Spending | No comments

    VOTE TODAY: AGAINST AISD Bond Props 1 - 4

    Posted on 11:41 by Unknown
    Today is the big day; vote against all four Austin ISD bonds:



    Read our endorsement AGAINST the bonds here.

    Find your polling place here.
    Read More
    Posted in AISD, Boondoggle du Jour, Education, Props 1-4 (AISD; 2013), Spending | No comments

    Tuesday, 7 May 2013

    Turnout Up for AISD Props. 1 - 4

    Posted on 21:12 by Unknown

    According to the Burnt Orange Report, 16,551 people voted in all elections across Travis County during early voting.

    In 2010, by contrast, the May AISD trustee election saw fewer than 10,000 people show up.

    Caution is in order, because the sixteen thousand number is for Travis County as a whole (not just AISD), but turnout is clearly up.

    Election Day voting locations can be found here.

    Let's slow this process down; vote AGAINST AISD props. 1 - 4.
    Read More
    Posted in AISD, Boondoggle du Jour, Education, Props 1-4 (AISD; 2013), Spending | No comments

    Monday, 6 May 2013

    AFP-Texas: The Ugly Numbers on AISD debt and spending

    Posted on 18:33 by Unknown

    Americans for Prosperity -- Texas breaks down the numbers on the AISD bond election:



  • Teachers comprise only 52% of the ISD staff
  • And only 49% of the ISD revenue is spent on instruction



  • And the Superintendent – as of TEA’s last listing – is making base salary of over $285,000
  • AISD debt is currently just over $1.1 billion
      • Approximately $751 million in principal and
      • $372 million in interest
    AISD student enrollment has grown 8.9% at under 1% a year over the past 10 years according to TEA:
      • In 2001, enrollment was 77,816;
      • In 2011, enrollment was 85,273
    Yet spending almost doubled – 71.12% increaseFrom $547 million to $936 million
    And the ISD fund balance grew an astounding 117.647% in 10 years.
      • $68 million in 2001 to $148 million in 2001-10
    The bond package proposed would more than double AISD debt.
    Let’s remember the current principal is $750.5 million; This bond package is for over $892 million.


  • Read more: http://americansforprosperity.org/texas/legislativealerts/aisd-bond-election-loving-our-kids-to-debt/#ixzz2SZ8bxieq
     This is lot of debt to burden ourselves and our children with over the next thirty years.  A low turnout May election that maximizes the special interest vote is not an appropriate forum.  Let's slow this process down;  Vote AGAINST AISD Bonds 1 - 4.
    Read More
    Posted in AISD, Americans for Prosperity, Boondoggle du Jour, Education, Props 1-4 (AISD; 2013), Spending | No comments

    STOP THE PRESSES: Austin-American Statesman comes out AGAINST AISD Props. 1-4

    Posted on 06:53 by Unknown

    Oh. My. Gosh.

    Vote for Mia's future; say 'no' to the rushed bond package; money quote:
    The district’s board and administration is asking for permission to borrow $892 million — the largest in the district’s 132-year history. The four bond propositions on the ballot are the results of many hours of hard work by the district’s volunteer bond advisory committee and by district staff. And while we appreciate the commitment of time and effort, the American-Statesman cannot recommend passage of any of the four items presented to district voters.

    The newspaper is a strong supporter of public education, and that support makes this decision difficult. But we cannot in good conscience recommend approval of a package that is riddled with questionable cost estimates and expenditures and rushed for inclusion on the May ballot.

    ....

    Had the propositions not been structured to bundle needed projects with costly wishful thinking, voters could have separated mere want from true need. Bundling the projects was a political choice — not an academic one. The same goes for ignoring or overlooking the potential for full use of existing buildings before rushing to build new ones.

    Trustees seek permission to build new schools when vacancies exist at facilities — mostly east of the interstate.

    ....

    Waiting for a spot on the November ballot after a more thorough vetting of the items would have made the bond requests more affordable as well as supportable.

    To reiterate, it is a departure for the American-Statesman not to support a school bond issue, and we did not reach this decision easily.

    Consider that Mia, the cute little girl on the flyer, will grow up and be into her 30s paying back millions in unnecessary debt the bond propositions would impose on her.
     Cahnman's Musings is pleasantly shocked by this development, but we'll take it.

    Let's slow this process down; vote AGAINST AISD Props. 1-4.

    Early voting runs through tomorrow, find early voting locations here.

    Election day proper is Saturday, May 11th, find election day polling locations here.
    Read More
    Posted in AISD, Boondoggle du Jour, Education, Props 1-4 (AISD; 2013), Spending, The Statesman | No comments

    Friday, 3 May 2013

    ACTION ALERT: YES on SB 101 and SJR 10

    Posted on 08:04 by Unknown

    Following the biggest conservative victory of the 83rd #TXLEGE in the Texas House on Wednesday, Conservatives now need the Texas Senate to act on the following two pieces of legislation:
    • SB 101 -- This is the corresponding legislation to the bill the Texas House passed on Wednesday; "Relating to the constitutional limit on the rate of growth of appropriations of revenue."
    • SJR 10 -- This will place a strict spending cap in the state Constitution; "Proposing a constitutional amendment concerning the limitation on the rate of growth of appropriations of revenue."
    These two pieces of legislation are major components of the Texas Budget Compact, which Lt. Governor David Dewhurst endorsed last year.

    Concerned citizens should contact BOTH Lt. Governor David Dewhurst AND their own Senator and respectfully request a vote on SB 101 and SJR 10 on the floor of the Texas Senate.

    Lt. Governor David Dewhurst:

    (512) 463-0001

    Facebook: David Dewhurst

    Twitter: @DavidHDewhurst

    Texans can contact their individual Senator here.
    Read More
    Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, David Dewhurst, Economic Growth, Spending, Texas Budget Compact, Texas House, Texas Senate | No comments

    Wednesday, 1 May 2013

    "The Biggest Conservative Victory of the 83rd #TXLEGE; So Far...."

    Posted on 21:37 by Unknown

    Last night, a source on Congress Ave sent us this clip from the Houston Chronicle; money quote:
    There would be a tighter state limit on spending under a bill given preliminary approval Wednesday by the Texas House.

    Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford, added the spending limit as an amendment to House Bill 7, which, along with HB 6, seeks to tamp down on the practice of collecting fees or taxes for certain purposes and instead leaving them unspent to help balance the budget.

    ....

    King’s amendment would require the board to base the cap on the lower of three things: revenue, growth in personal income or growth in population and inflation.

    ....

    King afterward acknowledged the potential for confusion but said his amendment would put a new cap on the overall budget.

    Gov. Rick Perry has called for a new spending cap to be placed in the state constitution that would limit spending to growth in population and inflation. A constitutional amendment would require approval by two-thirds of the Legislature to be placed on a statewide ballot for voter approval. HB7, as amended, would simply put the new cap into state law.
     This is huge.  This type of spending cap is a major component of the Texas Budget Compact.  Perhaps we're seeing movement after all.

    Our source explains:
    if this survives on [sic] makes it through, it will be transformational....Not only will it freeze the footprint of government as far as the state funded side of the budget, but it will apply downward pressure on the unexpended balances maintained for budget certification, which will force agencies to reduce their taxes and licensure fees.
     In other words, this policy will alter the trajectory of state spending.

    Cahnman's Musings would like to thank Rep. Phil King for introducing this amendment.  We would also like to thank reps Drew Darby and John Otto for assisting Rep. King on the floor.  This was the best move the Texas House has made all session and Cahnman's Musings prays it continues.

    Update: Williamson County Conservative has more here.
    Read More
    Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Phil King, Rick Perry, Spending, Texas Budget Compact, Texas House | No comments

    Thursday, 4 April 2013

    Tim Hawkins: The Government Can!!!

    Posted on 21:20 by Unknown
    The Texas House is debating the budget as we write this, but Cahnman's Musings just worked a thirteen and a half hour shift, and we said our piece on Tuesday; for now, enjoy Tim Hawkins:




    Read More
    Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Spending, Tim Hawkins | No comments

    Tuesday, 2 April 2013

    Empower Texans: Obligation to Cut

    Posted on 14:30 by Unknown
    A battle is brewing this Thursday over Texas' state budget; Empower Texans has the details:
    Will taxpayers actually see some gumption from Republicans during Thursday’s debate on the state budget? Several GOP freshmen have pre-filed amendments seeking to cut wasteful government spending in favor of addressing the state’s major unfunded teacher pension liability. How the rest of the GOP caucus votes will be telling.
    Several Republican House freshmen have pre-filed amendments to SB 1 – the state’s budget up for debate on Thursday – that would shift wasteful government spending to the Teacher Retirement System (TRS) in order to address the pension fund’s estimated $27 Billion unfunded liability.

    ....

    While unfunded pension liabilities are a serious problem for state and local governments that require systematic reforms – the state cannot ignore the growing liabilities of the TRS – the fifth largest public pension in the U.S. as of last September. Cutting wasteful government in order to fulfill the state’s current obligation is responsible budgeting.
    The action will take place on Thursday evening of this week; if you have a few moments, please tune in throughout the night and let your legislators know how you feel.
    Read More
    Posted in Boondoggle du Jour, Economic Growth, Spending, Texas, Texas House | No comments

    Tuesday, 19 March 2013

    Mediterreanian Update Tuesday: When Will Califonia Follow Cyprus?!?

    Posted on 12:55 by Unknown

    The other day, the tiny Mediterranean nation of Cyprus attempted to confiscate between 7 and 10 percent of all bank deposits in the country.

    Considering that the situation in Greece is worse than Cyprus and, at least in some respects, California is worse off than Greece, we wonder how long it will be until someone proposes something similar in California; California has already seriously considered taxing people who move out of state.

    Sure, it sounds crazy now, but let this situation unfold for a few more years.
    Read More
    Posted in California, Cyprus, Economic Growth, Greece, Spending | No comments
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