TimTebowSituation

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg
Showing posts with label Transparency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transparency. 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)
Read More
Posted in Boondoggle du Jour, New York, Spending, Texas, Transparency | No comments

Monday, 20 May 2013

ACTION ALERT: YES on SB 14!!!

Posted on 20:25 by Unknown

We've got one last chance to pass transparency legislation in the Texas House.

From Americans for Prosperity -- Texas:
The goal of SB 14 is to empower Texas voters with easily accessible knowledge of their current local government debt levels while also limiting debt issued without taxpayer approval. SB 14 would also require that special-purpose taxing entities demonstrate that they are serving the purpose for which they were created.
From Texas Watchdog:
Senate bills 14 and 13 and their identical House counterparts establish, at the request of state Comptroller Susan Combs, new requirements for the posting of public debt, unfunded liabilities, borrowing and project costs on websites maintained by state and local agencies.

“People need to know what their government is doing, and how it spends their money,” Combs said in a statement she issued after a press conference announcing the filing of the bills. “We need to implement common-sense changes that put vital information about government spending and debt in front of the public.”

....
The state’s Bond Finance Office would post on a website a list of all outstanding local securities and schedules for their repayment. In turn, the issuers of local securities would submit reports of their activities to the state.

Under SB 14, the public would get more detailed information about the issuing of bonds, the rationale for their issuance and a tally of outstanding debt incurred by the bonds.

Local political bodies would be expected to file annual reports detailing all of their funds and their outstanding debt obligations. These reports would be posted on websites maintained by all cities, school districts and special taxing districts.
Susan CombsSusan Combs

Once every three years each special taxing district in the state would be expected to prepare a report defending its existence and hold a public hearing to discuss the assessment.

The bill would also require school districts to create or to include on their websites detailed information about school facilities, enrollment, estimates of projected costs for new school projects and the current annual financial report.

Contact you legislator here.
Read More
Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Susan Combs, Texas House, Transparency | No comments

Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Revised Priorities for the 83rd Texas Legislature

Posted on 14:27 by Unknown

Back in February, Cahnman's Musings published this list of big ticket items for the 83rd Texas Legislature; heading into the final six weeks of the session, these are our revised priorities:
  1. Gold, gold, gold - Rep. Giovanni Capriglione has proposed building a depository to store Gold bullion.  Governor Perry supports this effort.  Repatriating our own gold, and creating a safe haven for others' gold, will enable Texas to withstand the coming global economic [REDACTED]storm.  In a world where bank deposits are being confiscated, safety has value.  Accomplishing this task will allow us to live to fight another day.
  2. School Choice - K-12 education is 40% of state spending.  Keeping long-term education spending under control is essential to keep the budget under control.  Putting the money in the hands of parents instead of educrats will also help pre-empt future CSCOPE's.
  3. Medicaid - Medicaid expansion is economic suicide; just say no.
  4. Transparency/Pensions - As we said in February: "Local government debt in Texas is $324 billion.  Pension obligations are a big chunk of that debt.  The interrelated issues of local debt and pension obligations are a time bomb the legislature should defuse before it becomes a crisis."
  5. Texas Budget Compact - This is Rick Perry's baby.  To our knowledge, he isn't doing bupkus to get it passed.  Cahnman's Musings was an early supporter of the Texas Budget Compact, but if Rick Perry isn't going to do squat to pass his signature initiative, why should we?!?
There's still time to pass every item on this list.  These are structural reforms that will strengthen Texas' economy for the next generation.  If the 83rd Texas legislature delivers on these five items, Cahnman's Musings can live with a lot of other crap.

Read More
Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Education, Giovanni Capriglione, Medicaid, Rick Perry, Sound Money, Texas Budget Compact, Transparency | No comments

Thursday, 21 March 2013

Empower Texans: Moderates Mobilize to Keep Taxpayers in the Dark

Posted on 06:49 by Unknown

Empower Texans reports on a depressing series of events in the Texas House:
A pattern is emerging in the Texas House: moderate Republicans seem to be setting their sights on killing commonsense transparency measures during the committee process before they have a chance to see the light of day on the floor. They’re being joined by school districts and local taxing entities trying to keep taxpayers in the dark.

...

HB 14 would bring local government code into the 21st century by requiring this information be put online in a searchable format. That’s great for taxpayers who live in a digital age where information is just a quick Google search away. That’s not so great for local cities, counties, school boards, and other districts that seek to put taxpayers on the hook for more debt in order to fund massive spending projects
.
Enter yesterday’s Appropriations subcommittee meeting:

Representatives Bennett Ratliff (R – Coppell) and Drew Darby (R – San Angelo) took turns attacking the premise that taxpayers should have easier access to information already made available to them upon request.

Their justification?!?

Taxpayers should attend city council and school board meetings when this information is discussed, so taxpayers don’t get confused by potentially misleading information.
In other words, taxpayers are too dumb to figure out if more debt and more spending is appropriate. They should have that information sanitized by local officials and bureaucrats before making a decision.

...

Are these conspicuous attacks by moderates in the House an attempt to kill these transparency measures before they have a chance to see the light of day? It sure seems like it.
This cannot stand.  Transparency is a big ticket item for the 83rd Texas Legislature.  Contact your legislators here.
Read More
Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Susan Combs, Texas, Texas House, Transparency | No comments

Friday, 22 February 2013

Big Ticket Items for the 83rd Texas Legislature

Posted on 11:39 by Unknown

With the 83rd Texas Legislature one-third over, and conservatives off to a bad start, it's time to re-group and prioritize.  To protect and strengthen Texas' economy, we need to alter the trajectory of state spending.  The following five items will maintain Texas as place where entrepreneurs can risk their capital and achieve a decent rate of return.
  1. Texas Budget Compact -- Cahnman's Musings was an early supporter of the Texas Budget Compact.  It remains our top priority, though we remain frustrated with Governor Perry's timidity.  Limiting government spending is the foundation of prosperity.

  2. School Choice -- In order to limit state spending, you have to get education under control.  K-12 Education remains 40% of state spending.  For that money, K-12 education remains an array of boondoggles and bureaucracy.  The CSCOPE scandal re-enforces what we already knew about public education.  In order to keep state spending under control (and pre-empt the next CSCOPE), you need to take education dollars out of the hands of bureaucrats and put it into the hands of parents.
  3. Medicaid -- Medicaid has been the fastest growing component of state spending for two decades.  In 2001, Medicaid was 14% of the budget; today it's 25%.  If the Obamacare Medicaid expansion goes through, that will rise to 33%.  Medicaid is a broken program that hurts the poor.  We can't keep pouring money we don't have into a program that doesn't work.
  4. Pensions/Transparency -- Local government debt in Texas is $324 billion.  Pension obligations are a big chunk of that debt.  The interrelated issues of local debt and pension obligations are a time bomb the legislature should defuse before it becomes a crisis.
  5. Repeal the Margins Tax -- This atrociously designed tax is unworthy of a state like Texas; end it, don't mend it.
In business, the Pareto principle states that you get 80% of your results from 20% of your activity; this list is that 20%.
Read More
Posted in 83rd Texas Legislature, Americans for Prosperity, CSCOPE, Economic Growth, Education, Entrepreneurship, Health Care, Medicaid, Rick Perry, Spending, Texas Budget Compact, Texas Public Policy Foundation, Transparency | No comments
Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • 1 Peter 4:10 and the Moral Case for Free Enterprise
    "As each one has recieved a gift, minister unto one another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God." 1 Peter 4:10 "Th...
  • Thomas Ratliff: A Documented Liar
    Today's Austin American-Statesman has dueling Op-Eds on CSCOPE.  Peggy Venable of Americans for Prosperity has a fantastic piece outlin...
  • The Men Behind the Declaration of Independence
    We first came across this classic piece from Paul Harvey last year ; today, we found the video : Highlights : These were men of means; well ...
  • The Intellectual Maturity of Pro-Abortion Activists
    In these serious times at the Texas Capitol, what does the Huffington Post propose?!? Texas Women: Stop Having Sex With Men Who Vote Agains...
  • How to Identify Toxic Cirriculums
    A must read piece from Texas CSCOPE Review : The Characteristics of Toxic Curriculum Include: 1.  A 21st Century learning curriculum 2.  C...
  • Wallbuilders: Influence of the Bible on America
    This upcoming DVD from Wallbuilders looks way cool:
  • Pro-Abortion Left's Valiant Stand for ... Tampons?!?
    About an hour and fifteen minutes ago (6:25 pm CDT) the pro-abortion mob re-assembled in the Texas Capitol rotunda. They were chanting about...
  • The Lazarus Phone
    38  Then Jesus, again groaning in Himself, came to the tomb. It was a cave, and a stone lay against it. 39  Jesus said, “ Take away the sto...
  • KVUE Succeeds where KXAN Fails
    KVUE news continues to distinguish itself with, by far, the best coverage of the ongoing AISD bond election; here's their report from l...
  • Team Dewhurst's Gift to a Hostile Media
    Last night, in an interview with Hot Air , Lt. Governor Dewhurst made the following asinine statement: “We have reports, and I have my staf...

Categories

  • #AuditAISD (1)
  • 10th Amendment (10)
  • 2nd Amendment (5)
  • 83rd Texas Legislature (92)
  • Abby Johnson (1)
  • Abortion (46)
  • Adolph Hitler (1)
  • AISD (21)
  • Alfred Kinsey (2)
  • American Revolution (1)
  • Americans for Prosperity (13)
  • Arthur Brooks (1)
  • Ashley Granger (1)
  • Atheism (1)
  • Austin (24)
  • Austin Chronicle (1)
  • Barack Obama (17)
  • Barbara Cargill (2)
  • Battleground Texas (12)
  • Ben Bernanke (2)
  • Bennett Ratliff (2)
  • Bill Owens (3)
  • Bill Powers (3)
  • Bill Zedler (1)
  • Billy Graham (5)
  • Boondoggle du Jour (33)
  • Border Security (4)
  • Boy Scouts (1)
  • Brandon Darby (2)
  • Bryan Hughes (1)
  • Buck Sexton (1)
  • Caleb Bonham (1)
  • California (11)
  • Catholic Church (2)
  • CD-25 (4)
  • Chaos (2)
  • Charlie Geren (1)
  • Chris Christie (1)
  • Chuck DeVore (3)
  • CNBC (1)
  • Colorado (2)
  • Commissions and Czars (1)
  • Communism (4)
  • Concerned Women for America (2)
  • Constitution (3)
  • CPAC (3)
  • Crony Capitalism (6)
  • CSCOPE (21)
  • Culture War (6)
  • Cyprus (1)
  • Dan Branch (4)
  • Dan Cummins (1)
  • Dan Patrick (8)
  • Dan Savage (1)
  • Dana Loesch (1)
  • Danny Forshee (4)
  • Darwinism (2)
  • David Barton (4)
  • David Dewhurst (8)
  • David Simpson (1)
  • Debra Medina (1)
  • Declaration of Independence (4)
  • Democrats (14)
  • Destroying Hollywood (1)
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1)
  • Dixie Chicks (1)
  • Dodd-Frank (1)
  • Dolores Huerta (1)
  • Donna Garner (1)
  • Dr. Donna Campbell (4)
  • Economic Growth (35)
  • Education (54)
  • Egypt (2)
  • El Paso (1)
  • Election 2014 (8)
  • Elizabeth Warren (1)
  • Energy (3)
  • Entrepreneurship (5)
  • Eric Holder (2)
  • Erica Greider (1)
  • Erin Cargile (1)
  • Explore God (1)
  • Faith (47)
  • Federal Reserve (4)
  • Fidel Castro (1)
  • Financial Terroism (2)
  • Food Stamps (1)
  • Fox News (2)
  • Franklin Graham (2)
  • FreePAC (3)
  • Ft. Worth Star Telegram (1)
  • GBTV (12)
  • GE (1)
  • George P. Bush (1)
  • George W. Bush (6)
  • George Washington (1)
  • Giovanni Capriglione (4)
  • Glenn Beck (16)
  • Gratitude (1)
  • Great Britain (2)
  • Greece (1)
  • Greg Abbott (6)
  • Harry Reid (1)
  • Health Care (7)
  • Homosexuality (7)
  • Human Trafficking (2)
  • Immigration (2)
  • Independent Women's Forum (1)
  • Iowa (1)
  • Iraq (1)
  • IRS Scandal (7)
  • Israel (8)
  • Jason Villalba (1)
  • Jesus Christ (26)
  • JoAnn Fleming (1)
  • Joe Biden (1)
  • Joe Straus (21)
  • John Adams (1)
  • John Cornyn (5)
  • John McCain (1)
  • Jon Stewart (1)
  • Jonathan Strickland (1)
  • Josh Charles (1)
  • Judge Tim Sulak (3)
  • Julian Castro (6)
  • Karl Marx (2)
  • Karl Rove (1)
  • Katrina Pierson (2)
  • Kermit Gosnell (7)
  • King David (1)
  • King Hezekiah (1)
  • King Solomon (1)
  • Kirk Watson (1)
  • Konni Burton (3)
  • KVUE (3)
  • Lamar Smith (1)
  • Larry Kudlow (1)
  • Lloyd Doggett (1)
  • Louie Gohmert (1)
  • Marc Ott (1)
  • Margaret Thatcher (1)
  • Maria Acosta (2)
  • Marixsm and Sex (38)
  • Marriage (2)
  • Matt Rinaldi (1)
  • Media Corruption (6)
  • Medicaid (14)
  • Mike Lee (3)
  • Milton Friedman (1)
  • Mitt Romney (1)
  • New York (2)
  • New York Jets (1)
  • North Carolina (1)
  • NYC (3)
  • Obamacare (16)
  • Oday Aboushai (1)
  • Organized Labor (1)
  • Partying (3)
  • Pat Robertson (1)
  • Pedophilia (2)
  • Pennsylvania (1)
  • Phil Gramm (1)
  • Phil King (1)
  • Planned Parenthood (9)
  • Playboy (2)
  • Pop Culture (2)
  • POTUS 2012 (4)
  • Progress Texas (5)
  • Promiscuity (31)
  • Prop. 1 (Travis Cty; 2012) (1)
  • Prophet Jeremiah (1)
  • Prophet Samuel (1)
  • Props 1-4 (AISD; 2013) (19)
  • Rabbi Daniel Lapin (4)
  • Race (2)
  • Radical Islam (7)
  • Rafael Cruz (5)
  • Rand Paul (6)
  • Randall L. Stevenson (2)
  • Republicans (19)
  • Rick Perry (44)
  • Rick Santorum (1)
  • Roger WIlliams (4)
  • Ron Paul (1)
  • Ronald Reagan (6)
  • Rosemary Lehmberg (9)
  • Russia (2)
  • San Antonio (7)
  • Sarah Palin (1)
  • Satan (43)
  • Saul Alinsky (2)
  • Sean Duffy (CO) (1)
  • Self-Sufficiency Act (1)
  • Sheriff Mack (1)
  • SOPA (1)
  • Sound Money (5)
  • Spain (1)
  • Spending (28)
  • Stanley Kurtz (1)
  • Stealth Jihad/Marxism (30)
  • Stephen Broden (1)
  • Steve Toth (1)
  • Steven Crowder (1)
  • Supreme Court (3)
  • Susan Combs (3)
  • Syria (1)
  • Tea Party (7)
  • Ted Cruz (18)
  • Texas (45)
  • Texas Budget Compact (7)
  • Texas Freedom Network (4)
  • Texas House (35)
  • Texas Longhorns (2)
  • Texas Monthly (2)
  • Texas Public Policy Foundation (9)
  • Texas Senate (16)
  • Texas Tribune (5)
  • Texas Values (3)
  • The Bible (37)
  • The Hard Left (19)
  • The Ratliff Clan (1)
  • The Statesman (4)
  • Thomas Jefferson (1)
  • Thomas Ratliff (2)
  • Tim Hawkins (1)
  • Tim Tebow (2)
  • Toby Marie Walker (3)
  • Todd Hunter (3)
  • Tommy Williams (3)
  • Tragedy Du Jour (3)
  • Transparency (5)
  • Travis County Taxpayers Union (12)
  • U-Verse Campaign (2)
  • U.S. House (4)
  • U.S. Senate (7)
  • Unemployment (2)
  • United Nations (2)
  • University of Texas (8)
  • Vetoes (8)
  • Victoria Woodhull (1)
  • Vincent Torres (1)
  • Virginia (1)
  • Vladimir Putin (1)
  • Voter Fraud (3)
  • Wayne Christian (2)
  • Wayne Slater (1)
  • Welfare (1)
  • Wendy Davis (21)
  • Woodhull Alliance (1)
  • Young Conservatives of Texas (1)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (299)
    • ▼  August (21)
      • Thomas Ratliff: A Documented Liar
      • Who is Save the Storks?!?
      • What the Culture of Promiscuity has Begotten....
      • Straus Lieutenants Heart Dan Branch
      • BREAKING NEWS: Dan Patrick to Debate Thomas Ratlif...
      • Will the Texas Ethics Comission Stand for Justice ...
      • Texas Public Policy Foundation on Local Government...
      • Truth about Local Government Debt in Texas
      • Late-Term Abortion, Latino Voters, and Texas Progr...
      • On Abortion Barbie
      • Travis County Loots Taxpayers to Protect Rosemary ...
      • City of Austin Asks Eric Holder to Help Knife its ...
      • Texas Water Boondoggle would legalize Book Cooking
      • Travis County Taxpayers Union announces August 13t...
      • Racial Reconciliation, the Church, and Trayvon Martin
      • History Lesson: The Texas Water Boondoggle of 1968
      • Keep Standing Strong Barbara Cargill!!!
      • Pornography, Fiscal Discipline, and the Texas Legi...
      • Julian Castro's Christian Persecution Ordinance
      • The Strange Priorities of Chairman Dan Branch (and...
      • Texas Politics Over the Next Few Months
    • ►  July (55)
    • ►  June (58)
    • ►  May (55)
    • ►  April (40)
    • ►  March (49)
    • ►  February (21)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile