Voter Integrity Bills- Good and Bad

February 27, 2019

A BUNCH of voter integrity bills have been filed this session: ones that strengthen integrity main by conservatives, ones that loosen it by Democrats.  So here are some of the key bills to track in this area:

GOOD

  • SB 953 (Fallon) – if a person marks themselves as a non-citizen to get out of jury duty and they are registered to vote, a letter is sent to ‘clarify’ (which law was broken)
  • HB 378 (Lang) – Verification of citizenship to vote, in cases where a driver’s license did not have citizenship verification.

BAD

  • HB 1104 (Meza) – Massively expands absentee ballot by mail. Mail-in ballots are subject of major fraud via ballot harvesting.
  • HB 526 (Israel) – Relax voter ID laws, using questionable documents & lessen penalties

Busy week for the Tx Lege 2/25

February 24, 2019

So many important bills and a LOT of grassroots people coming down (and we need as MANY as possible to come). Here is a listing of the more important ones for freedom and fiscal sanity.

2/25/2019    
E1.036 Senate Finance Committee 10:00am
SB 3 Teacher across the board $5K pay raise Nelson
     
2/26/2019    
E2.030 House Human Services Committee 8:00am
HB 285 Prohibiting removal of work requirements for receive supplemental nuitrition assistance Springer
     
2/27/2019    
JHR140 House Ways & Means Committee 8:00am
HB 2 Voter approval rate cap at 2.5% plus appraisal district review board & regulations Burrows
HB 705 Allowing counties to opt for additional sales tax, as opposed to additional property taxes. NOT a swap for EXISTING taxes. Geren
     
E2.016 House Homeland Security & Public Safety 8:00am
HB 238 Preventing federal arms restrictions from being implemented in Texas Krause
     
E2.014 House State Affairs Committee 10:30am
HB 234 Legalizing neighborhood lemonade stands Krause
HB 281 Prohibiting tax-funded lobbying Middleton
HB 433 Disclosure of govt money spend directly and indirectly on lobbying Shaheen

Lots of advocacy needed to combat the Professional Political Class this week.


RED ALERT! HB2 Hearing in Austin Wed. Feb 27th

February 22, 2019

UPDATE: This day is now a 2fer; HB281 (by Rep. Middleton) to end taxpayer-funded 3rd-party lobbying will be heard at 10:30am in State Affairs in E2.014
Time to saddle up & ride, property taxpayers!

UPDATE2: a 3fer, considering HB238 (by. Rep. Krause) challenging enforcement of federal regulation on guns & gun accessories in Texas. 8am in the Homeland Security & Public Safety committee in room E2.016

It is absolutely critical we get a BIG turnout of taxpayers to testify at this one. Many local government officials and the lobbyists they hired with YOUR money to work against you realized that they would not get far with the Senate Property Tax committee, so they didn’t put in the big effort there, But they WILL in the House Ways & Means committee; expect lots of shiny first responder uniforms to be present to claim HB2 will take cops of the streets & empty out firehouses. So we need an even BIGGER property taxpayer turnout at this meeting. We need people to bring WRITTEN testimony if they can; only 1-2 pages detailing their struggles with property tax growth- either in numbers or personal story. If they DO have written testimony, try to email it to the committee office by Tuesday am at paige.higerd_HC@house.texas.gov and let them kill the trees for you. Be sure your name and city are listed at the top, so they can locate it when you testify.

No this is NOT property tax RELIEF, except in a future sense. It is a mechanism to control the GROWTH of property taxes and to put voter in more direct control of that growth. It is ABSOLUTELY essential that this piece get great support, because the bills coming later with actual relief for property taxpayers would be meaningless, if the appraisal growth could be used to ‘swamp’ any specific property tax reduction in a couple of years. We need the grassroots there and knowledgeable in the issues at hand.

In the lists below, our ‘BEST friends’ are in bold; the others need various levels of ‘selling’. Democrats are italicized but don’t pass on ‘selling’ them as well. Cole & Rodriguez are from Travis county & their communities are being DECIMATED by rising property values & taxes.

Position House Ways & Means Committee Office Phone
Chair: Rep. Dustin Burrows E2.722 512-463-0542
Vice Chair: Rep. Ryan Guillen 1W.3 512-463-0416
Members: Rep. Dwayne Bohac GS.6 512-463-0727
Rep. Sheryl Cole E1.218 512-463-0506
Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer 3S.2 512-463-0616
Rep. Jim Murphy 4N.3 512-463-0514
Rep. Candy Noble E1.412 512-463-0186
Rep. Eddie Rodriguez 4S.5 512-463-0674
Rep. Scott Sanford E1.408 512-463-0356
Rep. Matt Shaheen E2.718 512-463-0594
Rep. John Wray E1.302 512-463-0516

A lot of folks may not have had to testify in the John Reagan building before. it is located to the NORTH of the capitol on the map below, Need to approach the main intrance from the GROUND level.  The tunnel in E1 requires a badge, apparently (My apologies for directing some folks that way earlier.


A conservative suggestion for a new source of tax revenue

February 14, 2019

The recommendation below is as an element for a ‘tax swap’ related to reducing local property taxes related to school M&O, NOT as more overall money for government.

Conservatives rarely come up with new taxes due to their belief in less government. But to generate relief in areas of overtaxation- such as the current Texas property tax situation- it sometimes is important to not only reduce taxation, but shift some of the burden onto untaxed sources. And there is no greater amount of untaxed revenue than the all-cash underground economy that, in large part, supports illegal immigrants. This untaxed income does however, surface to visibility in significant amounts in one place: wire money transfers.

Cash transfers from the U.S. represent the 2nd largest source of hard currency for Mexico- and the largest source of hard currency in several Central American countries. More importantly, a large share of this is from labor from illegal immigrants, many who are receiving cash-only payments for their labors to avoid federal income tax collection- and to avoid income declarations that would render their families here ineligible for government benefits. Some of that money gets sent home via wire transfers, primarily through services like MoneyGram and Western Union; 40% of all MoneyGram transfers go to Mexico, for example.

So, my recommendation is to look to apply taxation to these transfers, since much of it is vastly undertaxed in relation to other parts of the economy. The least that could be done would to remove the sales tax exemption from the wire transfer service fee, which runs anywhere from $4-$27 depending on the service and amount sent; it probably averages around $9-$10. Ideally, it would be limited to transfers to foreign destinations if possible; but it not, applying it to all transfers is acceptable. We’re talking an average of less than a dollar per transfer: hardly a large burden (nor a large source of revenue) but it would send an important initial message that could be followed up on.

Of far MORE significance, I also would suggest investigating application of a percentage fee on the amount sent by wire transfer, if possible. Even a 1-2% charge for every dollar sent would be a truly significant revenue source, if it can be accomplished legally and politically.

I make these recommendations at significant personal cost. I do direct aid to orphans and poor families in Uganda; a network of support outside the usual charitable organizations, mainly to benefit some who have either ‘aged’ out of the orphanages or their families. I do this by sending wire transfer to trusted people I’ve met over there and know well. I send over 50 transfers a year, totally $8,000-$9,000/year; since I don’t work through 501c3 anymore to do this, I do not get a charitable deduction on my tax return. My proposals would cost me out of my own pocket, but I support them and would testify effectively for them when needed.