Here is an overview of activity from  your area elected officials on various legislation so far this session.




Sen. Kelly Hancock • District 9 Sen. Kelly Hancock • District 9[/caption]

Sen. Kelly Hancock


R-North Richland Hills • Elected: 2012
[email protected]


Hancock’s SB 21, which provides qualifications for delegates should a convention be called to amend the U.S. Constitution, passed the House in a 119-20 vote.  Gov. Greg Abbott has signed the bill into law.







Sen. Konni Burton • District 10 Sen. Konni Burton • District 10[/caption]

Sen. Konni Burton


R-Colleyville • Elected: 2014
[email protected]


Burton’s SB 5, which establishes new voter ID regulations, was named an emergency item by Abbott late in the session. The law is intended to mitigate the risk of Texas having to seek federal approval for election law changes.







Sen. Jane Nelson • District 12 Sen. Jane Nelson • District 12[/caption]

Sen. Jane Nelson


R-Flower Mound • Elected: 1993
[email protected]


Nelson shepherded SB 1, the state budget, through both chambers. It takes $1 billion from the state’s Rainy Day Fund and just under $2 billion from a deferral of funds to the Texas Department of Transportation. The bill was sent to the governor.







Rep. Tan Parker • District 63 Rep. Tan Parker • District 63[/caption]

Rep. Tan Parker


R-Flower Mound • Elected: 2006
[email protected]


Parker’s HB 1290, which requires the repeal of a state agency rule for each new one passed, gained the approval of both chambers. It was sent to the governor to be signed.







Rep. Giovanni Capriglione • District 98 Rep. Giovanni Capriglione • District 98[/caption]

Rep. Giovanni Capriglione


R-Southlake • Elected: 2012
[email protected]


Capriglione’s HB 501, which expands the financial disclosure requirements for legislators to include contracts with governmental entities, passed both chambers. Gov. Greg Abbott has signed the bill into law.







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For live coverage via our “Latest from the Lege” blog, visit communityimpact.com/capitol.


To follow live broadcasts of Texas House of Representatives proceedings, visit www.house.state.tx.us/video-audio.


To follow live broadcasts of Texas Senate proceedings, visit www.senate.texas.gov/av-live.php.







steps to follow when state special-called session begins July 18




  1. Abbott said the special session will be limited until the Senate passes a sunset bill to extend the life of state agencies, including the Texas Medical Board, which licenses doctors. He said the Senate should be able to pass this bill in three or four days.




  2. After the sunset bill's passage, Abbott enabled legislators to address 19 additional bills. One proposal addresses property tax growth, which Abbott said can be fixed via reform bill SB 2, which some considered to also be the solution to school finance reform.




  3. Abbott also called to limit the local government powers by prohibiting tree regulations, capping new construction fees during projects and preventing slow permitting processes. Additionally, he asked legislators to consider enacting local spending caps








News and notes from the capitol


Community Impact Newspaper and The Texas Tribune have established a partnership to share essential updates during the 85th legislative session. The Texas Tribune is the only member-supported, digitally focused, nonpartisan news organization that informs and engages with Texans about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.


Budget update


On May 27, both chambers of the Texas Legislature approved a $217 billion, two-year budget that would boost funding for the state’s beleaguered child welfare agency, increase the number of state troopers on the Texas-Mexico border and avoid serious reforms to the state’s much-criticized school finance system. The budget now goes to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk.


Public education


On May 28, the House and Senate approved a compromise version of House Bill 22, which would tweak a plan for grading public schools and districts on an A-F scale. The measure now goes to the governor. On May 25, Abbott signed Senate Bill 7 into law. The legislation requires principals and superintendents to report cases of teachers having inappropriate relationships with students or face a state jail felony or a fine of up to $10,000. The House on May 22 backed a Senate bill extending a program that lets high school students who fail a couple of required exams take an alternative route to graduation.


Ride-hailing


On May 29, Abbott signed House Bill 100 into law. That measure establishes a statewide framework to regulate ride-hailing companies, like Uber and Lyft, and undoes local rules that the two companies have argued are overly burdensome for their business models.


Texting while driving


Legislation that would create a statewide texting-while-driving ban has passed through the House and the Senate. Abbott had appeared to be undecided on whether he would veto the ban, but he signed the bill into law June 6.


Voter ID


The House and Senate have approved a deal to relax the state’s voter identification requirements, sending the legislation to the governor’s office where it was signed into law.


‘Sanctuary jurisdictions’


On May 7, Gov. Greg Abbott signed Senate Bill 4 into law. The measure would ban “sanctuary” jurisdictions in Texas and allow police to inquire about the immigration status of people they lawfully detain.







SCORECARD: Find out how the Texas Legislature did on Gov. Abbott’s top priorities


In January lawmakers were just about to begin the 140 day-long marathon of the 85th legislative session when Gov. Greg Abbott declared four issues as top priorities—and he recently added another. Here’s how each priority fared:


'Sanctuary City' Bans
Background: Travis County Sheriff Sally Hernandez promised  last year to implement “sanctuary city” policies. Abbott vowed to end sanctuary cities in Texas and create penalties for those leading jurisdictions that nurtured them.
The latest: Abbott signed Senate Bill 4 into law May 7. It allows law-enforcement officers to question an individual’s immigration status during a lawful detention or arrest—officers could pull someone over for speeding and ask about his or her citizenship, for example. Texas preemptively sued Travis County and other entities over what Texas believes will be nonenforcement.


Calling a convention of states
Background: Following the November presidential election, Abbott renewed his calls to form a convention of states to amend the U.S. Constitution to implement term limits for members of Congress, require Congress to adopt a balanced budget and allow more than 33 states to override a Supreme Court decision.
The latest: The House of Representatives and Senate worked out differences of SB 21 in a conference committee and sent the bill to the governor. The bill would only allow state lawmakers to serve as delegates for said convention.


Fixes to Child Protective Services
Background: In October, Abbott ordered Child Protective Services to work on a plan to protect endangered children in the foster care system. The order required the department to focus on retention and recruitment of new caseworkers.
The latest: The Senate and House worked to transfer some CPS duties to nonprofits through community-based foster care, increase payments to family members participating in the kinship care program and separate the Department of Family and Protective Services from the state health and human services system.


Ethics Reform
Background: In 2015, Abbott called for a number of ethics reforms throughout the government, including preventing retired legislators from immediately lobbying the state and requiring lawmakers to disclose contracts with public entities.
The latest: The omnibus ethics bill, SB 14, passed the Senate in early February but died in the House. The governor has signed some minor bills relating to open meetings. The House approved a bill that would prohibit donors to the governor who donated more than $2,500 from serving as a governor appointee.


Changes to Voter ID
Background: Just under four months after Abbott issued his first emergency items, he added another in response to a string of court decisions declaring Texas’ 2011 voter ID law as intentionally discriminatory. As a result, Texas could be required to seek federal preclearance before changing election laws.
The latest: SB 5, a bill expanding limitations on voter ID, passed in late March, and the bill sat in the House until May 20 when the governor declared it an emergency item. The Senate and House met to work out differences and sent the bill to the governor.