From Katrina to Ike

They say good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment.

The fall political season in Texas hit a snag right at the starting gate, as candidates dropped the usual stuff and replaced it with storm warnings and assistance and all that jazz. But some of that has — dare we say it — political benefits. There's something to be said for reminding people why they elected you. And there are reasonable people in office who saw the political aftermath of the FUBAR approach by local, state, and federal governments when Katrina hit.

With that in mind, what follows is a scattershot version of what some state officials are doing about the storm. It's not complete or comprehensive; the idea is to give you a quick survey of what political and government people were up to as Hurricane Ike crossed the Gulf of Mexico.

Gov. Rick Perry suspended the collection of state and local hotel and motel taxes for two weeks and he backdated that to the beginning of the week... Mandatory evacuations were underway in a slew of counties: Brazoria, Galveston, Jefferson, Orange, Chambers, and parts of Harris and Matagorda. Voluntary evacuations were on in Hardin, Jackson, and Victoria counties... The state put 7,500 members of the Texas Guard and 500 state troopers in place for the storms, helped move people in hospitals and state schools and prisons in the projected storm path... Utility crews went on notice... A "strike team" for hazardous waste problems that might develop went into place...

Almost 300 school buses from outside the storm area were sent by the state and by Dallas ISD to help move people. That's part of a contingent of around 1,350 buses available for this... The state's Department of Transportation was ready to convert highways for evacuations (which can mean running cars on both sides of the freeway in the same direction to get out of heavily populated areas like, say, Houston)... The Texas Supreme Court canceled hearings on legal aid services for the poor... Texas Parks & Wildlife canceled public teal and alligator hunts along the coast and in East Texas. That agency put 200 game wardens in place to help out and had the rest of them — 300 more — on alert...

President George W. Bush put FEMA and the Department of Homeland Security on the case, allowing them to assist financially and otherwise in 25 specified counties. The state's own disaster list covers 88 counties that might be affected... The Texas Banking Department said state-chartered banks can ignore state laws about holidays and close up for the storm — that's against the law without a waiver...

Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston, replaced his regular email about official activities with a list of things to do when a hurricane is coming and evacuation directions... Rep. Juan Garcia, D-Corpus Christi, suspended campaign stuff (it's a tough fight against former Rep. Todd Hunter, R-Corpus Christi) to visit the South Texas Nuclear Project and emergency operation planners in and near his district, and like Ellis, his newsletter to constituents and political supporters came complete with evacuation instructions. Hunter, who just started a radio and TV ad campaign, suspended it with the storm coming... Rep. Solomon Ortiz Jr. went with hurricanes in his constituent emails, dropping any mention of other state business...

Texas Railroad Commissioners Victor Carrillo, Elizabeth Ames Jones and Michael Williams got into it with a reminder to secure propane tanks and appliances in the storm path... Comptroller Susan Combs, who'd planned to announce her new prepaid college tuition plan in Edinburg, moved that to Austin since South Texas was preoccupied with storm prep... Attorney General Greg Abbott announced "Operation Safe Shelter," in which his office will tell people running storm shelters whether any of their residents are in the state's sex offender database...

And another well-known state operation — the University of Texas at Austin — moved its football game against Arkansas from this weekend to September 27. That gets them out of the way, maybe frees Austin rooms for evacuees, and saves the Razorbacks a trip through heavy weather (it's just an example, too; the storm already wrecked high school, college and pro schedules in a number of sports from football to soccer to baseball).

Now they wait. And there's a special section on the governor's website if you want complete or specific info about the state's hurricane prep.

Stolen Records at the Texas Lottery

A former state employee is under investigation for removing personal records of state lottery winners and lottery employees while he was working at the Texas Lottery Commission.

The person worked at the Texas Lottery Commission and then for the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, where the information theft was discovered. His name wasn't released, but officials at that agency responded to questions about the matter by referring to an ongoing investigation by Travis County prosecutors.

But a spokesman for the comptroller's office confirmed the investigation. "The Comptroller’s office is working with the Travis County District Attorney’s office on a criminal investigation of a former employee who possessed confidential personal identifying information that was obtained while previously employed at another state agency," said R.J. DeSilva. "It is a felony violation of state law to possess this information without consent."

Sources say the electronic data was taken from the Lottery and uncovered by an internal audit at that agency. The employee went on to a job at the comptroller's office, and the problem apparently came to light when he used state computers there to store the data.

The auditor's report wasn't immediately available. The Lottery issued a statement acknowledging the investigation for "alleged unauthorized possession of data by a former Texas Lottery Commission employee" and saying the information that was stolen involves "certain TLC employees, certain licensed retailers, and certain prize winners." It's not clear just what information was in the files, but lottery officials said they're sending letters to every "potentially affected parties."

One potential twist: The records were breached some time ago — the internal audit was apparently completed early this summer — and the people whose records were stolen are only now finding out about it. Not all prize winners are on record, but the lottery keeps information on people who win $600 or more for federal tax purposes. And records of employees and retailers potentially includes direct deposit and other banking information.

A Steep Hill and a Way to Climb It

The state's got a new way for parents to lock in current college tuition and required fees and to sock away money to pay for junior's higher education.

But with deregulated tuition rates and rising college costs, it's a lot more expensive than the plan it replaced. And it doesn't carry the same constitutional guarantee as the old program, either.

One year of prepaid tuition at a top public university in Texas now costs more than four times what it cost when the state's first such program started in 1996.

Even so, it could be attractive to people who want to freeze current rates and get a start on paying for college for their kids and grandkids. The new Texas Tuition Promise Fund lets families freeze tuition rates for state colleges and community colleges for students who are at least three years from entering college. Either the beneficiary or the purchaser has to be a Texas resident.

The original Texas Tomorrow Fund carries a constitutional guarantee. Purchasers who paid for four years of college get four years of college even if their investment doesn't cover the price. Because voters approved that guarantee, the state has to make up the difference. That plan was closed to new purchasers when the Legislature deregulated college tuition; the actuaries couldn't set priced based on rates they were unable to predict. In the new plan, approved by the Legislature in 2007, the universities have to make up any difference between the top-priced plans and actual tuition rates. But the schools are units of the state; the legal difference is that the Legislature isn't constitutionally required to give parents what they pay for, and neither are the schools.

There are three flavors in the new program, which is run by Comptroller Susan Combs and operated by a subsidiary of Oppenheimer Funds. Type 1 pays for credits at any public college or university in the state, even the most expensive one (whatever that is at the time). Type 2 pays the average cost of four-year public schools in Texas, which would cover all of the costs at many schools, but not at the most expensive ones. Type 3 covers average tuition and fees at public community colleges (two-year schools) in Texas. Details of this, the original plan that's no longer being offered, and the state's 529 education savings plan, are online at this link.

It's expensive as all get-out, but that's not the fund's fault — blame the Legislature and the universities who set the prices and funding for public higher education. Four years at a top-price school would cost $39,400 in a lump sum plan paid now for a kid born at the beginning of this month (it was under $9,000 in the original prepaid tuition plan).

At an average four-year school, it'd cost $27,060 (that would pay the average price to any school, and you'd keep what's left from a cheaper school and have to write a check for the remainder at a more expensive one). Two years at a community college, paid in a lump sum, would be $3,398. Buyers can pay over time: The wunderkind in our example would cost $351.57 a month from now until high school graduation on her way to a top-price school; the monthly payment for four years of an average cost university would be $241.46. And buyers could opt to pay for less than four years.

They can also use the plan's online calculator to figure out what colleges are most and least expensive. That four-year Type 2 contract, for instance, would get you four year at the University of North Texas, 4.57 years at the University of Texas at El Paso, 3.99 years at Texas Tech University, 3.45 years at Texas A&M University, and 2.89 years at the University of Texas at Austin business school.

The Legislature could add some things when it meets next year. Top of the list: Saving money for technical and trade schools, and funding a provision of the law creating state matching funds for poorer students who can't save enough to cover all of the costs of higher education.

Set the Table for Six

An Austin judge left the special election ballot in SD-17 alone — voters there will choose from four Republicans and two Democrats. And if nobody can get the votes they need to win in the first round, they'll face a runoff between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

That's potentially bad news for Democrat Chris Bell, who sued late last week to try to knock Stephanie Simmons off the ballot. He said she doesn't live in the district and can't run. A state district judge in Austin told her he wasn't convinced of her honesty about residency and voting in the wrong places, but left the ballot alone.

One theory is that Bell has a better chance of winning on Election Day if he's the only Democrat and the four Republicans split the conservative vote. Another is that Simmons, who is Black, could benefit from a large turnout (if there is one) for presidential candidate Barack Obama. Another: It's Republican territory and it doesn't matter how many Democrats run because the GOP's candidates have an edge. Another: Bell's still the best-known name on the ballot. And one more: It doesn't matter all that much. Kyle Janek, a Republican, resigned from that state Senate seat earlier this summer. If recent history is a guide, Republican candidates should have the edge. But it's a competitive district, and a Democrat prevailed in a special election runoff last year in Fort Worth, on more reliably Republican turf. That raised Democratic hopes and Republican guards.

The four Republicans in the race are Austen Furse, Grant Harpold, Joan Huffman, and Ken Sherman. Huffman, a former judge, is the only member of that quartet who's had her name on the ballot before, and as of the last reports, she was the best-financed candidate in the race (highest cash on hand, at $750,182).

A poll done for Huffman's campaign has her leading the Republicans in the race. And it says Bell, who's the best-known candidate, is either unknown or disliked by two-thirds of the voters in the district. She's got Bell at 41 percent, herself at 12 percent, and everyone else lagging behind. The Huffman spin? It's a two-candidate race, and Bell is a "wounded duck."

Early Bird

Rep. Leo Berman, who's hinted at running for governor if state lawmakers don't address immigration issues, wants to know if making himself a candidate would knock him out of the House.

Berman sent a letter asking Attorney General Greg Abbott for his opinion on two questions. First, would declaring oneself a gubernatorial candidate during the first year of one's term (that'd be 2009) force one to resign from the House? Second, what about forming an exploratory committee; would that hurt one's legislative status?

Berman has pushed for stricter immigration laws and has been telling people for some time that he'll run for governor if the issue isn't addressed.

Flotsam & Jetsam

Lobbyists in Texas got paid as much as $348 million last year, according to the latest lobby spending report from Texans for Public Justice. That outfit says spending during the 2007 legislative session was up 15 percent from the 2005 session. By their count, 1,629 lobbyists had 8,166 contracts with 2,706 different clients. Utility lobby clients were the biggest on the list; TXU's corporate takeover earned lobbyists up to $14 million, and AT&T's lobby spending totaled as much as $10.2 million. The state doesn't require exact reporting from lobbyists. They report a range within which their contracts fall, and TPJ uses the maximum value in each range for its biennial reports. They counted 31 clients who spent a total of up to $69 million, or about one of every five dollars spent lobbying in the state. Likewise, 28 lobbyists made up to 19 percent of all the money spent, earning up to $67 million from their clients.

• Texas Democrats are taking swats at U.S. House candidate Lyle Larson, a Bexar County commissioner who's promising to serve no more than six terms (12 years) if he beats U.S. Rep. Ciro Rodriguez, D-San Antonio. The Democrats dug up a 1996 story in the San Antonio Express-News where Larson, now in his third commissioner term, said he'd serve no more than two terms there.

Todd Hunter, the former Democratic state rep running now as a Republican, has pulled together a "Democrats for Todd" group led by former Rep. Hugo Berlanga, who with former Rep. Judy Hawley, is the Hunter campaign co-chair. Berlanga and Hawley are both Democrats who served with Hunter. Berlanga's now a lobbyist. Incidental, but interesting: Hunter's signs in the district say he's conservative, but don't say he's Republican. No party label is listed.

• Republican Greg Meyers picked up an endorsement from the Harris County Deputies Organization. Meyers, a Houston school board member, is challenging Democratic Rep. Hubert Vo.

• Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, got the endorsement of a political action committee representing three nursing groups. The Texas RN/APN PAC is affiliated with the Texas Nurses Association, the Texas Association of Nurse Anesthetists, and the Coalition for Nurses in Advanced Practice. Oh, and she used to be a critical care nurse. She also picked up endorsements from PACs affiliated with the Texas Medical Association and the Texas Hospital Association.

• Republican Pete Olson launched a web attack at U.S. Rep. NickLampson, D-Stafford, firing up NicksDCTricks.com. The home page reads, "Dedicated to a master political illusionist," and there are links to Olson's website and to his fundraising and volunteer sections at the bottom of every page.

• Political matching programs seem to be multiplying. Now, Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer, D-San Antonio, says he'll match contributions to the House Democratic Campaign Committee, up to $20,000.08. His pitch? That's the only organization trying to win a Democratic majority in the Texas House (they'd need to win five seats to do that) and protecting endangered Democratic incumbents. And Democrat Sherrie Matula, who's running against Rep. John Davis, R-Houston, is trying to raise enough money to get a $10,000 matching grant from Annie's List.

• The HDCC has a couple of ads up on their web site, but doesn't have immediate plans to put them on the air. One slights the Republicans in charge in the state for their "opposition to clean air and clean water laws." It doesn't point at the Legislature or at the House; the ad is aimed at Republicans in general. The other lists "failures" of GOP officeholders on issues like children's health insurance, college tuition, insurance and utility rates. And it ends with the line Republican Wendell Willkie used when he ran against President Franklin Roosevelt in 1940: "Had enough?"

• Officially, now that the conventions are all over: Barack Obama got 123 votes from Texas Democrats at their convention, to 96 for Hillary Clinton. Thus endeth the Texas Two-Step.

Political People and Their Moves

Brandy Marty is Gov. Rick Perry's new liaison to the Texas House. She's worked for the Guv, for several legislators, and as a teaching assistant in law school for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. She'll join David Eichler, her counterpart in the Senate.

Clay Brewer has been assigned to follow Mike Berger around at the Texas Department of Parks & Wildlife so he can figure out what Berger does every day. Berger, director of the agency's Wildlife Division, is retiring next month. Brewer, a regional director now stationed in Brownwood, will be acting director while a national search to replace Berger is finished.

And then there were none: John Moritz, the last reporter left in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's Austin bureau, decided to take a buyout offer from that shrinking newspaper. That had been what other reporters regarded as a dangerous (meaning: competitive) gang of newsies. But R.A. "Jake" Dyer left in a round of layoffs earlier this summer and Jay Root split for the Associated Press. That leaves an empty office.

Bracewell & Giuliani hired former San Antonio Chamber CEO Joe Krier to help start a new Public Issues Management Group within the firm. Krier was at the chamber for 20 years. He'll be joined in that practice by Milam Mabry, who is moving to the firm's Austin office from its operation in Washington, D.C.

Gov. Perry appointed Frank Bryan Jr. of Austin, Karen Gordon of Port O'Connor, and Shari Waldie of Fredericksburg to the Texas Board of Physical Therapy Examiners. Bryan is an attorney. Gordon and Waldie are physical therapists.

The Guv named Charlotte Foster of Houston to the State Preservation Board. She's a retired petroleum engineer. While we're here, that board hired Dealey Herndon to oversee restoration of the Governor's Mansion. She's been involved in a number of restoration projects as a private contractor, and she was director of the agency during the restoration and expansion of the State Capitol in the early 1990s.

The state's new Cancer Prevention and Research Institute elected its officers: James Mansour, president of Telephone Management of Austin, is chairman; Malcolm Gillis, a professor at Rice University, is vice chairman; and Fort Worth lawyer Dee Kelly is secretary.

Quotes of the Week

Galveston Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas, quoted by the Associated Press after ordering a mandatory evacuation of Galveston Island: "This is a very hard call for me to make but our intent is to save lives. We believe it is best for people to leave."

Lauren Parker, a Galveston college student who evacuated for Hurricane Rita came three years ago, quoted by The Wall Street Journal: "I don't think it'll be that bad. I'd rather drown than wait in traffic."

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, sparking several days of political conversation: "John McCain says he's about change, too. And so I guess his whole angle is, 'Watch out, George Bush. Except for economic policy, health-care policy, tax policy, education policy, foreign policy and Karl Rove-style politics, we're going to really shake things up in Washington. That's not change. That's just calling some — the same thing something different. But you know, you can't, you can put lipstick on a pig. It's still a pig."

Adele Morgan, a singer, songwriter, and friend of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's since grade school, quoted in The New York Times: "That's an Alaska woman for you. She can pee in the woods, then put on lipstick and go out to dinner."

U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Surfside, telling the Houston Chronicle his supporters wouldn't stand for an endorsement of Republican John McCain for president: "I don't enjoy getting 2 to 3 million people angry at me."

Harris County Commissioner Jerry Eversole, quoted in the Houston Chronicle about an FBI investigation of his use of campaign funds: "I've said all of my career the biggest problem is people want to help an elected official. And there is a point that you have to say, 'Stop. I can't do this. You're going to get in trouble. I'm going to get in trouble.'"


Texas Weekly: Volume 25, Issue 35, 15 September 2008. Ross Ramsey, Editor. Copyright 2008 by Printing Production Systems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. One-year online subscription: $250. For information about your subscription, call (512) 302-5703 or email biz@texasweekly.com. For news, email ramsey@texasweekly.com, or call (512) 288-6598.

 

The Week in the Rearview Mirror

This week, bloggers are captivated by the landfall of Hurricane Ike. They're also talking about persons of interest, reporting on state representative races and paying attention to U.S. congressional happenings, too. There's also a pair of posts on presidential events and a jumble of unrelated writings.

* * * * *

Eyes on the Storm

Lone Star Times readers submit photos of damage caused by Hurricane Ike, while Greg’s Opinion reports from downtown Houston on Sunday, saying that broken glass, humidity, homeless people and cleaning crews abound.

RightWingSparkle says that her area north of Houston got some wind but not much else on Friday night. Plowing, Sowing and an Occasional Harvest "hunkered down" in the Bryan-College Station area and found time to blog twice (one and two). And UrbanGrounds liked the cut of U.S. Rep. John Culberson's jib after the Houston congressman advised residents to "stock up on food, water, and ammo."

Here’s word on Ike from U.S. Senate candidate Rick Noriega, via Texas Politics, the Houston Chronicle’s blog. Also from Texas Politics, the view from U.S. Sen. John Cornyn. And Off the Kuff has messages from Houston city councilwomanMelissa Noriega and Galveston resident and Senate candidateJoe Jaworski.

Texas on the Potomac, the Houston Chronicle's D.C. blog, lists facts and figures about the damage caused by the hurricane. Also from Potomac, video of U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison saying to expect gas shortages for the next week or so because of the storm; a press release from the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign (which still exists); and, a statement on Ike from Pres. George W. Bush.

And Grits for Breakfast wants to know what happened to the 1,000-some-odd inmates and jailers stranded at the Galveston County Jail, while Capitol Annex alleges that Gov. Rick Perry used a Hurricane Ike news conference to showcase GOP incumbent Sen. Mike Jackson of La Porte, who's facing Jaworski.

* * * * *

Human Resources

A Penn law professor guest blogs on Grits about the case involving convicted killer Charles Dean Hood and the romance between the attorney who prosecuted him and the judge who presided over his trial. Meanwhile, Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins is one of Governing magazine’s "Public Officials of the Year," reportsTex Parte Blog.

KVUE's Political Junkie invites readers to say goodbye to John Moritz, the last reporter to vacate the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's Austin bureau. Then, Junkiesays hello to Dave Montgomery, who's returning to the Star-Telegram's Austin bureau after doing time in Russia and Washington, D.C.

On an unrelated note, JunkieIDed Karl Roveby the back of his head in the Dallas-Fort Worth airport. One reader responds, "Well, in all fairness, the horns help make him recognizable from behind, even if the forked tail can be hidden in the trousers."

Burnt Orange Reportmakes a case that poster "D. Davenport" is actually former Assistant House Parliamentarian and former Rep. Ron Wilson. That spurs a reader discussion on Texas Politics about anonymous posters, with most of the conversation coming from people hiding behind screen names instead of revealing their real monikers.

* * * * *

State House Stuff

Via Burnt Orange, HD-64 Democrat John McLellandsends out an APB for "any candidate survey actually filled out by Representative Myra Crownover," his opponent.

Kuff's latest installment of candidate interviews is with HD-144 Democratic candidateJoel Redmond, who's aiming to succeed retiring Rep. Robert Talton, R-Pasadena.

And Mean rachel has set up a web page to convince Rep. Elliott Naishtat, D-Austin, that people think he needs a website. (The goal is for 100 people to donate money to Naishtat. After 4.5 days, three people had given $35.)

* * * * *

CD Cases

Lone Star Times got in on a conference call with Pete Olson, the Republican running against incumbent U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson, D-Stafford, in CD-22. The highlight: "Pete — likes the FairTax to replace all taxation, including personal and corporate taxation. Thinks it’s [achievable] in the future. Would support repeal of 16th amendment to insure that income taxation wouldn’t return." (If elected, looks like Olson would have something in common with a certain neighboring congressman.)

Speaking of whom, here's a post from The Ellis County Observer: "Penny Langford Freeman, who served as Ron Paul’s congressional district office director, announced she was running for governor in 2010 as an independent."

Half Empty has video of U.S. Rep. Al Green, D-Houston, saying nice things about Chris Bell, who's running a Senate race (Green, you'll remember, is the guy who displaced Bell from Congress). And Potomac has a podcast of U.S. Reps. Kevin Brady, R-The Woodlands, and Michael McCaul, R-Austin, talking about energy.

* * * * *

Prez Two

The Dallas Morning News's Trail Blazers continues to fact check statements made by and about presidential candidates.

After a few glasses of wine, an In the Pink Texas blogger thought it would be a good idea to grab a pair of glasses and a gun and prance around in front of the camera like GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin. [eds. note: We report, you decide.]

* * * * *

Hodgepodge

Grits looks at projected prisoner numbers in a report by the Legislative Budget Board, while Half Empty helps Fort Bend County Democrats put out campaign signs. And Blue Dot Blues says that Railroad Commissioner Michael Williamswill debate Democratic opponent Mark Thompson someday sometime.

Pondering Penguin relates a harrowing tale starring two interns for the Cornyn campaign who were tossed from a Noriega event and had their camera confiscated by security.

And Texas Observer Blog wins Headline of the Week award for a border fence article headlined "Border Wall Out of Time, Out of Money."


This edition of Out There was compiled and written by Patrick Brendel, who hails from Victoria but is semi-settled in Austin. We cherry-pick the state's political blogs each week, looking for news, info, gossip, and new jokes. The opinions here belong (mostly) to the bloggers, and we're including their links so you can hunt them down if you wish. Our blogroll — the list of Texas blogs we watch — is on our links page, and if you know of a Texas political blog that ought to be on it, just shoot us a note. Please send comments, suggestions, gripes or retorts to Texas Weekly editor Ross Ramsey.

Republican Sen. Kim Brimer picked up endorsements from all 19 mayors in the Senate district, including Fort Worth's Mike Moncrief, a Democrat and a former state senator.

That's a stinker for the Wendy Davis campaign; the Democratic challenger is from Moncrief's party, and served on the city council with him until quitting to make this race.

Moncrief and the other mayors who came out for Brimer are elected in nonpartisan contests; Moncrief's party bona fides are well-known, though, because he served in Democratic shoes as Tarrant County Judge and in the Legislature. The full list, according to the Brimer campaign:

Dorothy Aderholt — Pantego

Bob Cluck — Arlington

David Cook — Mansfield

Billy Davis — Crowley

Jerry Dittrich — Benbrook

James Gosey — Forest Hill

David Kelly — Colleyville

Bryan Lankhorst — Kennedale

Pat McGrail — Keller

Mike Moncrief — Fort Worth

Mary Lib Saleh — Euless

Ken Shetter — Burleson

Jim Stephenson — Everman

Jim Story — Bedford

Chuck Talbot — Edgecliff Village

Michael Tedder — Dalworthington Gardens

Oscar Trevino — North Richland Hills

Andy Wambsganss — Southlake

Richard Ward — Hurst

He picked up some former mayors, too, including Bob Bolen, Kay Granger, and Jewel Woods of Fort Worth, and Harold Patterson and Tom Vandergriff of Arlington.

The Fort Worth appeals court deciding on the eligibility of Senate candidate Wendy Davis punted to Dallas. That delays this week's hearing and that, in turn, will delay a verdict.Score it as sort of a win for Davis, a former Fort Worth city council member and Democrat who is challenging Sen. Kim Brimer. Brimer went to court to knock her off the ballot, and any delays that push the courts closer to Election Day probably benefit her side. A lower court judge ruled against Brimer, setting up this appeal. The Fort Worth court got the case last month and set a hearing for this week (Thursday). But on Tuesday, they asked the state's highest civil court to move it from their plate to the 5th Court of Appeals in Dallas. In their letter asking the Texas Supreme Court to move the case to Dallas, the judges on the Fort Worth court were cryptic: "Subsequent to scheduling the case for submission, however, circumstances have arisen which warrant that the case be transferred to another court." The Dallas court has not yet set a hearing date.

John McCain and Barack Obama won't be on the Texas ballot if the courts agree with Libertarian candidate Bob Barr, who's filed a lawsuit saying the two major parties missed the deadline for getting their top-of-the-ticket candidates listed.

His contention — discounted by the Texas Secretary of State, who's on the other end of the lawsuit — is that state law doesn't allow election officials to wait until the Democratic and Republican conventions are over and that neither of the national parties named their nominees in time to make the statutory deadline in Texas. When this first arose a couple of weeks ago, SOS officials said the parties had done what they needed to do in time, and still had room to amend their candidate lists to include the presidential and vice presidential nominees.

Another law comes into play here: It's too late to remove candidates from the Texas ballots (though Barr's lawsuit asks the state to reprint the ballots after it strikes Obama and Biden, McCain and Palin from the list of certified candidates). And the ballots being mailed out for overseas military personnel and others are going out right about now. The Court denied Barr's request to stop that mailout and asked both sides for briefs. It's still possible for the courts to prevent the state from counting the votes for candidates deemed illegal.

The state's lawyers gigged the former congressman for trying to stop those ballots; it turns out he co-sponsored the federal legislation that requires states to sent military ballots at least 45 days before an election. In this case, that's Saturday, September 20.

• Don't like any of the presidential candidates on the ballot? Texas also counts votes for certified write-in candidates, and there are seven pairs of them from all over the country. Take your pick: Jonathan Allen and Jeffrey Stath, Chuck Baldwin and Darrell Castle, Thaddaus Hill and Gordon Bail, Alan Keyes and Marvin Sprouse Jr., Cynthia McKinney and Rosa Clements, Brian Moore and Stewart Alexander, and Ralph Nader and Matt Gonzalez.

Who's got trouble, and who's got an open road? Forty House members have no contests left and 79 are either unopposed or have only minor party opponents. That's true for eight state senators, eight members of the congressional delegation, and one statewide incumbent. Meanwhile, a couple of dozen contests look — at the moment — very competitive.[click image to download a copy]

The state's politicians are forced to regroup four weeks before voting begins.

The post-Ike damage report according to Gov. Rick Perry's office, as of Thursday — a week after hundreds of thousands of Texans evacuated their homes on and near the Gulf Coast: 21,941 refugees were still housed in 211 shelters statewide; 1.6 million customers were waiting for power to return, with 9,500 people working on that particular problem and electric companies saying it will be next week before most of those people get their power back. You can look at all the particulars, if you need them or are just curious, on the governor's website.

Those are improvements, and the political world is slowly pulling itself together along with the communities that got smacked by the hurricane. The political winners, so far, are the same folks who did this right last time: Perry, Houston Mayor Bill White, Harris County Judge Ed Emmett, and a gazillion people who threw in and helped. Ike doesn't yet have a goat — at least not on the scale of Katrina or Rita, when the federal government stepped in that role.

The cleanup will take a while. The political questions are pretty simple:

• What does each campaign do with the time left?

• Are voters displaced, and does one candidate or another benefit from that and is there any way to work around it?

• Did the storm give anybody new issues to run with?

Early voting is just a month away (October 20) and voters displaced by Hurricane Ike (or by anything else) have until October 28 to get a mail-in ballot to take care of their election business. Voter registration is open until October 6. In areas slow to recover, those votes could be critical. But they are, by definition, hard to reach; how's a candidate to know where voters have burrowed while their homes are being repaired or replaced?

Expect the parties to aggressively promote that voting alternative. And expect it especially from the Democrats. It looks like the areas hardest hit by Ike tend to be more Democratic than Republicans (and in some cases, "tend" isn't strong enough). Senate candidates like Chris Bell and Joe Jaworski and congressional Democrat Nick Lampson will be pushing to replace or encourage voters who won't be home to vote on November 4. Half of Galveston Island is in SD-17, where Bell and five others are vying to replace Republican Kyle Janek. The other half is in Sen. Mike Jackson's SD-11. Jaworski is trying to knock off the La Porte Republican and most political folk who've looked say the Democrat's base was probably hit harder than the incumbent's (though both were hit politically and in the case of their own homes, personally).

The displacement isn't just about voting. Candidates like to communicate with voters and it's hard to do when the TV set is floating in the backyard and the mailbox has blown into the next county. That's especially a problem for lesser known candidates who were hoping to use these last weeks to make an impression on voters.

Some candidates have restarted the ads they pulled when the hurricane's direction wasn't clear. The game's not back on in Galveston or Houston yet, but it is in Corpus Christi. And candidates — even from those areas — are resuming their fundraising, particularly if they were set to raise money in Austin, which completely avoided the weather.

How this will affect voting isn't clear at all. Hope Andrade, the new Texas Secretary of State, is talking to local election officials, but hasn't yet formulated a public plan to let displaced voters cast ballots or to run elections in areas that are still getting themselves back together. Mail ballots to overseas voters go out this weekend and are available to voters in the state. But it's not like going door to door to get out their votes, and candidates are still figuring this out.

Chris Turner, the Democrat challenging Rep. Bill Zedler, R-Arlington, in HD-96, got the Texas Parent PAC's endorsement. They're unhappy with the incumbent for votes to cut school funding, textbook funding and for co-authoring a private school voucher bill.

Bryan Daniel, the Republican running in the open HD-52 seat, claims the endorsements of "all the major agriculture groups" in the state. His list includes the Texas Farm Bureau, the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, the Texas Agricultural Cooperative Council, the Texas Cattle Feeders Association, the Texas Poultry Federation, the Texas Pork Producers Association, the Texas Association of Dairymen, and the Texas Nursery and Landscape Association. That's a partly rural but mostly suburban district.

• Want to know how much money the state had at the end of its fiscal year almost three weeks ago? Fuggetaboutit. Officials with the comptroller's office, which also serves as the state treasury, say they won't let those numbers loose until they publish the cash balance numbers, including the amount of money in the state's general revenue account at the end of the fiscal year. That number is the best overall measure of how the state's actual spending matches up with its budget. It'll be out soon, they say.

• The Texas Lottery has its year end numbers: The games put $983 million into the state treasury during the last fiscal year. That's after six years in a row of contributions over $1 billion.

• With the collapse of Lehman Brothers, Texas Comptroller Susan Combs ended their contract with the state's TexPool and subbed in Federated Investors to run that operation. TexPool is a state fund that lends money to local governments to meet cash flow needs. Lehman wasn't the investment manager, but handled marketing and client services. The two companies had a joint contract, collecting fees from the local governments whose money they were investing. Federated, which is the investment manager, will keep its current duties and take over for Lehman. And Combs says the Lehman bankruptcy had no financial impact on TexPool's operations.

• Attorney General Greg Abbott opened his database to storm shelters, offering them the chance to run names to make sure they identified any sex offenders among their refugees. Through mid-week, Operation Safe Shelter had done 5,555 checks and found 18 registered sex offenders.

• The Texas Supreme Court extended deadlines for court pleadings (where it could — some of this is set in law and not by rule) so the storms wouldn't lose anyone their legal battles. Short form: If the courthouse isn't open, those papers are not due. And the justices say Louisiana lawyers displaced by storms can do their Louisiana work from Texas without breaking the law.

• Three business groups have formed the Texas R&D Alliance to promote tax incentives they say will make the state competitive with other states in attracting and promoting bioscience and electronics research. That new outfit includes the Texas Association of Business, the American Electronics Association, and the Texas Healthcare and Bioscience Institute.

• The Texas Lyceum is sponsoring a statewide public conference on transportation in Houston on October 3, featuring legislators, business people and think-tankers who'll talk about the state's infrastructure and what it needs and how to pay for it, among other things. Details are available on that group's website, at www.texaslyceum.org.

Political People and their Moves

Esperanza "Hope" Andrade of San Antonio is formally the Texas Secretary of State after a public swearing-in ceremony in the Texas House chamber. She was named and sworn in by Gov. Rick Perry a few weeks ago, replacing Phil Wilson, but now she's done the ceremonial thing. Just in time: There are under 50 days left until the general election.

Former Rep. Dianne White Delisi, R-Temple, has been appointed to be a civilian aide to the Secretary of the Army, a posting that makes her an Army liaison to the state Legislature and other groups in the state. That's a non-paying gig.

Luke Bellsnyder, who's been a political consultant, legislative aide (state and federal) and lobbyist, will be the new executive director of the Texas Association of Manufacturers. He's probably best known for the time he spent working for Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano; he was most recently with the Polan-Culley lobby firm.

Add Randall Dillard to Andrade's media office. He was a spokesman for the Texas Department of Transportation before moving to SOS.

Dave Montgomery, who reported on Austin before leaving almost three decades ago for Washington, D.C., is on his way back. He'll move from the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's office in the nation's capital back to Texas, taking a spot in a bureau that's currently unpopulated.

Recovering: Former U.S. Rep. Kika de la Garza and his wife, Lucille de la Garza, after a traffic accident in McAllen.

Deaths: International Boundary and Water Commissioner Carlos Marin of El Paso and Rio Grande COG director and former Presidio County Judge Jake Brisbin Jr., in a plane crash while inspecting flooding along the border. Two others, including the pilot, and Marin's Mexican counterpart — Arturo Herrera — also died. The conditions they were inspecting have worsened. Add Presidio County to the official state disaster list. A levy breach along the Rio Grande River there poses a flood threat and the state sent helicopters to help with sandbags and supplies.

Quotes of the Week

Kujawa, Pustilniks, Smithee, Randel, McClung, Armstrong, and Hodges

Michael Ray Kujawa, the owner of a lioness named Shackle, telling the Austin American-Statesman how she behaved around a group of Hurricane Ike refugees in a church during that storm: "They worked pretty well together, actually. When you have to swim, the lion doesn't care about eating nobody."

Galveston County medical examiner Stephen Pustilniks, quoted by the Associated Press on the relatively small death toll from Hurricane Ike: "We don't know what's out there in the wilds. Searchers weren't looking for bodies; they were looking for survivors."

Rep. John Smithee, R-Amarillo, quoted in the Houston Chronicle on the condition of the Texas Windstorm Insurance Association, where claims are expected to outrun reserves by a two-to-one ratio: "TWIA is wiped out. It's naked."

Karla Randel, a resident who's house was damaged when Ike knocked over some large trees, in the Nacogdoches Daily Sentinel: "I wanted to redo the bathroom anyway."

Democratic consultant Dan McClung, telling the Houston Chronicle how the Hurricane might affect the elections: "I just always presume that the Republicans have the higher ground because it's the most expensive."

Cyclist Lance Armstrong, talking about his political future in Men's Journal: "You could argue that you're far more effective as a Texas governor than a senator. Plus I don't want to be in DC half the year because of my kids. I don't know what's going to happen with all this, I reckon I really don't. I do have a hunch."

Clay Hodges, general manager of Cash Special Utility District, explaining to WFAA-TV how a Rockwall County home burned down because the fire hydrants had been turned off since just after 9/11: "These hydrants need to be cut off in a way to prevent vandalism or any kind of terrorist activity, including something in the water lines."