On the Ballot: Taxes, Property, and College

by Reeve Hamilton, The Texas Tribune


Early voting is under way, but Texans — at least those who do this kind of thing — will vote on 11 proposed amendments to the Texas Constitution on November 3.

(Some already started; early voting began this week and runs through October 30.)

Experiencing significant crossfire is a cluster of amendments (2, 3, and 5) dealing with property tax appraisals. All three stem from House Joint Resolution 36.

Prop. 2 stops a home from being appraised based on its value as commercial property — or its "best use." Some wonder why, if the money a big box store could pay a homeowner for their land is real, the communities shouldn't consider that when procuring much needed tax dollars for their school district. Others, like Rep. Ralph Sheffield, R-Temple, feel that burdening select citizens with higher taxes is "wrong and it's time to make it unconstitutional."

There would be uniform statewide standards for property appraisal if Prop. 3 passes. If Sen. Jeff Wentworth, R-San Antonio, is right, this is that "rarity when there is no opposition to an issue related to state government." This ignores vocal opposition from local control advocates who prefer counties enforcing standards themselves. Colorful agitator Linda Curtis of Independent Texans calls it "truly rotten" and "the Trojan Horse of this election."

The runt of this litter, Prop. 5, allows separate appraisal districts to combine, with legislative approval. Rural districts could benefit because they have trouble staffing their review boards. The Austin Chronicle called this "entirely trivial" — as opposed to the merely "trivial" Prop. 3 — and then endorsed both.

What crossfire? A chain e-mail that mislabels these as "propositions 1, 2, and 3" has made its way around the state claiming, "If you own a home, and these laws are passed, you will be taxed by the State." Rep. John Otto, R-Dayton, one of the bill's coauthors has been scrambling to assure voters that's "blatantly false." The Texas Constitution prohibits a state property tax. Otto, along with Sen. Tommy Williams, R-The Woodlands, has launched a new website (under the auspices of STAR PAC) that Williams says, "anyone confused or concerned about the effect of these propositions should visit."

Elected officials are climbing over each other to endorse the Prop. 4 plan to devote state funds to developing more Tier One universities. Gov. Rick Perry already voted for it. Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, calls it "a big deal — a once-in-a-generation opportunity to super-charge our economy, help our universities and create a lasting inheritance for future generations." Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tom Schieffer and Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, are on board. Despite prominent Republican support, Young Conservatives of Texas came out against the measure in a YouTube video calling for a wiser investment.

The final amendment in the spotlight is Prop. 11, which limits the state's eminent domain authority. This is the first time Texans will vote on the issue since the 2005 U.S. Supreme Court Kelo v. New London decision. Rivals U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison and Gov. Rick Perry have both made a show of their support for this protection of private citizens. On the other hand, it may be unnecessary. On his website, Rep. Scott Hochberg, D-Houston, explains, "The Legislature has already passed a law providing protections against abuse of eminent domain authority."

Also being considered is Prop. 8 proposing a state fund to help veterans' hospitals. Some say it's a federal issue, but State Sens. Juan "Chuy" Hinojosa, D-McAllen, and Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, and Democratic U.S. Senate candidate John Sharp say people should vote early because, when it comes to veterans, "a 'yes' vote... is too important to risk waiting."

Prop. 9 writes access to public beaches into the state constitution. Unfazed by arguments that private property rights might be infringed upon, Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson opined, "Can you imagine driving your family to the beach for summer vacation only to find a high fence covered with 'no trespassing' signs?"

Tax dollars could go to buy up land for buffer zones around military bases if Prop. 1 passes. Empower Texans, a conservative PAC, fears it allows "local entities to incur debt and raise property taxes in attempts to keep federal installations that may no longer be necessary to the military's mission or performance." But, if those bases are lost, supporters fear for the security and economy of the surrounding communities.

Prop. 7 grants members of the Texas State Guard an exception to an arguably antiquated law that says civil servants can't hold two government positions. It has the support of bipartisan coalition of Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford, Rep. Dan Flynn, R-Van, Rep. Aaron Pena, D-Edinburg, and Rep. Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City.

Prop. 6 lets the Veterans' Land Board issue bonds to help veterans with home loans and land purchases. Prop. 10 extends term limits for state-elected emergency services districts from two years to four. Voters' passions aren't coalescing on either side for these two.

Shapleigh Makes Two

by Brandi Grissom, The Texas Tribune


Longtime El Paso state Sen. Eliot Shapleigh won't seek re-election in 2010. He joins Steve Ogden, R-Bryan, on the lame duck list. Ogden said earlier he won't return.

His surprise announcement set off speculation about his plans for higher office — and a vigorous fight to replace him.

"While other public service may lie ahead, I will not run for the Texas Senate in 2010," Shapleigh said. "During each day of the last decade, we have endeavored to do our very best for the people of our great community and state."

Shapleigh said he had been weighing the decision for several weeks, but the announcement came as a shock to his staff and to many in the political arena.

"I've done what I came to do," Shapleigh said.

Shapleigh would not say specifically what office he will seek, but he did rule out a challenge to El Paso Democratic U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes.

"My dreams have never been in Congress," he said.

Shapleigh said repeatedly that Texas needs change at the highest state levels, but he would not say whether he planned to run for statewide office. He didn't say no, either.

An announcement about his future plans, he said, would come in about three weeks, after he has some time to relax.

Shapleigh's good friend El Paso County Attorney José Rodriguez was one of the few people not surprised by Friday's news. Rodriguez said Shapleigh told him last week he planned not to seek re-election. During that conversation he said Shapleigh mentioned that he might consider a run for statewide office.

Shapleigh was elected to the Senate in 1996 and helped lead efforts to establish a four-year medical school in El Paso, the first on the U.S.-Mexico border. He has been among the most liberal Democrats in the Texas Senate, a vocal critic of Republican leadership and a lonely proponent of establishing a state income tax. He has fought to fund services for low- and middle-income families and chastised conservatives for slashing the budgets for children's health insurance and other programs.

Shapleigh's departure leaves open a Senate seat that has rarely been vacated.

Only three people, all Democrats, have held the seat since 1973: Shapleigh, Peggy Rosson, who served from 1991 to 1997, and Tati Santiesteban, who held the seat from 1973 to 1991.

Potential successors — mostly Democrats — are already stacking up. It's a solidly Democratic seat; over the last two election cycles, the average statewide Democrat beat the average statewide Republican by 25.7 percentage points.

Rodriguez said he plans to announce an exploratory committee to run for the Senate soon.

"I am going to be trying to gain support both here locally and in Austin in the next 30 days or so," he said.

Rep. Norma Chavez, D-El Paso, said, "you bet" she's going to consider a run for the Senate seat.

"I finished my seventh term. I'm an accomplished legislator who will obviously look seriously at the Senate race," Chavez said, adding that she was already planning to do a countywide poll in November to gauge her support.

Rep. Joe Pickett, D-El Paso, thought about it and decided not to run.

"I'm just going to cool my jets," said Pickett, who had floated the idea last week.

The chairman of the House Transportation Committee said he is happy with his position in the lower chamber. And, he doesn’t see a move to the Senate as a step up.

"I don’t need to run for the Senate," he said. "I'm in a really good spot for El Paso."

Asked whether he'd support any of the current candidates who have expressed interest in the El Paso Senate seat, Pickett said he was keeping his powder dry for now.

Former Republican Rep. Pat Haggerty, caught during a round of golf in Austin, said he would consider running, but he added that a Republican couldn't win that seat.

"If I ran, it wouldn’t be as a Republican," he said.

Other names circulating in the potential candidate list today include El Paso Mayor John Cook and Republican businessman Dee Margo, who challenged Shapleigh in 2006.

Margo, reached at a reunion in Nashville, Tenn., said he still hasn't made any decisions about running in 2010. He had previously said he wouldn't run against Shapleigh.

Asked whether today's news changed the equation, Margo said, "I doubt it, but I don't know."

Challenging Relationships

by Julian Aguilar, contributor to The Texas Tribune


Political allies and a noisy and very public divorce dominate the conversation so far in Rep. Tara Rios Ybarra's effort to win a second term in the Texas House.

The Democratic lawmaker's support from Texans for Lawsuit Reform, a group that gives generously to Republicans, continued this week. TLR gave her its Civil Justice Leadership Award in Harlingen. Though TLR's support was crucial to her primary victory last year over incumbent Rep. Juan Escobar of Kingsville, Rios Ybarra said their backing indicates her pro-business leanings, not her party affiliation.

J.M. Lozano, a South Texas businessman vying for the freshman's HD-43 seat, said her support from the group reflects the Democratic incumbent might be out of touch with her own party.

"Any political action committee is going to say they are bipartisan but when you see who funds them (TLR), they are not," Lozano said. "In South Texas when you get into these communities you cannot abandon your constituents. If 90 percent of your constituents are Democrats you better stay loyal to your party."

Despite the publicity surrounding her financial support from TLR, Rios Ybarra downplayed the issue.

"I am a pro-business candidate," she said. "There are different organizations that will make contributions based on my stance with that, and there is a way to be pro-business and pro-environment and pro-worker and pro-everything else, one is not mutually exclusive to each other."

Campaign finance reports show TLR has given to Democrats but favors Republicans — something Lozano claimed could up his chances of claiming a Democratic Primary Election victory next year.

Not so, said Rios Ybarra, adding that lawsuit reform is just one item in a cornucopia of issues that, when settled, will lead to job growth.

"First of all, our issues are not lawsuit reform, our issues are very clearly jobs, education and health care," she said. "And so I talk to constituents. I am not in Austin working the lobby."

Lozano, who is at the helm of three restaurant franchises in his district and the son of a medical doctor, said he believes frivolous lawsuits should be addressed but that TLR does not distinguish between frivolous and legitimate issues.

Rios Ybarra must also contend with her current divorce proceedings after splitting with Richard Ybarra. The state representative admitted in a deposition that she was having an intimate relationship with developer and campaign contributor Clayton Brashear after she filed for divorce. But she said her personal life — public as it has now become — is irrelevant when it comes to her politics.

"There are so many important issues for my district and for South Texas right now that there is not really time to get distracted," she said.

Lozano said he has followed the divorce proceedings not to sling mud, but to prepare himself for whatever may come next. He says he's considering his options should Rios Ybarra drop out of the race, and someone else jump in.

Chances of that look slim, however, according to Rios Ybarra. She and her ex-husband still attend public functions together, she said, and have agreed to put the best interests of their two children first.

"Our objective is to raise two healthy children," she said.

Running Shoes

Former capitol reporter James Bernsen says now that he won't challenge Rep. Diana Maldonado, D-Round Rock, in next year's elections. He'll back Larry Gonzales instead.

Last year, Maldonado won what had been a Republican seat, and the GOP wants it back. There are four people on the Republican side still looking at the race (John Gordon, Stephen Casey, and Ralph Piña have all shown interest, in addition to Gonzales).

Bernsen says he got into the contest about the same time Gonzales did, that he took at look at it, and that he decided "Larry is the better candidate. I'm going to support him."

• Sen. Jane Nelson, R-Lewisville, will seek another term. She won her spot in 1992 and has held it continuously since then. Five senators have more seniority than she does; three others came to the Senate the same time she did.

• Rep. Mark Homer, D-Paris, will have an opponent in the person of Erwin Cain, a Como lawyer and businessman who is also chairman of the Hopkins County GOP. Republicans regularly beat the stuffing out of Democrats in that six-county district — on the statewide level in the last two elections, the difference averaged 20.3 percentage points in favor of the Republicans — but Homer has held off serious challenges over several cycles. And Homer says he'll seek a seventh term in next year's elections. That's HD-3.

• Not running: Donna Keel, a Republican who challenged Rep. Valinda Bolton, D-Austin, in 2008. She sent a note to "fellow Republicans" saying it's not the right time to run again, but that she'll support the Republican nominee

• San Antonio lawyer Tim Tuggey, managing partner of Tuggey Rosenthal Pauerstein Sandoloski Agather, will run in the GOP primary for the State Board of Education. He's got his eyes on the seat now held by former state Rep. Ken Mercer, who's also a Republican and is also from San Antonio. Tuggey, who served on San Antonio's VIA board, said in his announcement that he's concerned about alleged ethical lapses in SBOE's management of the Permanent School Fund. Another Republican incumbent on the SBOE — Don McLeroy — also faces a challenger in the GOP primary next year. Lobbyist Thomas Ratliff is taking him on.

• The political fire drill in the El Paso delegation continues with Naomi Gonzalez's announcement that she'll run for the Texas House seat occupied now by Democrat Norma Chavez. Chavez is in the hunt — not officially, but in — for Eliot Shapleigh's Senate seat. The allegiances are tricky here; Shapleigh's decision not to run again prompted El Paso County Attorney José Rodriguez to start exploring the race, along with Chavez. Gonzalez works for Rodriguez as an assistant county attorney, and finished second in a 2008 race for city council.

• Freshman Rep. Allen Fletcher, R-Tomball, will seek a second term in HD-130. He knocked off incumbent Rep. Corbin Van Arsdale in the GOP primary in 2008.

John Sharp picked up an endorsement for his U.S. Senate bid from Dan Richards, son of the late Gov. Ann Richards.

Dan Gattis, running for the SD-5 Senate seat, won endorsements from Round Rock Mayor Alan McGraw and from five of McGraw's predecessors.

• Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, being interviewed on Dallas radio, said "two or three" senators were planning to move on before the next session. We know of Steve Ogden and Eliot Shapleigh, a Republican and a Democrat who've said they won't seek reelection. But three? Dewhurst was apparently referring to Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, who's raising money to run for the U.S. Senate should Kay Bailey Hutchison resign her spot. Dewhurst is also interested in the Hutchison job.

TEA's Testing Troubles

by Brian Thevenot, The Texas Tribune


Some 30,000* "highly qualified" Texas public school teachers don't actually meet the federal definition for that standard — which could jeopardize their jobs and will certainly cause bureaucratic headaches for them and their school systems.

The teachers in question did not take a required general knowledge exam, but rather believed — on the advice of the Texas Education Agency — that a specific subject knowledge test would suffice.

The snafu, apparently due to a miscommunication between state and federal bureaucrats, was disclosed in a letter from the Texas Education Agency to school systems. Districts across the state seek to have 100 percent "highly qualified" staff to meet federal standards under the No Child Left Behind Act — meaning many of the teachers in question might not have been hired in the first place, said Texas Education Agency spokeswoman Debbie Ratcliffe.

The agency stressed in its correspondence, however, that it has asked federal authorities to review the matter, and that many teachers may be able to complete the requirements and gain the "highly qualified" designation. The 30,000 figure is just a guess — based on typical turnover in a state with 321,000 teachers, Ratcliffe said.

And it might well be a wrong guess, as it turns out. TEA might be revising the number of "highly qualified" teachers who didn't actually earn that qualification.

On Wednesday, TEA said the number of teachers affected could reach 30,000, but that number was called into question Thursday when the Houston and Austin systems — which educate more than a quarter about six percent of the state public school population — reported that less than 30 of their teachers would be affected.

Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott repeated the 30,000 figure in an interview Thursday. Later, when told of such small numbers in large districts, Ratcliffe said the figure she had supplied a day earlier was a “worst-case scenario” and that the agency had not yet done enough research to determine the true number. Given the Houston and Austin totals, the number could be “much lower,” she said.

The term "highly qualified" comes from the federal No Child Left Behind Act and generally has replaced state certification standards. The problem here stems from differing interpretations by the Texas and U.S. education departments over qualifications to gain the credential.

Federal monitors who visited the agency last month, however, disabused them of the notion that subject-specific tests would suffice for elementary teachers, who teach multiple subjects. They sent the state a ruling, which it forwarded to districts. The state has asked for federal leniency in the matter, but as it told districts in the letter: "there may be little or no flexibility" from U.S. education officials on the designations.

"It's a significant concern," Ratcliffe said. "Sometimes it can take months to get an answer (from the feds), and in Texas, if they want to non-renew a contract, they have to tell the teacher by March. And of course they have to start hiring by then.

"It has all kinds of implications," she said.

In addition, according to the TEA letter, school systems will have to ensure that those teachers who don't qualify are not being paid by federal grants funds, such as the Title I program, which aims to improve education for children in poverty. And Texas has tens of thousands of public school students in those programs and can get the federal funds if their teachers meet the federal standard, Ratcliffe said.

Texas Unemployment Rises Again

The state's unemployment rate hit 8.2 percent in September, up from 8 percent in August and 5.1 percent in September 2008. There were 996,000 people unemployed last month, according to the Texas Workforce Commission. Three areas of the state have unemployment levels over 10 percent: McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, at 11.6 percent; Beaumont-Port Arthur and Brownsville-Harlingen, both at 10.8 percent. The lowest rate in the state, according to TWC, was Lubbock, where 5.7 percent of labor force was out of work.

For Reasons of Health

See how far we buried this in the newsletter? Still: In a letter to supporters, U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison vows to stay in federal office until the health care debate is over.

"The U.S. Senate is now debating legislation that would dramatically expand federal government control over our health care system," she writes. "It's important that you know I will not leave this fight. I will remain in the Senate this fall to help lead opposition to any government takeover of one-sixth of our economy."

The timing of the letter roughly coincides with Hutchison's comments on a radio show (Mark Davis, WBAP-AM) last week, when she was vague about when she might leave the federal job to concentrate on her challenge to sitting Republican Gov. Rick Perry. She said a few months ago — to reporters in general and on that same radio show in particular — that she would resign in October or November. October looks unlikely now. And the timing of a congressional vote on health care might be best left to bettors and political consultants. The Texas primary is four-and-a-half months away.

While she says she'll stay in office, she throws several spears in Perry's direction in the letter, saying the state has a highest numbers of uninsured citizens, that property taxes are the highest in the nation, that "our highways are lagging and TxDOT is broke," and that "our children are quitting school at alarming rates."

Hutchison says "14 years of one-man rule is too long." Later in the letter, she calls herself a reformer: "Quite frankly, I believe the lobbyists and insiders in our state capitol could use an infusion of new, conservative thinking and new ideas — a cleanup of business as usual in a city that badly needs it."

Political People and Their Moves

Adam Haynes is leaving TIPRO (the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners Association) after five years for a job with Chesapeake Energy, one of TIPRO's member companies.

Gov. Rick Perry named R. David Kelly of Dallas to chair the Teacher Retirement System of Texas and appointed Todd Barth, Seth Crone, and Nanette Sissney to that board. Kelly is a partner with Carleton Residential Properties in Dallas. Barth is an attorney and president of Bowers Properties in Houston. Crone is a CPA and an exec with The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Co. He lives in Beaumont. Sissney is a school counselor at Whitesboro ISD.

The Guv appointed Keith Drewery of Nacogdoches and James "Jim" Hughes Jr. of Newton to the Angelina and Neches River Authority Board, and reappointed Dominick "Nick" Bruno of Jacksonville. Drewery runs a construction company. Hughes is an insurance and investment broker, and Bruno is the retired past president of Austin Bank.

Rep. Joe Pickett, D-El Paso, said he and fiancée Shannon Wiggins are planning a wedding for next spring. They had planned to get hitched sooner, but discovered the planning takes a bit more time. The nuptials are tentatively set for April 2010, and will probably take place in Austin.

Deaths: Former Sen. J.P. Word, a Democrat who served for a decade in the Senate, after following a family tradition by winning election as Bosque County Judge, and did a stint lobbying for the Texas Chiropractic Association and consulting for the Texas Association of Taxpayers. He was 80.

Quotes of the Week

Former Gov. Mark White, telling The Dallas Morning News that he's lost confidence that the state can fairly administer the death penalty, which he once championed: "I'm not running for anything. It's a lot easier for me to say it."

Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson, telling the Houston Chronicle that Matthew Knowles' home on the eroded Texas beach is getting the same treatment it would get if his daughter wasn't famous: "I didn't know who Beyoncé Knowles was. If he's getting special treatment it's not because of me."

Charles Robinson of Amarillo, talking to gubernatorial candidate Tom Schieffer after a speech, quoted by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: "You sure picked a bad time to run on the Democratic ticket."

Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, asked to second-guess Gov. Rick Perry in the Houston Chronicle: "I can't get inside the mind of Perry even on a good day."

Dallas County Republican Party Chairman Jonathan Neerman, in The Dallas Morning News: "Even the most ardent partisan can't claim we didn't get our clocks cleaned the last two cycles. The question is why? We don't know what's driving it. I, for one, don't believe this is a Democratic county."

Billy Higginbotham, a wildlife specialist at Texas A&M University, in The Atlantic: "There are two types of landowners in Texas — those that have hogs, and those that are about to have hogs."


Texas Weekly: Volume 26, Issue 40, 26 October 2009. Ross Ramsey, Editor. Copyright 2009 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

by Brandi Grissom, The Texas Tribune El Paso state Sen. Eliot Shapleigh's surprise announcement that he won't seek another term in the Texas Senate in 2010 set off speculation about his plans for higher office — and a vigorous fight to replace him.

"While other public service may lie ahead, I will not run for the Texas Senate in 2010," Shapleigh said Friday. "During each day of the last decade, we have endeavored to do our very best for the people of our great community and state."

Shapleigh said he had been weighing the decision for several weeks, but the announcement came as a shock to his staff and to many in the political arena.

"I've done what I came to do," Shapleigh said.

Shapleigh would not say specifically what office he will seek, but he did rule out a challenge to El Paso Democratic U.S. Rep. Silvestre Reyes.

"My dreams have never been in Congress," he said.

Shapleigh said repeatedly that Texas needs change at the highest state levels, but he would not say whether he planned to run for statewide office. He didn't say no, either.

An announcement about his future plans, he said, would come in about three weeks after he has some time to relax.

Shapleigh's good friend El Paso County Attorney Jose Rodriguez was one of the few people not surprised by Friday's news.

Rodriguez said Shapleigh told him last week he planned not to seek re-election. During that conversation he said Shapleigh mentioned that he might consider a run for statewide office.

Shapleigh was elected to the Senate in 1996 and helped lead efforts to establish a four-year medical school in El Paso, the first on the U.S.-Mexico border. [Correction: The University of California San Diego School of Medicine opened in 1968. The school in El Paso is the first medical school on the Texas-Mexico border.]

He has been among the most liberal Democrats in the Texas Senate, a vocal critic of Republican leadership and a lonely proponent of establishing a state income tax. He has fought to fund services for low- and middle-income families and chastised conservatives for slashing the budgets for children's health insurance and other programs.

Shapleigh's departure leaves open a Senate seat that has rarely been vacated.

Only three people, all Democrats, have held the seat since 1973: Shapleigh, Peggy Rosson, who served from 1991 to 1997, and Tati Santiesteban, who held the seat from 1973 to 1991.

Potential successors — mostly Democrats — are already stacking up. It's a solidly Democratic seat; over the last two election cycles, the average statewide Democrat beat the average statewide Republican by 25.7 percentage points.

Rodriguez said he plans to announce an exploratory committee to run for the Senate soon.

"I am going to be trying to gain support both here locally and in Austin in the next 30 days or so," he said.

Rep. Joe Pickett, D-El Paso, said his phone was ringing off the hook following Shapleigh's announcement. Most of the callers — legislators, lobbyists, El Paso politicos — were encouraging him to run, he said.

"I must have gotten a dozen calls this morning offering to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars," Pickett said. "I really have to think about it."

But Pickett said he might have more power and be able to do more good for El Paso in his current position as chairman of the House Transportation Committee.

"I have as much power as the senator does," he said.

State Rep. Norma Chavez, D-El Paso, said, "you bet" she's going to consider a run for the Senate seat.

"I finished my seventh term. I'm an accomplished legislator who will obviously look seriously at the Senate race," Chavez said, adding that she was already planning to do a countywide poll in November to gauge her support.

Former Republican state Rep. Pat Haggerty, caught during a round of golf in Austin, said he would consider running, but he added that a Republican couldn't win that seat. "If I ran, it wouldn’t be as a Republican," he said.

Other names circulating in the potential candidate list today include El Paso Mayor John Cook and Republican businessman Dee Margo, who challenged Shapleigh in 2006.

Margo, reached at a reunion in Nashville, Tenn., said he still hasn't made any decisions about running in 2010. He had previously said he wouldn't run against Shapleigh. Asked whether today's news changed the equation, Margo said, "I doubt it, but I don't know."

bgrissom@texastribune.org

by Matt Stiles and Elise Hu, The Texas Tribune On the day Gov. Rick Perry removed three forensic science commissioners, citing their expired terms, at least 100 appointees whose time was also up remained in their jobs.

The governor has said he followed the "the normal protocol of the state" in removing the three commissioners just 48 hours before they planned to review a report raising questions about an execution. But critics say Perry removed them to cover up the possibility that the state executed a man convicted on faulty evidence.

"These numbers are disturbing because, contrary to what Gov. Perry said, it was not a regular practice to remove these commissioners so quickly and on the verge of a very important hearing," said Barry Scheck, co-director of The Innocence Project, a group that helps the falsely accused. "It's more evidence that Gov. Perry's actions were not to get to the scientific truth of the matter but were self serving and calculated for political advantage."

The list of gubernatorial appointees who were serving after their terms were expired on September 30 also contains nine chairmen of state boards and commissions, according to data obtained by The Texas Tribune under the state's open-records law.

Chris Cutrone, a Perry spokesman, reviewed the list Monday afternoon and said some people with expired terms had been replaced or reappointed since September 30. The office did not have time to research each appointee's status, however.

"The majority of expired appointments are replaced when their terms are up, and these members were replaced," he said of the forensic science commissioners.

The appointees with expired terms represent just a fraction of the roughly 2,400 people serving now. The 103 people serving after their terms were up had overstayed their terms, on average, more than 100 days when the other commissioners were ousted. Several had overstayed their terms more than a year, the records show.

The Forensic Science Commission had scheduled a meeting to examine a report in the case of Cameron Todd Willingham, a Corsicana man convicted of capital murder in the 1991 fire deaths of his three daughters. The state executed him in 2004, after numerous appeals, but some experts now question the investigative conclusions made by arson investigators at the time of the trial.

As the day of the commission's meeting approached, however, Perry announced the removal of chairman Sam Bassett, an Austin attorney, and two other panel members, including a Tarrant County prosecutor whose work has sent killers to Death Row.

Bassett said Monday that Perry aides questioned the scope and cost of the commission's work. He suspected he might be replaced when he learned that Perry aides were compiling a list of potential new commissioners.

"I'm not surprised that the commission was a priority for Gov. Perry because I know his office was concerned about the Willingham investigation," he said.

He said he remains proud of the work he and his colleagues performed on the commission.

"I'm sad that it has been delayed, and I hope that it hasn't been stopped," he said.

The new chairman, Williamson County District Attorney John Bradley, delayed the meeting, and it's unclear when or if it might be rescheduled. Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, chairman of the criminal justice committee has scheduled a meeting on the issue for November 10.

"There wasn't going to be enough time for me to learn about the case before the hearing," Bradley said after his appointment.

Craig Beyler, an arson expert hired by the commission, concluded that arson investigators in the Willingham case didn't use scientifically supported techniques and displayed "poor understandings of fire science."

Perry refers to people who question the evidence as "supposed experts," and strongly supported the execution and Willingham's conviction, calling him a "monster."

The forensic commission investigates complaints that allege professional negligence or misconduct in the use of scientific evidence from criminal cases. It doesn't have authority to make legal conclusions about Willingham's guilt or innocence, but it was expected to release its own report about the fire investigation.

"It is not unusual for gubernatorial appointments to lag, but this new information suggests a unique urgency in replacing members of the Forensic Science Commission on the eve of a critical meeting to review an independent, renowned expert's report on the faulty arson science used to convict Cameron Todd Willingham," said Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston. "This new information raises new questions about why Governor Perry replaced several members of the Forensic Science Commission when he did. Those questions need to be answered."

mstiles@texastribune.org

ehu@texastribune.org

by Emily Ramshaw, The Texas Tribune Want a cheap house for your large family? Texas has you covered. The state is home to the largest average household and lowest median home value in the nation, according to new data from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. Odessa takes the prize for cheapest home; the median home value is $68,200. Meanwhile, Laredo shares its largest average household ranking – 3.5 people per home -- with Provo, Utah. In Provo, 88 percent of residents are Mormon, a faith known for its large families. Texas is also home to the U.S. city with the highest percentage of people who speak a language other than English. More than 84 percent of people over age 5 in McAllen speak a language other than English at home, compared to 1.8 percent in Charleston, W.Va, which is on the other end of that ranking. The language isn't specified in the survey, but it's a safe bet that it's Spanish. The second place city is also in Texas. In El Paso, more than three-quarters of people speak a language other than English. The American Community Survey covers socioeconomic, housing and demographic characteristics for the three-year period between 2006 and 2008. eramshaw@texastribune.org

With three days left to go, only 103,992 Texans had voted early on 11 proposed constitutional amendments in the state's biggest counties.The turnout was bad even in Houston, where races for mayor and other city posts are on the ballot. According to the Texas Secretary of State's office, just under 43,000 had voted in Harris County, which includes Houston. That's about 2.3 percent of the registered voters there. The vote totals aren't available for all of the 254 counties in Texas, but the SOS reports daily on activity in the top 15 counties. Through the first nine days of early voting, 1.3 percent of registered voters had voted in those counties. Three days, including today, remain. And Election Day is November 3 — next Tuesday.

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Hank Gilbert's new transportation plan includes an eight-cent-per-gallon increase in gasoline taxes, which would then be indexed to something called the highway cost index. He wants an elected transportation commission replacing the one appointed by the governor. And he'd kill toll roads, with the exception of toll roads that first won approval from voters.

The Texas Medical Association's PAC voted to endorse Gov. Rick Perry over U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison in the Republican gubernatorial primary. So did the PAC of the Texas Association of Builders.

Gov. Rick Perry personally endorsed Doug Hoffman, who's running for Congress in New York's CD-23. That's a little off the beaten path. The address the governor listed in his email endorsement wasn't his campaign office, the Capitol, or the home he's renting in West Austin. It was the address for the Governor's Mansion, which is being rebuilt after an arson fire.

While we have the travelogue open, Perry got campaign visits (in Fredericksburg and Dallas) from Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour.

Former major league pitcher Nolan Ryan endorsed former minor league pitcher Roger Williams for U.S. Senate. Williams, a former Texas secretary of state, wants to run for Kay Bailey Hutchison's seat if the senator resigns to run for governor.

by Brandi Grissom, The Texas Tribune Starting Monday, U.S. Border Patrol plans to ship about 100 undocumented immigrants a day from Arizona back to Mexico through a remote border entry point in Presidio, and Gov. Rick Perry is displeased.

“Turning the Presidio area into a way station for the repatriation of illegal immigrants adds responsibility to local authorities and holds the potential of increasing the strain on local and state infrastructure and resources,” Perry said Saturday.

Perry sent a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano urging her to stop the Alien Transfer and Exit Program, or ATEP.

Bill Brooks, spokesman for the Border Patrol Marfa Sector, where Presidio is located, said the plan would not create any burden on the local community.

Local officials, including Presidio's mayor and law enforcement, he said, have been consulted about the plan.

“We’ve got plenty of Border Patrol agents,” he said. “It’s our job to interdict people trying enter our country illegally.”

Under the program, undocumented immigrants apprehended in Arizona will be transported to Presidio, then deported to Mexico.

Immigrants who are caught crossing illegally in Arizona and deported, Brooks said, often just come right back.

By shipping them to the remote countryside between Presidio and Ojinaga, Mexico, Border Patrol is hoping to decrease the likelihood of repeat illegal entry.

“It’s difficult to get anywhere if you come across there,” he said.

The plan will bring two buses per day to Texas, each with 74 undocumented immigrants. The immigrants will be checked for health problems and will have signed voluntary deportation agreements. The program will not involve immigrants charged with criminal violations, Brooks said.

Mexican officials are participating and will provide the immigrants with bus tickets to their hometowns, Brooks said.

“Every day we send people across the border down there,” he said. “We don’t have problems with them coming back immediately in this area.”

But Perry said he was worried the plan would result in more illegal immigration to Texas, which already has a large undocumented population.

“Texans will not stand for federal programs burdening our state and communities with the nation’s illegal immigrants,” he wrote.

bgrissom@texastribune.org

Political People and their Moves

by Brandi Grissom, The Texas Tribune Longtime El Paso state Sen. Eliot Shapleigh announced today he will not run for re-election in 2010.“While other public service may lie ahead, I will not run for the Texas Senate in 2010,” Shapleigh said in a press release. “During each day of the last decade, we have endeavored to do our very best for the people of our great community and state.” Shapleigh, a Democrat, did not immediately return phone calls Friday morning, and a spokeswoman indicated the announcement came as a surprise to his staff. Shapleigh was elected to the Senate in 1996 and helped lead efforts to establish a four-year medical school in El Paso, the first on the U.S.-Mexico border. [Correction: The University of California San Diego School of Medicine opened in 1968. The school in El Paso is the first medical school on the Texas-Mexico border.] He has been among the most liberal Democrats in the Texas Senate, a vocal critic of Republican leadership and a lonely proponent of establishing a state income tax. Now comes the haggling to see who will run for the open seat and the wondering about what “other public service may lie ahead” for Shapleigh. Stay tuned. bgrissom@texastribune.org

Former U.S. Ambassador and Texas Sen. Teel Bivins, a Republican from one of the old Panhandle ranching families, died today of pneumonia after a long illness. He was 61.Bivins became a senator in 1989 and served until 2004. He chaired the Senate Finance Committee, the Nominations Committee, and the Education Committee. He was one of three Republicans — Bill Ratliff and David Sibley were the others — who led that party in the Senate as it moved from a Democratic to a Republican majority. President George W. Bush chose Bivins to be Ambassador to Sweden in 2004 and he held that post until 2006, when he returned to Texas. He had been diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy and died from complications of that disease, at home, surrounded by family and friends. Bivins received a B.A. from Tulane University in 1970 and a J.D. from Southern Methodist University in 1974. Instead of running out to join a law firm after he passed the bar exam, he bought some cattle. He spent the next 24 years making money in the cattle and oil and gas exploration business. Based in Amarillo, he was elected to represent Texas Senate District 31 in 1988 and served until 2004. In 1989, after a successful first session as a state senator, Texas Monthly named Bivins a “Rookie of the Year” in its regular list of the best and worst legislators. The magazine honored him two more times – in 1997 and 2003 – both times in the “Best” category. His 200 write-up said, “He spent his days and nights fighting the bad guys, and it almost did him in.” In 2000, he was a Bush “Pioneer,” an individual who raised over $100,000 for the presidential campaign. In 2004, he was promoted to “Ranger” for raising over $200,000. Bivins was rewarded with the position of U.S. Ambassador to Sweden. Health problems forced him to step down in early 2006 and he returned to Texas. In 2006, not long after his health forced his return from Sweden, Bivins was visited by members of his former staff. Robyn Hadley, his former administrative assistant, posted online, “Teel is noticeably slower in everything he does - walking and talking, especially, but he is still very sharp and funny. He made us laugh many times with a well-placed quip.” Hadley remembered that, when in office, “Teel was one of the fastest-moving senators around. Ask any lobbyist who had to "walk with him" while explaining a bill. The man had a long stride.” He was the second of four boys, and leaves four children. Funeral arrangements are pending.

Former Vice President Dick Cheney will endorse Kay Bailey Hutchison for governor, her campaign said today. Cheney, who lived and worked in Dallas before he became vice president to George W. Bush, will do a fundraiser in Houston on November 17 for Hutchison's gubernatorial campaign.

Rep. Carol Kent, D-Dallas, won't get a second term without a fight. Republican Geoff Bailey announced he'll run in HD-102 next year. His resume includes time on Vice President Dick Cheney's staff in Washington, and he says he now works for T. Boone Pickens. Kent won the seat away from Rep. Tony Goolsby, R-Dallas. It's GOP turf, at least on paper, but Democrats slowly increased their numbers until 2008, when Kent overcame the red tide.

Rep. Dan Branch of Dallas is dropping out of the race for attorney general. Texas Supreme Court Justice Dale Wainwright, who's been looking at the job, doesn't have time to raise the money to outrun former Solicitor General Ted Cruz. The GOP primary for that job is lining up.

It's not clear yet that AG Greg Abbott is stepping aside next year, but if he does, Cruz appears to have the advantage in next year's contest.

Branch is out of the race as of Thursday (his announcement is posted at the bottom of this story). But Cruz has been busy raising money and locking up support that would otherwise go to another Republican. Wainwright, who'd have to leave the Texas Supreme Court to run for the AG job, would have about four months left to raise the money and pull together a competitive campaign against a guy who had almost $1 million at mid-year. Wainwright had $48,528.41 in the bank at the end of June.

Branch, who had $1.1 million on hand at mid-year, found himself on shifting sands. While he and others waited to see whether Kay Bailey Hutchison would resign from the Senate and start the chain reaction that could open the AG's seat, other Republicans were lining up to run for his Dallas House seat. Hutchison said earlier in the summer that she would leave in October or November, but more recently wrote to supporters saying she'll remain in the Senate while the health insurance fight is going on. Branch, watching the candidates growing larger in his rearview mirror, opted out of the uncertain AG's race and will seek a fifth term in the House.

That'll save Cruz some money, especially if Wainwright and other Republicans decide not to play.

Branch's announcement:
BRANCH SEEKS REELECTION TO TEXAS HOUSE Campaign to focus on economic & education agenda DALLAS, TX – Representative Dan Branch (R-Dallas) today announced that he will seek re-election to the Texas House of Representatives for District 108. “Our economy and our educational systems face tough challenges,” Branch said. “I’m running for reelection because I want to continue my work to make Texas the higher learning and research powerhouse our future economy will demand. Our campaign will offer thoughtful solutions that build on a record of results, and reflect my vision for an effective and limited state government.” This session, Rep. Branch led the successful efforts to develop more Tier One universities in Texas, reform the Top 10% college admissions law, limit cell phone use in active school zones and provide more interactive technology in public school classrooms. His legislative efforts earned him high marks from Texas Monthly, The Dallas Morning News and Austin American-Statesman; Capitol Inside listed Branch among its Best of the Texas Legislature. House Speaker, Joe Straus, said, “I’m very pleased that Dan has decided to run for re-election to the Texas House of Representatives. He is a real leader in the House whose hard work made a profound impact on the state as our Higher Education Chair this session, and I am confident he will not only hold his seat, but help us expand the Republican majority in 2010.” Rep. Branch is the Chairman of the House Committee on Higher Education, a member of the Legislative Budget Board, and serves on the Judiciary and Civil Jurisprudence Committee. This year, he was elected by his House colleagues in North Texas to lead the Dallas Area Legislative Delegation. Prior to this session, he chaired a select committee on education finance, and served on the House Appropriations, Public Education and Calendars Committees. Earlier this year, Rep. Branch received widespread support to run for Texas Attorney General in 2010. “I’m grateful for the broad encouragement to run statewide,” Branch said. “While the prospects for a successful run looked good, with only a month to go now until filing, the prospect of an open seat appears unlikely.” Before his 2002 election to the Texas House, Branch served as President of The Dallas Assembly and as Chairman of the Texas Public Finance Authority. Rep. Branch is a shareholder of Winstead PC. He and his wife, Stacey, have five children and have lived and worked in District 108, the central Dallas area, for 25 years. ###

Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas was appointed to be regional administrator of the General Services Administration and his replacement — elected by the commissioners — is Rene Ramirez. The new judge has been chief of staff to Sen. Juan "Chuy" Hinojosa, D-Brownsville, and told the local folks he'll serve out the last 14 months of the term and doesn't plan to seek election to it next year.

Colby Beuck is the new chief of staff to Rep. Patricia Harless, R-Spring. Beuck was previously with Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst.

Donna Warndof takes over as interim Veep for the Texas Independent Producers and Royalty Owners. She had been their director of public affairs. That job opened with Adam Haynes left TIPRO for Chesapeake Energy.

Deaths: Houston lawyer and political financier John O'Quinn, in a car wreck. He was 68. O'Quinn, a prominent Houston lawyer and a real nemesis to tort reformers, gave heavily to Democratic candidates. An example: he gave $2.4 million to Chris Bell for the 2006 elections, including a $1.4 million contribution to pay off Bell's loans the year after the Democrat lost the election.

Austin businessman Paul Workman will challenge Rep. Valinda Bolton, D-Austin, in HD-47.He started and ran Workman Construction and was in the Army Reserve for ten years. He's also a former chairman of Associated General Contractors, a trade group.

by Brandi Grissom, The Texas Tribune El Paso business developer Jay Kleberg confirmed Sunday that he will run as a Republican in 2010 against state Rep. Joe Moody, D-El Paso.

Kleberg, who until Friday worked for Verde Realty, said he would wait until his official campaign announcement to discuss more about the race.

Kleberg, 32, moved to El Paso five years ago, and the race for House District 78 will be his first run for public office.

Moody, 28, won election to the Texas House last year in a bruising race against Republican businessman Dee Margo.

“I’m very proud of the record we had during the session, and I am dedicated to keep working for the people of El Paso and District 78,” Moody said.

Prior to Moody, Republican Pat Haggerty represented the district, which encompasses portions of Northeast El Paso and the city’s affluent West side.

Haggerty was the only Republican legislator from the border before Margo defeated him in the GOP primary last year.

bgrissom@texastribune.org

Quotes of the Week

West, Neerman, Adams, and Thompson

Hudspeth County Sheriff Arvin West, quoted in the Texas Observer: "At least 98 percent of what I deal with is drug trafficking. If you took away the border, my county would be like Mayberry. We'd be spending our time taking cats off the roof."

Dallas County Republican Party Chairman Jonathan Neerman, talking about new state party Chair Cathie Adams in the Dallas Observer: "She has been part of an issue group that has gone after Republicans, and I don't know how she can shift gears and go from being an issue-group leader going after Republican candidates and elected officials to now being one where she has to try and grow the party."

Cathie Adams, quoted in the Austin American-Statesman on her view that Kay Bailey Hutchison should resign from the U.S. Senate to run: "If she's going to run for governor, I think that it would be best for our party if by January 4, filing deadline, that we know clearly who is running for what."

Gubernatorial candidate Mark Thompson of Garland on two other candidates in that five-person race, quoted in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: "Right now I’m just re-evaluating because in a three-way race, I think I’d have a very good chance. [Tom] Schieffer has problems being a Republican and Kinky Friedman has problems being Kinky Friedman."