Happy Birthday, Dusty!

Patrick vs Abbott.

Everyone knows Gov. Greg Abbott is a punkarse.  Check the latest from the Trib here:

Gov. Greg Abbott is raising the prospect of vetoing large numbers of bills passed by the Legislature as he demands a House-Senate compromise on property tax relief, further raising public tensions with Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick.

Sunday is the deadline for Abbott to sign or veto bills from the regular session, which ended late last month without a resolution on property taxes. Lawmakers are about halfway through a 30-day special session in which they remain gridlocked on the issue.

Abbott has recently held back on signing legislation — Senate bills in particular — and on Tuesday, he vetoed Senate Bill 2035. And on Wednesday evening, Abbott vetoed two more bills, one from each chamber, saying lawmakers could revisit them after they tackle property taxes.

“As we get closer and closer to this Sunday, all of these bills that have yet to be signed face the possibility — if not the probability — that they’re going to be vetoed,” Abbott told reporters Wednesday afternoon during a bill-signing ceremony at the Capitol. He later doubled down, saying he “can’t ensure that any bill that has not yet been signed is going to be signed.”

Patrick, the presiding officer of the Senate, fired back in a tweet.

“In a ploy to apparently get his way, Governor Abbott suggests he is threatening to destroy the work of the entire 88th Legislative Session — hundreds of thousands of hours by lawmakers doing the work the people sent us to do,” Patrick said. “The Governor’s suggested threat today to veto a large number of Senate bills is an affront to the legislative process and the people of Texas.”

Abbott’s comments earlier Wednesday appeared to significantly raise the stakes as he tries to coax a property tax compromise out of the two chambers. Abbott initially backed the House’s approach to the issue in the special session, but he has since cooled off, instead calling for the two chambers to strike an agreement that can reach his desk.

The special session has been dragging on amid the traditional bill-signing period that follows every regular session. Abbott can sign or veto bills by Sunday — or do nothing and let them become law anyway.

Since last Monday, Abbott has signed only 10 Senate bills, compared with 450 House bills, according to legislative records at the time of Abbott’s news conference. There were 240 Senate bills awaiting action by the governor, compared with 108 House bills. One of those House bills is the budget, which Abbott has said he will sign.

The unsigned bills include a number of Patrick’s priority bills, like Senate Bill 15, which would ban transgender college athletes from competing on teams that align with their gender identity. There are also less controversial bills on Abbott’s desk, like Senate Bill 25, which would provide financial assistance for nursing students.

Abbott’s Tuesday veto of SB 2035, which deals with bond election restrictions, was notable because its author was Sen. Paul Bettencourt, R-Houston, the Senate’s top expert on property taxes.

“Senate Bill 2035 has too many loopholes,” Abbott said in his veto proclamation. “This bill can be reconsidered at a future special session only after property tax relief is passed.”

Bettencourt said in an interview that he was not aware of any loopholes in the bill. He added he was working to get in touch with Abbott’s for more information.

“It’s quite a surprise because it’s as good government as a good-government bill gets,” Bettencourt said.

The two chambers have been at odds over the best way to deliver property tax relief since the beginning of the special session. Abbott called for lawmakers to exclusively focus on a method known as compression, or sending state funds to school districts to help lower their property tax rates. The House quickly obliged Abbott and left town, but the Senate has remained in session while insisting on also increasing the homestead exemption, or the chunk of a home’s appraised value that is exempt from property taxes.

The property-tax standoff has sparked a rare public spat between Abbott and Patrick, who over the years have tended to work out their differences in private.

The showdown also finds Abbott looking to leverage the few formal powers a governor has to influence the legislative process. He has wielded his veto power aggressively before, nixing funding for the Legislature in 2021 as punishment for a Democratic walkout over GOP-backed voting restrictions.

I would have to say Patrick is the grown-up on this deal. I would put my money on Patrick.  He can do more harm if you ask Commentary.

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This is a good Op-Ed in today’s Chron. Here is the headline:

We’re on the HISD board ousted by TEA. Give the new leaders a chance. (Opinion)

Judith CruzSue DeigaardDani HernandezBridget Wade

Here is the Op-Ed:

The four of us were elected by voters as Houston Independent School District Board of Trustees — which is to say, to the board that’s been sidelined in the Texas Education Agency’s takeover of the district. Our elected board was comprised of people with servant hearts for our city and, most importantly, for our students. So suffice it to say, there are few who are as disappointed that HISD is under the leadership of a board of managers as we are. 

Unfortunately, the challenges were larger than our nine-member board could overcome, and our students were not receiving the level of education we aspire for them to achieve. We commend the new superintendent, Mike Miles, for expeditiously addressing the needs of our chronically struggling schools and the schools that feed into them.

One size does not fit all, and over the past two years the budgets that the administration initially presented to the board proposed to cut funding to campuses such as Kashmere and Wheatley. Prioritizing high-quality instructional time in core content areas for our highest-need students, including by increasing base pay for teachers on these campuses, is overdue. We believe the district can, and should, address the challenges without undermining areas of demonstrated success.

We expect the new board and superintendent to be transparent. We expect them to engage effectively with families and students — not just the loudest voices but, most importantly, with the ones who have been marginalized. We expect them to demonstrate results in key areas such as literacy and in college and career readiness, especially for our populations of students who are furthest behind, regardless of which schools the students attend and without ignoring the needs of the whole child.

The community is skeptical and has concerns, and those are natural components of significant and misunderstood change. However, we also encourage the community to give the new leadership a chance. We believe that no one chooses to sit at that dais who doesn’t have the best intentions for students in their heart, and these ten new leaders are no different than we are in that value.

Our students need this new board and superintendent to be successful. We have high expectations and plan to hold them accountable to outcomes, but we also plan to give them a chance. We hope you will do the same. Anything less, and children suffer. Our students have already had enough lost years. We need to work together for a better future for all our students. HISD students are capable of reaching their potential, and we should cooperate as a community to do everything we can to ensure they live out their dreams.

Dani Hernandez is HISD Trustee for District III. Sue Deigaard is HISD Trustee for District V. Judith Cruz is HISD Trustee for District VIII. Bridget Wade is HISD Trustee for District VII.

Good job. We need more of this.

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Dusty Baker is 74 today. Happy Birthday, Dusty!

The featured photo today is one of my favorite bobbleheads – Dusty Baker.

We won last night.

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