Additionally, Molly Cook will fill the remainder of Mayor John Whitmire’s term in the state senate.

Additionally, Molly Cook will fill the remainder of Mayor John Whitmire’s term in the state senate.
“Why do [Democrats] value radical politics more than your family’s safety?”
Collin, Denton, and Tarrant County officials propose spending plans that don’t raise residents’ property taxes.
The council is proposing to take away a third of the Austin Police Department’s budget.
School board puts scaled-down spending proposal on November ballot.
A radically left media company is receiving a taxpayer handout from Tarrant Regional Water District.
“The mayor and the city are violating state law by providing taxpayer money to abortion-assistance organizations,” claims Zimmerman.
Harris County Commissioners Court proposes raising taxes to maximum rate allowed without voter approval.
The city council is continuing to use citizens’ money to pay for abortions.
A proposed development project in Deep Ellum would put soccer fields underneath I-345.
Prosecutors have now implicated 22 suspects in an illegal voting operation to elect Edinburg Mayor Richard Molina.
The lawsuit targets the city council’s decision to discriminate against the popular restaurant.
Two Lubbock County commissioners took bold action to defend taxpayers, using a little-known state law that allowed them to block a proposed tax increase.
Frustrated by the heavy burdens of property taxes, Crouch is volunteering his company’s time and his personal talent to help taxpayers fight back.
A property taxpayer looks at the City of Allen’s approach to fiscal stewardship.
My travels took me to Del Rio for a speech this week, a border town in Val Verde County. I had the good fortune to chat with the sheriff, D’Wayne Jernigan. He’s true West Texas lawman who has earned the ire of the left-leaning establishment for doing his job well and right. He is going to face a tough re-election battle this year. We need more sheriffs like him, on the border and elsewhere.
Supporters of “light rail†and “commuter rail†consistently over-sell and under-deliver. Not only does mass-transit fail to reduce congestion, but it is always fraught with cost-overruns and implementation delays. Such is the case in Austin, where the new toy train is going to cost taxpayers a third more than promised.
The San Antonio Express-News reports that new National Federation of Independent Business radio ads assail the business tax that will take its first toll in May. The ads note some small businesses will see their tax burden rise by 1,000 percent over the current franchise tax.
A lawsuit designed to stop counties from using taxpayer-money to lobby against taxpayers is still brewing in Williamson County. The judge last month gave taxpayers a partial victory, but those who brought the suit are hoping to convince His Honor to make modifications to the ruling that would ensure justice.
No title makes conservatives’ skin crawl like “tax assessor/collector.†It’s just not a job most of us hope our little conservative bundles of joy grow up to be. But thank goodness someone does, because it’s a critically important position.
Speaking in Farmers’ Branch this week I saw a familiar face in the audience – one of my upper-classman from Texas A&M. It turns out that Steven Autry is now seeking to serve as the judge of the Dallas County Criminal Court #4. He was a positive influence on me as a cadet 20 years ago, and I have no doubt he’ll serve the people of Dallas with distinction. Good luck, Mr. Autry, sir!
Hard to believe, but true, we do have a strong number of fiscally conservative lawmakers in the Texas Legislature. While outnumbered, they fight the fight for our values and principles regardless of political pressure. But doing the right thing comes at a cost. One of the taxpayers’ champions in the legislature is State Rep. Corbin Van Arsdale of Harris County.
Confronted with not getting 100% of the money, the city of Nederland (near Beaumont) is backing out of their red-light camera contract.
This story shows just how dysfunctional big government can be. The Texas Historical Commission is taking $80k from Blanco County taxpayers because the County, following a hail storm, replaced its wooden courthouse windows with acrylic windows that are virtually indistinguishable but considerably less expensive.Â
Voters in three out of four San Antonio area school districts rejected Tuesday’s proposed tax rate increases from $1.04 to $1.17 per $100 valuation. Now the San Antonio ISD (SAISD) superintendent says voters didn’t know what they were doing when they rejected his tax increase.Â