The ring allegedly profited $1 million on certifying unqualified teachers.

The ring allegedly profited $1 million on certifying unqualified teachers.
In Collin County’s largest cities, every council seat on May ballots is contested.
Amarillo Mayor Ginger Nelson likens hiring lobbyists with Amarillo taxpayers’ dollars to hiring a plumber to “make flushing toilets or non-flushing toilets flush again.”
Amarillo voters will have plenty of options for mayor, city council, and local school boards on May 1.
Will Texas officials finally improve the electrical grid?
Wylie City Council Member Matthew Porter resigned to run for mayor in this May’s election.
Ellis County is the first Texas county to declare itself a “sanctuary for the unborn.”
Fort Worth congresswoman stumbles through trying to explain why she labeled herself “pro-choice” in a television interview.
After voters rejected the district’s $422 million debt package last May, Allen ISD is planning for a new bond offering in November.
Citizens and local officials called for accountability and transparency at a legislative hearing on drawing future political maps.
A number of factors, including wildly outrageous property taxes, have wreaked havoc on working-class citizens.
“I was told by Dixon, ‘Be nice to him; he’s going to help get me elected.’”
Texas Scorecard interviews congressional candidate J. Ross Lacy on his bid to represent Texas’ 11th Congressional District.
Challenger Chris Putnam points to opponent’s poor fiscal record and lack of transparency in congressional primary.
A congressional forum sparked a flurry of legal threats and accusations between Tom Green County GOP Chair Jeff Betty and congressional candidate Casey Gray.
The old rock-country hit "Happiness is Lubbock, Texas, in My Rearview Mirror" had a tender, sappy-sweet quality to it. But sitting in the Lubbock airport after a great day visiting with our supporters and friends here in the Panhandle, we’re happy to report that Lubbock is just, generally, a great place to be. We’re sorry the Southwest flight is coming so quickly.
Last week’s announcement that State Sen. Kyle Janek of Houston isn’t seeking re-election has opened the gates of candidates rumored, potential and real. One name that’s surfaced is Gary Polland, a long-time conservative activist who lets his professional life (he’s a lawyer) fund his passion for right-thinking politics.
According to KSAT, a San Antonio television station, more than 1,000 calls were made to the Bexar County courthouse by folks asking where to vote on this Super Tuesday. Of course, Texas’ primary isn’t held until March 4 — a month away.
On Wednesday the Houston City Council voted 9-5 in favor of an ordinance giving businesses the right to build electrified fences, which were previously forbidden.
North Forest Independent School District in the Houston area is nearly bankrupt, having lied about student enrollment numbers, mismanaged the taxpayers’ cash, and cheated untold numbers of children out of an academic future. The response from the teacher union rep: worried that people might lose their jobs. That they haven’t already is part of the problem.
The Bexar County Commissioners Court voted earlier this month to present  San Antonio area voters with a $415 million venue tax increase measure on the May ballot. While it would fund lots of nice-sounding goodies, increased hotel and rental car taxes have been proven to reduce tourism.
Used to be selling your land to the government was a break-even proposition — you got what the government valued it at, or else. But the Austin City Council is much more progressive than that since, after all, it’s not their money. In looking to build a new water treatment plant (not exactly a tourist attraction), the city found land that they valued at $28 million. The owners said it was worth $39 million. The land was on the tax rolls for $5.8 million. So, of course, taxpayers are coughing up $32 million.
Never has a better small-government campaign been mounted than the one in Kerr County for the position of treasurer. Republican Ed Hamilton says that if he’s elected, he won’t do a single thing — he won’t even take the $46,000-per-year paycheck. Hamilton says the position is duplicative and could be handled more effectively elsewhere in county government.
Hysterical pronouncements by politicians can lead to both bad policy and higher costs. You don’t get much more hysterical than Arlington Mayor Robert Cluck, who told an audience that simply breathing the air in some parts of Texas places people “as at [much] risk for cancer as a smoker." Cluck-cluck, clucks Cluck.
The Dallas Morning News reports that only 7 percent of homeowners challenged their 2006 appraisals. Although 54 percent of protesters got some relief, Richard Whittle was denied when he challenged the increase of his one-story Garland house by 67 percent to $135,490 in 2006.