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Texas Budget: What if $72.2 Billion really is enough?

Our Republican Representatives and Senators, together with our Republicans throughout the Executive and Judicial Branches and leaders at the local and county levels of government throughout the state, have a lot of hard choices to make during this Session, and I don’t want to increase the pressure on them to accomplish more than we can humanly expect from one two-year cycle, even if we kept the part-time legislature in a full-time Special Session. But, I am asking them to never forget that this election gave them a majority they probably never will have again, which gives them a once in a generation opportunity to challenge every old assumption, to look at the structural labyrinth that has been created to deliver state services that are often supplemental to services provided by other levels of government or the private sector, to look at how we compensate public employees (especially their retirement plans), and to start the process of dismantling the labyrinth and re-organizing government into a properly limited, yet effective operation. Who knows, we just might be able to provide more effective education, mental and physical health care, and transportation for a lot less than what the system is currently absorbing from our tax dollars.

How could you even start such a task? Here are just three possible steps that could be implemented to start the process:

Rome wasn’t built in a day, but the cornerstone was actually laid and the process started in a day. If we are going to maximize the historic opportunity presented by the November election, let’s lay the cornerstone and get started on the construction.

 


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