With the 88th Texas Legislature already underway, the following is a list (non-exhaustive) of our current legislative priorities:
Bill Number | Author | Summary | Last Status |
HB 1 | State Rep. Greg Bonnen (R-Friendswood) | General Appropriations Act for 2024-25 Biennium | Passed House 4.6.23, On Senate Intent Calendar 4.13.23 |
SB 1 | State Sen. Joan Huffman (R-Houston) | General Appropriations Act for 2024-25 Biennium | Left pending in Senate Finance Committee 2.21.23 |
Observations:
- The base budget proposals are currently below the population and inflation spending cap
- Only one-third (1/3) of the at least $32.7 billion budget surplus (i.e. over-collected taxpayer money) is currently proposed for new tax relief
- The proposed “relief” amounts to just $9.7 billion in new property tax relief, not $15 billion as is being promoted by lawmakers:
- $3 billion for homestead exemption increase
- Inferior to ISD M&O compression
- Must be readjusted constantly to keep up with inflated valuations
- $6.7 billion in ISD M&O compression is not enough to make a significant difference in property tax bills for Texas taxpayers
- $3 billion for homestead exemption increase
TFR Supports/Recommends:
- Pass a “No-Growth” (Frozen) budget until the elimination of ISD M&O property taxes
- Use at least 90% of the budget surplus to compress ISD M&O
- Break the constitutional spending limit (if necessary) for maximum tax relief for Texas taxpayers
Bill Number | Author | Summary | Last Status |
HB 985 | State Rep. Briscoe Cain (R-Deer Park) | Use 90% of the budget surplus to ‘buy down’ the ISD M&O | Referred to House Appropriations Committee 3.2.23 |
HB 612 | State Rep. Matt Shaheen (R-Plano) | Use 90% of the budget surplus to ‘buy down’ the ISD M&O | Referred to House Appropriations Committee 2.23.23 |
HB 629 | State Rep. Ellen Troxclair (R-Spicewood) | Use 90% of the budget surplus to ‘buy down’ the ISD M&O | Referred to House Appropriations Committee 2.23.23 |
HB 1030 | State Rep. Matt Schaefer (R-Tyler) | Use 90% of the budget surplus to ‘buy down’ the ISD M&O | Referred to House Appropriations Committee 3.2.23 |
SB 1107 | State Sen. Mayes Middleton (R-Galveston) | Use 90% of the budget surplus to ‘buy down’ the ISD M&O | Referred to Senate Finance Committee 3.9.23 |
Observations:
- Texas Governor Greg Abbott said last fall that he wants to “eliminate school property taxes so people can own their homes”
- Texas taxpayers want it in statute to eliminate property taxes as soon as possible
- TFR believes that increasing the homestead exemption ultimately shifts the burden of funding increased spending and does not provide long-lasting tax relief
- Historically, inflated appraisals have evaporated any savings from raising the homestead exemption
TFR Supports/Recommends:
- TFR supports both versions of legislation seeking to use 90% of the budget surplus to ‘buy down’ the ISD M&O portion of the property tax
- Both can be accomplished before the year 2030
Bill Number | Author | Summary | Last Status |
HB 2258 | State Rep. Briscoe Cain (R-Deer Park) | Impose a spending cap using population and inflation on all local governments | Referred to House State Affairs Committee 3.9.23 |
HB 2220 | State Rep. Brian Harrison (R-Midlothian) | Lower the voter-approval tax rate to that of the No-New-Revenue tax rate | Referred to House Ways & Means Committee 3.9.23 |
HB 4479 | State Rep. Carrie Isaac (R-Wimberly) | Freeze ISD M&O until compressed to zero (0) | Referred to House Ways & Means Committee 3.21.23 |
Observation:
- Local government spending is the biggest obstacle to property tax elimination
TFR Supports/Recommends:
- TFR recommends three (3) reforms for local governments:
- Impose a spending cap using population and inflation on all local governments
- Lower the voter-approval tax rate to that of the No-New-Revenue tax rate
- Freeze ISD M&O until compressed to zero (0)
Bill Number | Author | Summary | Last Status |
SB 175 | State Sen. Mayes Middleton (R-Galveston) | Bans the practice statewide | Passed Senate 4.6.23. Referred to House State Affairs Committee 4.13.23 |
HB 3538 | State Rep. Ellen Troxclair (R-Spicewood) | Bans the practice statewide | Referred to House State Affairs Committee 3.16.23 |
Observations:
- The practice of taxpayer-funded lobbying is a massive conflict of interest that is seldom in favor of the taxpayer
- The amount of money spent by local governments on taxpayer-funded lobbying continues to increase
TFR Supports/Recommends:
- TFR supports legislation seeking to ban this practice statewide