County officials keep an eye on unfunded mandates

Henderson County Judge Richard Sanders.
Henderson County Judge Richard Sanders.

ATHENS — With the 83rd Texas Legislature convening in Austin this week, Henderson County Now asked county officials what issues they are watching the closest … and we received the same answer all around.

“I’m concerned about any unfunded mandates the state might pass,” said County Judge Richard Sanders, “that’s always a big concern.”

Wikipedia defines unfunded mandate as “a statute or regulation that requires a state or local government to perform certain actions, with no money provided for fulfilling the requirements.”

As an example, county officials pointed out the spiraling cost of court appointed attorneys, which have cost local taxpayers about $900,000 the past two years.

“Originally, (the state) was going to fund 50 percent,” said Pct. 4 Commissioner Ken Geeslin. “Now it is basically just enough so they can say they’re in it.”

Sanders said Austin only paid $32,000 to the county last year for court appointed attorneys.

“That is the model for an unfunded mandate right there,” Sanders said.

Pct. 2 Commissioner Wade McKinney said he is watching for “anytime they push down state duties onto the county, where the county has to provide more services with limited revenue.”

He said, “A lot of those regulatory issues are what we really worry about.”

The Texas Association of Counties general counsel Jim Allen fights for counties in Austin, but he’s about the only one, according to McKinney.

“That’s the organization that lobbies on behalf of the counties,” he said. “Very effective, very able gentleman. Those are the type of issues he watches and keeps us informed of.”

As an example of how the county could be impacted, McKinney pointed out how they almost lost $53,000 in road and bridge money during the last Legislative Session.

“It’s a small amount … but still, that’s $53,000 divided amongst the four precincts that we almost lost.”

The 83rd Regular Session of the Legislature will run through May 27.

Daily Brief: Wednesday, Jan. 9

Rain_Rain_Go_Away_1_-_WW_Denslow_-_Project_Gutenberg_etext_18546Rain, rain go away
Come again some other day

Actually, the rain is a good thing for Henderson County. We’ve seen way too much of drought in recent years. Still, when the rain comes down like it did last night — and the way it is forecast for today — that children’s song always comes to mind.

I checked, and that little phrase goes back at least to the 17th century… and a version of it has been around all the way back to Ancient Greece.

So remember to take your umbrella today, and when you unconsciously hum “rain, rain” under your breath you will know you are singing the hits from the 1600s.

The Legislature convened yesterday amid declarations of being different than Washington, D.C.

Here at HCTNow, we had a story about State Rep. Jim Pitts filing legislation to extend the no-cellphone-while-driving-in-a-school-zone rule to the entire school property for elementary and middle schools.

The Athens City Council will be holding its “regular” special meeting today at 11:30 a.m. The council nearly always holds a special meeting the Wednesday afternoon before their Monday night regular meeting.

I used to be bothered by the pre-meeting meeting, but I have since changed my mind. Now I think it is pretty smart. On Wednesday, council members get to learn about what they will vote on Monday night, giving them several days to think about the issue. The setup also gives citizens several extra days to learn what the council is doing.

And with one meeting in the afternoon and one at night, a broader spectrum of citizens have the opportunity to see their council in action.

I call it a win-win.

The county has lowered the speed limit on Mill Run Road from 60 mph all the way down to 35 mph. We applaud the change — we’re all for safety.

Rich Flowers over at the Review has a good story about the change.

 

Keep dry out there … and if you are one of the fans following the TVCC basketball teams to Brenham for their games against Blinn tonight: Be Careful!

UPDATE: TVCC has announced it will stream tonight’s games live online.

TVCC honors service milestones

 

TVCC's Vice President of Instruction Dr. Jerry King (right) gives David Loper (left) a plaque honoring Loper's 40 years of service with the college. At spring in-service this week, TVCC recognized employees who met service milestones. King was also honored during the event for serving 35 years at TVCC. (COURTESY PHOTO)
TVCC’s Vice President of Instruction Dr. Jerry King (right) gives David Loper (left) a plaque honoring Loper’s 40 years of service with the college. At spring in-service this week, TVCC recognized employees who met service milestones. King was also honored during the event for serving 35 years at TVCC. (COURTESY PHOTO)

By Jennifer Hannigan, TVCC Public Information

 

It has been four decades since David Loper came to work at Trinity Valley Community College. At the college’s annual spring in-service event Monday, he was honored for his dedication along with other TVCC employees who achieved five-year milestones in their employment status. The hosting of service awards is often used to celebrate those who have dedicated their lives to the improvement of a company and their contribution to its community.

The employees who have reached milestone years were honored with pins and plaques at the event. Loper, who is the chair of the college’s business and marketing division, was the employee who reached the highest milestone this year with 40 years of service.

For serving 35 years, the college honored Dr. Jerry King, TVCC’s vice president of instruction.

Vice President of Information Technology Mike Abbott, Associate Vice President of Information Technology Brett Daniel, science instructor Jim Guillory, and TVCC Health Science Center Provost Dr. Helen Reid were all honored for reaching 30 years of service.

Other employees recognized for reaching service milestones were:

  • 25 years – Bo Cargil, Charles Dobroski, Merl Estep, Janet Lumpkin Angie McLeroy and Kay Pulley
  • 20 years – Mary Ensign, Nancy Love, Ben McCartney, Jim McNutt, Bud Richards, Liz Smith
  • 15 years – Richard Davis, Rick Gleason, Misti Hardison, Leslie Prater, Russell Self, Scott Walker, Gail McInnis
  • 10 years – Algia Allen, Cortney Curran, Janet Elledge, David Handorf, Brent Hoffman, Shelia Goldman, Linda Land, Eric Moseley, Therese Sharp
  • 5 years – Rhonda Chandler, Jennifer Evilsizer, Barbara Parr, Marshall Reeves, Melissa Singletary

PHOTO: Malakoff resident in Austin

ClintMalakoff resident Clint Stutts (far right) stands in the Texas Capitol Tuesday, Jan. 8, before the 83rd Legislative Session convened. He is joined by friends from Ellis and Tarrant counties, most of whom are involved with a bill Stutts helped write to nullify the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Pitts files distracted driving legislation

Texting while at the wheel

According to current state law, a driver may not use a cell phone while going through a school zone. State Rep. Jim Pitts has filed legislation that would extend that rule to all the property of an elementary or middle school.

Pitts’ chief of staff, Aaron Gregg, said the legislation arose from a pair of incidents at Red Oak ISD. In each case, a parent texting and driving while on school property bumped into another car.

“Let’s not get some 5-year-old run over because a parent is texting and driving,” Gregg said.

High schools are not mentioned in Pitts’ legislation. Gregg said that was because the lawmaker is looking to extend the current school zone to cover the area where students are dropped actually dropped off.

Gregg said drop off zones aren’t as big an issue for high schools, but added that the proposed bill could change.

The use of cellphones while driving has become a huge problem in Texas. According the the National Safety Council:

Cell phone use while driving is the No. 1 distraction behind the wheel. Accorsing to stats at https://www.hornsbywatson.com/personal-injury/tractor-trailer-accidents, almost 70 percentof the respondents to a AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety survey reported talking on a cell phone while driving during the previous 30 days. Researchers observing more than 1,700 drivers found that three out of every four drivers using a cell phone committed a traffic violation.

In 2010, cell phone use was a contributing factor in 3,387 Texas crashes.