ICYMI: Center for Tenth Amendment Studies Director Mario Loyola in National Review Online and The American Interest

AUSTIN – Texas Public Policy Foundation president and CEO Brooke Rollins today congratulated Texas Public Policy Action (TPPA), a 501c4 organization, on its launch. TPPA willanalyze bills and provide Daily Floor Reports for the 83rd TexasLegislature. “At the Texas Public Policy Foundation, we have established a strong tradition of rigorous analysis and effective advocacy in the...

Press Release February 12, 2013

Texas Public Policy Foundation statement on the launch of Texas Public Policy Action

AUSTIN – Texas Public Policy Foundation president and CEO Brooke Rollins today congratulated Texas Public Policy Action (TPPA), a 501c4 organization, on its launch. TPPA willanalyze bills and provide Daily Floor Reports for the 83rd TexasLegislature. “At the Texas Public Policy Foundation, we have established a strong tradition of rigorous analysis and effective advocacy in the...

Press Release February 11, 2013

TODAY: Right on Crime’s Brendan Steinhauser joins a panel discussion to be broadcast on KLRU and KUT 90.5

AUSTIN – The Texas Public Policy Foundation’s Brendan Steinhauser, Director of Communications for the Right on Crime initiative, joined KLRU’s program “Why Bother? Your State Legislature, Your Voice” that includes Texas State legislators Rep. Larry Gonzalez, and Sen. Wendy Davis, as well as Bee Moorhead, the Executive Director of Texas Impact. The panel will air...

Press Release February 7, 2013

$2,000 More per Student not the Answer for Texas

In his ruling in the Texas school finance trial on Tuesday, 250th District Court Judge John Dietz speculated that Texas public schools would need around $2,000 more per pupil to adequately educate Texas students. That’s a total of between $10 and $11 billion more than the over $50 billion Texas spent last session. But would there be definitive benefit to that spending? Texas currently spends $9,446 dollars per pupil, according to the National Education Association. Once you adjust for Texas’ low cost of living, that’s 97 percent of the national average. If we were to inject $2,000 more per student, we’d be comfortably above it. Moreover, we would be the second largest cost of living adjusted spender among the country’s 8 largest states, trailing only Pennsylvania. While Texas does have a slightly higher student/teacher ratio than Pennsylvania (14.5 to 1 vs. 14 to 1), their spending has not equated to success. Texas’ NAEP (National Assessment for Education Progress) scores are mostly better than theirs at our current funding level. Further, Pennsylvania ties with Michigan for lowest NAEP scores among those same 8 large states. There are plenty of problems in the Texas education system. Throwing money blindly at them is not a solution. Comprehensive reform that includes improvements in school choice and learning technologies—that is to say, reforms that address the needs of a massive, enormously diverse student body—is the path we should be taking. Unfortunately, Judge Dietz’ initial school finance ruling only goes to re-enforce the idea that money will solve everything for Texas schools and students.  

Press Release February 6, 2013

TPPF study finds that a capacity market would not improve Texas’ electricity market

AUSTIN – An analysis of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas’s competitive electricity market shows that reliability concerns can be best addressed through Texas’ world-class, energy-only market rather than through creating a “capacity” market, which would raise electricity prices for Texas consumers. The analysis is detailed in a new study, Does Competitive Electricity Require Capacity Markets?...

Press Release February 6, 2013

Texas Revenues Not a Problem

My friends on the Left speak frequently of the need to raise taxes and fees, as if Texas had a revenue problem. But a quick look at the data suggests that revenues are not the issue.  In 1977, Texas’ state and local governments consumed 7.91 percent of the state’s economy. In 2010, the state-local tax burden remained at essentially the same level, 7.93 percent, according to the Tax Foundation.  Although this runs contrary to the meme that we’ve “cut government to the bone,” the data is clear: Texas’ state and local governments are consuming just as much of the economy as they have in the past. What’s more, the state-local tax burden is actually on the rise, increasing from 7.2 percent of the economy in 2000. That means that, over the course of 10 years, government in Texas expanded to consume 10 percent more as a share of the economy—hardly the picture of austerity some would like to paint.    It’s data like this that lawmakers should be cognizant of before toying with the idea of new and higher taxes and fees. Because, clearly, Texas does not have a revenue problem.

Press Release February 4, 2013