VOL. XXXIII • SEPTEMBER 12, 2019
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Special session requested after two mass shootings Cotton Pickin’ Proud
Raising Black Millionaires
State/Metro Pg 2
By CASSANDRA POLLOCK and CHASE KARACOSTAS The Texas Tribune
Democrats in the Texas House are calling on Gov. Greg Abbott to convene a special legislative session to address gun violence – a move designed to place even more pressure on the state’s top GOP official to act in the wake of two deadly mass shootings just weeks apart. A letter to Abbott was delivered Wednesday morning, hours before the House Democratic Caucus hosted five news conferences across the state to discuss “protecting Texans from gun violence.” The letter, which also included several gun-related legislative proposals, was
Texas House Democratic Caucus during a press conference earlier this year. – Photo by Emree Weaver/The Texas Tribune
signed by 63 of the 66 members in the caucus. The caucus requested Abbott include issues such as “closing the background check loopholes” and “banning the sale of high-capacity magazines” in a special session agenda, along with “enacting extreme risk protective order laws and closing existing loopholes in current protective order
laws,” “limiting the open carry of certain semi-automatic long guns” and “requiring stolen guns be reported to law enforcement.” The request comes days after a gunman killed seven people and injured 22 others while on a rampage in Odessa and Midland. That shooting happened four weeks after a massacre in El
Paso left 22 dead and more than two dozen wounded. The Legislature does not convene again until 2021. Abbott, who has the sole authority to call both chambers back to the Capitol before then, tweeted Sept. 4 afternoon that he planned to announce “legislative considerations next week and executive action this week.” He added, “Legislators can be part of the process or part of the problem.” Democrats said Sept. 4 that waiting another year and a half to address gun violence in the state will endanger Texans. “This is the kind of thing our constituents are telling us they want us to tackle, and they want us to tackle it
See Shootings Page 11
Broadnax shares 2019-2020 budget amendments
City Manager T.C. Broadnax discusses his budget amendment before the Dallas City Council, Sept. 4. – The Dallas Examiner screenshot from city of Dallas video
By DIANE XAVIER The Dallas Examiner
The Dallas City Council heard a briefing about the proposed fiscal year 20192020 budget amendments at its Sept. 4 City Council meeting held at Dallas City Hall. Manager T.C. City Broadnax began the presentation discussing his proposed draft amendment, item 54, for City Council consideration. “I believe that the current amendment ensures sustainability for fiscal years 2020 and 2021, the second year of the biennial,” Broadnax said. “It keeps the property tax
rate at the fiscal year 2019 rate of 77.67 [cents] per $100 in valuation, rather than increase it by one-third or one cent as initially proposed. It does restore the basic human and social services that Dallas residents have voiced as a need, and it continues to make the momentum to make Dallas a more ethical, excellent and equitable city. “It does continue funding the many services and offices of community care that address the drivers of poverty, provides senior services that were being transferred from CDBG [Community Development
See Budget Page 11
AP file photo
AP file photo
AP file photo
Stock photo
Stock photo
New laws that may impact you, your community AP file photo
By MATTHEW WATKINS The Texas Tribune
This month, 820 new laws passed during the 2019 session of the Texas Legislature will go into effect. They range from the huge – a $250 billion two-year budget – to the symbolic – a number of bills to rename parts of Texas highways. Here’s a sample of several that will impact Texans’ lives: The 2020-2021 budget: The state’s two-year budget calls for spending roughly $250 billion on priorities including public school funding, teacher salaries and early childhood intervention programs. The Born Alive Act: This law, House Bill 16, requires doctors to treat a baby born alive in the rare instance of a failed abortion attempt. A new smoking age: This new law, Senate Bill 21, will raise the age to buy tobacco products from 18 to 21. Defunding abortion providers: This measure, Senate Bill 22, will prohibit state and local governments from partnering with agencies that perform abortions, even if they contract for services not related to the procedure. No more Driver Responsibility Program: This new law, House Bill 2048, will eliminate this much-maligned program, which critics have said traps low-income Texans in a cycle of debt. It had survived past attempts to kill it because money from fines helps fund the state’s emergency trauma care system. The bill
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Business Pg 8
offers alternative funding sources for trauma care. New rules for female inmates: House Bill 650 makes a series of changes to state law that are designed to make state prisons more accommodating to female inmates. The bill will ban the shackling of pregnant women, require a trauma screening of each incoming female inmate and require the Texas Department of Criminal Justice to study the effects of visitation policies on women and their children. Free speech on campus: Senate Bill 18, filed in response to concerns that conservative voices were being stifled on campus, requires schools to allow people to engage in “expressive activities” in outdoor common spaces. An attempt to stop telemarketers: Starting Sunday, telemarketers will be banned from calling Texans using fake numbers that show up on the recipient’s caller ID. Fighting surprise medical bills: Senate Bill 1264 aims to prevent Texans from being hit with surprise medical bills when their health care provider and insurance company can’t agree on a payment. The measure ushers the disputes into a stateoverseen arbitration process, keeping patients out of the fight. Lemonade stands: Neighborhoods and cities will no longer be allowed to enact regulations that block or regulate children trying to sell nonalcoholic drinks like lemonade on private
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property. Support for this new law grew after police in the East Texas town of Overton reportedly shut down a lemonade stand by two young siblings who were trying to earn money to buy a Father’s Day present. The right to pump breast milk: Starting Sept. 1, Texas law made clear that women can pump breast milk wherever they want. Previous law allowed breastfeeding anywhere but didn’t specify pumping. Carry your handgun during a disaster: House Bill 1177 will allow people to carry their handguns – even if they are unlicensed – in the week after the governor declares a natural disaster. Seller’s disclosure for houses in a floodplain: Senate Bill 339 expands the rules for selling property to require disclosures when a home is in a 500-year floodplain, a flood pool, or in or near a reservoir. They must say whether the home has flooded in a catastrophic event. No more stealing packages: Thieves who steal packages from people’s front porches will start facing stiffer penalties. Penalties range from a Class A misdemeanor to a third-degree felony, depending on the number of addresses mail is taken from.
The Indigent Project – Part IV: Speaking up for those who cannot speak for themselves
Boxes of case files at the Harris County public defender’s office in Houston. – Photos by Trevor Paulhus/The Texas Tribune and Texas Monthly
By NEENA SATIJA The Texas Tribune and The Texas Monthly
Drew Willey fumed as he left Galveston. In the weeks after Judge Jack Ewing first removed him from his cases, he’d been so upset that he’d filed a complaint with the Texas State Commission on Judicial Conduct, listing the canons of the Texas Code of Judicial Conduct that he thought Ewing was violating, “Most importantly, Canon 3, C. (4) by failing to exercise the power of appointment impartially and on the basis of merit.” Now, as he saw it, the judge had spelled out in his own words what Willey had suspected all along: There were poor defendants who were not getting a fair shake. He knew what some of his
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See Willey Page 9
Inside
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National . . . . . . . . . 3
Increasing Black Homeownership
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National Pg 3
Perspectives . . . . . 5
Health . . . . . . . . . . . 6
LifeStyle . . . . . . . . . 7
Bobby Blanchard/The Texas Tribune contributed reporting.
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lawyer colleagues would say – that he was too idealistic. The state commission was notoriously opaque. And the Texas Indigent Defense Commission, which Willey also filed complaints with – over Galveston’s jail docket – couldn’t do much either. Two years later, one of the attorneys was still receiving the second-most juvenile cases of any lawyer in the county. “It takes a lot of sacrifice, having that fight,” said Brandon Ball, a lawyer in the Harris County public defender’s office who has worked with Willey. “They beat you down. They beat you down. They beat you down.” But the fight is what had attracted Willey in the first place After majoring in
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