Everything IS bigger in Texas

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
47
48
67
Texas cut taxes, spending, ends up with $8 billion surplus

Legislators in Texas, the biggest energy producer among U.S. states, will begin deliberating its next two-year budget with a surplus forecast today to match an $8.8 billion record set in 2007.

The Texas economy has topped budget projections over the past 15 months, as booming energy output fueled job growth and an 11 percent fiscal first-quarter gain in sales-tax receipts, the biggest source of general-fund revenue. Even after paying off $7 billion in health and school bills, Comptroller Susan Combs said today that the state will be flush heading into 2014.

Lawmakers, who convene tomorrow for a five-month session, in 2011 put off about $4.7 billion in future Medicaid costs and $2 billion for public schools under the current budget, and now must pay those bills. With Combs projecting an $8.8 billion surplus by Aug. 31 and a 12 percent jump in general-purpose receipts for the next two years, Democrats sense an opening.

“Given that we’re seeing an increase in revenue, let’s use this opportunity to fix those things that those in control of the budget have broken,” said state Senator Kirk Watson, an Austin Democrat. “Some people clearly want to starve the necessities of our people, things like schools, health care and transportation.”



more


Texas Starts Budget Debate Flush With Energy Boom Cash - Bloomberg
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
66
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
Minnesota pays more than it gets back unlike Texas. Ditto for those Northeastern states that got reluctant help from Congress over the Sandy disaster.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
Texas lifts ban on deep frying school food






Deep fryers will no longer be banned in Texas public school kitchens.


The ban, lifted Thursday, also eased restrictions on soft drinks in school vending machines.


The state's agriculture commissioner, Sid Miller, says government mandates have failed to make kids healthier in Texas.


The move is about choice for local districts to decide what they offer students, not health, Miller wrote on his Facebook page June 11.


"This isn't about French Fries--its about Freedom," Miller wrote. "I believe we need fewer state and federal mandates and more local control."


About two-thirds of the state's residents are considered overweight.






Texas lifting ban on deep frying school food | www.wokv.com
 

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
33
48
Texas lifts ban on deep frying school food






Deep fryers will no longer be banned in Texas public school kitchens.


The ban, lifted Thursday, also eased restrictions on soft drinks in school vending machines.


The state's agriculture commissioner, Sid Miller, says government mandates have failed to make kids healthier in Texas.


The move is about choice for local districts to decide what they offer students, not health, Miller wrote on his Facebook page June 11.


"This isn't about French Fries--its about Freedom," Miller wrote. "I believe we need fewer state and federal mandates and more local control."


About two-thirds of the state's residents are considered overweight.






Texas lifting ban on deep frying school food | www.wokv.com
lift the ban on those deep fryers...too funny...oink