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Senate approves measure by Sen. Lucio to build UT Health Science Center in Valley, including Edinburg

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John de la Viña of Edinburg, featured left, has worked his way up from serving in the Office of the House Sergeant-at-Arms, which works with lawmakers and their staffs, to a position on the legislative staff of Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg. De la Viña, son of Danny and Judith De la Viña of Edinburg, plans to attend St. Mary’s University Law School in San Antonio this fall.

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Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, greets Gene “Scooter” Long and his father Ralph at the Arc of Texas 2007 Leadership Award Ceremony where Zaffirini was honored for her outstanding support and advocacy of persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Scooter’s Law is effective immediately. See story later in this posting.

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Texas A&M officials recently met with administrators from South Texas College to discuss the program and support opportunities for students. From left are Isai Morales, advisor for Valley Scholar’s and Honors Program for STC; Wanda Spratt, division dean of Nursing and Allied Health for STC; Paul Hernández, dean of Counseling and Advising for STC; Guadalupe Chávez, coordinator of Dual Enrollment Academies for STC; Dr. Ali Esmaeili; Dr. Juan Castro; Marie Olivarez, coordinator of Valley Scholar’s for STC; and Raymond Joyce, program coordinator for the Partnerships for Primary Care for the Texas A&M Health Science Center. See story later in this posting.

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Senate approves measure by Sen. Lucio to build UT Health Science Center in Valley, including Edinburg

By DORIS SÁNCHEZ

The Senate on Friday, May 11, gave its approval to a bill by Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, that allows the Board of Regents of the University of Texas System to establish a free-standing U.T. Health Science Center in South Texas that includes a medical school and other health-related degree programs.

“This lays the foundation for a full-fledged medical school by requiring that the first two years of a degree program for medical students be offered at the University of Texas at Brownsville,” said Lucio, who added an amendment with this provision to Senate Bill 420 as requested by Rep. Eddie Lucio, III.

The amendment adds Brooks, Jim Hogg, Kenedy and Zapata counties to the area to be served by the medical school. The original bill would have included only Cameron, Hidalgo, Starr and Willacy counties in the school’s region.

“The opening of a medical school in the Rio Grande Valley would help recruit doctors to an underserved area and provide students in the region an opportunity to attend a professional school,” said Sen. Lucio. “Currently, only one professional school exists south of San Antonio: the Irma Rangel School of Pharmacy at Texas A&M University in Kingsville.”

The new bill requires research and training facilities to be established within the existing infrastructure of the Regional Academic Health Center (RAHC) at U.T. Brownsville, U.T. Pan American and at Harlingen, with an estimated cost of $28 million for startup. Currently, there are eight medical schools in Texas, with the southernmost in San Antonio.

SB 420 is also important because it would increase the availability of physicians who are culturally sensitive to the area’s population. Miscommunication problems are less frequent when health care providers understand and are educated to work with the cultural composition of the population. Additionally, studies show that medical students from underserved areas are more likely to practice in those areas.

Texas also has a below-average doctor-per-capita ratio (152 per 100,000) compared to the rest of the nation (220 per 100,000), which compounds the health care crisis: a rapidly growing population with an increasing susceptibility to obesity, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease and cancer. By 2020 or 2025, the deficit could be as great as 200,000 physicians, or 20 percent of the workforce. Recent studies indicate that the Rio Grande Valley counties have been designated as Medically Underserved Areas by the Department of State Health Services.

The Higher Education Coordinating Board’s 2002 study on new medical schools stated that if additional schools were to be established, they should: (1) have a high population area served by significantly fewer than the state average number of physicians; (2) show the potential to address issues of geographic access, with physician workforce diversity; and (3) provide the state the ability to build on significant prior investments that it and other entities have made for medical education and services. The Rio Grande Valley and El Paso were listed as potential sites.

“We need to press ahead with a medical school in the South Texas region, or we will further shortchange the medical needs of the area and its people,” added Sen. Lucio. “It is time we get the process moving.”

The bill is now headed to the House for consideration.

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House passes border security bill to help fight border crime, improve homeland security coordination

By ALEXIS DeLEE

The Texas House of Representatives on Tuesday, May 8, gave final approval to House Bill 13 by Rep. David Swinford, R-Dumas, to improve the coordination of homeland security operations along the Texas border and reduce criminal activity.

All Valley state representatives supported the measure. It was scheduled for a public hearing on Monday, May 14, before the Senate Transportation and Homeland Security Committee.

Rep. Juan Escobar, D-Kingsville/Willacy County, and Rep. Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City, are joint authors of the bill.

Sen. John Carona, R-Dallas, is the Senate sponsor of HB 13.

“Mexican cartels take advantage of our porous border with Mexico to traffic drugs and other criminal activity throughout Texas and the rest of the United States,” Swinford said. “Portions of our border with Mexico are controlled by drug lords where murder and crime is skyrocketing. We must take control of our border, and this legislation will get us closer to that goal.”

Swinford’s legislation creates the Border Security Council whose members will be appointed by the governor and whose function will be to oversee the distribution of $103 million to border law enforcement agencies.

A legislative committee would be created to monitor this activity and report back to the legislature on the effectiveness of these programs. Concurrently, state funds could be leveraged with federal funds under legislation currently pending before Congress.
The bill also encourages cities and counties to cooperate with federal agencies in immigration matters, allowing for the withholding of homeland security funding in the event they actively disregard federal laws.

A legislative study will also be conducted to evaluate the expedited deportation of illegal immigrants held in state jails and prisons for criminal offenses.

“This is one of the most important pieces of legislation that we will pass this session as it affects the safety of every citizen of this state and country,” said Speaker Tom Craddick, R-Midland. “I want to thank Chairman Swinford for putting forth a bipartisan bill that will beef up the homeland security structure in Texas.”

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Congressman Cuellar addresses lack of outreach to border communities by federal government about plans for proposed border wall

By LAUREN SMITH

Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo/McAllen, on Monday, May 7, facilitated a video conference between federal and local officials to continue dialogue regarding the proposed border fence and address the lack of outreach to local citizens and officials.

The meeting included top-ranking officials from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Chief David Aguilar of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and SBINet Executive Director Greg Giddens. Staff members of Cuellar, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, local leaders and elected officials also participated, including Webb County Judge Danny Valdéz, Dennis Nixon of International Bank of Commerce, and Laredo Mayor Raúl Salinas.

During the video conference, CBP and DHS officials agreed to engage local communities in an outreach campaign and said they will continue communicating with border leaders before any action on the proposed fence is taken. Officials also explained that the proposed fence location was drafted before SBINet measures were implemented and that DHS officials will monitor the results of a pilot program in Ariz. to determine if these security measures are good for the entire U.S.-Mexico Border.

Cuellar said he will also coordinate a visit to study the pilot program in Arizona, with the intention of determining the feasibility of a similar project along the Texas-Mexico Border.

“We will look to find the best options to increase border security, including the possibility of SBINet technology,” said Cuellar. “The SBINet technology– including air surveillance, cameras, ground sensors and ground radars– would help minimize the number of miles of fencing along our borders.”

Aguilar, an Edinburg native, welcomed town hall meetings along the border as a part of the CBP outreach initiative.

“I will work to bring SBINet Executive Director, Border Patrol Chiefs, border mayors, county judges and other officials who are stationed along the Texas-Mexico borderto Laredo for a border town hall meeting in the near future,” said Cuellar.

“Two people who will become major players in how we secure our borders will be Chief David Aguilar and Greg Giddens. In addition, we need to involve our Border Patrol Chiefs because they are the ones in the trenches and protecting our borders,” said Cuellar.

DHS representatives stated that their top priority along the international border in Texas is not building a fence, but cooperating with local citizens and representatives to improve border security and efficiency. Cuellar has long been an advocate for such communication as well as for clearing the banks of the Rio Grande.

“I applaud the Department of Homeland Security for recognizing the need to maintain an open line of communication with citizens in border communities, and I want to thank everyone for working to have such a positive meeting regarding border security,” said Cuellar. “I will continue to advocate for efficient and beneficial solutions at the border in Texas, utilizing the best combination of technology, infrastructure and construction to secure our border.”

“My goal is to facilitate communication and progress between local citizens and the federal government. By helping to address the local needs with federal solutions, we will truly be on track to bring about progress at the border,” said Cuellar.

Cuellar is a member of the House Homeland Security, Small Business, and Agriculture Committees in the 110th Congress; accessibility to constituents, education, health care, economic development and national security are his priorities. Congressman Cuellar is also a Majority Senior Whip.

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Edinburg’s retail economy in February up almost 18% over same month in 2006

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

Edinburg’s retail economy in February 2007, as measured by the amount of local and state sales taxes generated by a wide range of local businesses, was up 17.75 percent over the same month in 2006, the Edinburg Economic Development Corporation has announced.

The EEDC is the jobs-creation arm of the Edinburg City Council.

It’s five-member governing board, which is appointed by the Edinburg City Council, includes Mayor Joe Ochoa, former Mayor Richard García, who serves as board president, Fred Palacios, Mike Govind, and George Bennack.

The figure translates into more than $1.4 million generated in local sales taxes in February, and sent back to the Edinburg city government on April 13 by the state comptroller of public accounts.

The local sales taxes are generated by the city’s 1 1/2 local sales tax and the 1/2 economic development sales tax that is administered by the EEDC.

Retail businesses are required to collect both the local and state sales taxes and send them to the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, which soon after returns the local sales tax back to communities in the form of a rebate,

The local sales tax is used to help pay for dozens of major city services, ranging from new streets to city personnel.

In February, Edinburg’s economy generated $1,406,491.03 in local sales taxes, compared with $1,194,371.11 in local sales taxes in February 2006.

During the first two months of 2007, Edinburg’s retail economy has generated almost $5.8 million in local sales taxes, up more than seven percent over the first two months of last year.

Edinburg registered the second-best showing in Hidalgo County in February, with McAllen outpacing all major cities in the Valley.

McAllen’s economy generated more than $5.5 million in local sales taxes in February, compared with more than $5.2 million during the same month last year, an increase of almost five percent.

According to the comptroller’s office, Hidalgo County also showed continued prosperity. In February 2007, all cities in Hidalgo County generated more than $11.8 million in local sales taxes, up 10.12 percent over February 2006, which reached more than $10.7 million.

During the first two months of 2007, all cities in Hidalgo County generated more than $52.6 million in local sales taxes, up more than 11 percent over the $47.2 million mark set in January and February 2006.

Neighboring Cameron County also registered economic growth, according to the state figures.

In February, all cities in Cameron County generated almost $5.9 million in local sales taxes, compared with more than $5.5 million during the same month in 2006, an increase of almost six percent.

Other major cities in Hidalgo and Cameron counties reported the following sales tax figures:

•Brownsville’s retail economy generated more than $3 million in local sales taxes in February 2007 compared with almost $2.8 million in February 2006, an increase of almost six percent;

•Harlingen’s retail economy generated more than $1.8 million in local sales taxes in February 2007, compared with more than $1.7 million in February 2006, an increase of five percent;

•Mission’s retail economy generated almost $1.1 million in local sales taxes in February 2007, compared with slightly more than $1 million in February 2006, an increase of 6.4 percent;

•Pharr’s retail economy generated more than $1.1 million in local sales tax activities in February 2007, compared with almost $1.4 million during the same month in 2006, a drop of more than two percent; and

•Weslaco’s retail economy generated more than $904,000 in local sales tax activities in February 2007, compared with more than $770,000 in February 2006, an increase of almost 17.5 percent.

Statewide, Texas Comptroller Susan Combs said the state received $1.53 billion in sales tax revenue in March, up 11.9 percent compared to March 2006.

State sales tax revenue for March, and April payments made to local governments, represent sales that occurred in February.

“The national economy is showing signs of a slowdown, particularly in the housing sector, but we are still seeing healthy growth in the Texas economy and a corresponding growth in state sales tax revenue,” Combs said.

Local sales tax revenues also continue to grow. Combs sent $404 million in April sales tax allocations to cities, counties, transit systems and special purpose taxing districts, a 9.7 percent increase compared to April 2006. So far this calendar year, sales tax allocations to local governments are up 6.4 percent.

Combs sent April sales tax allocations of $272.4 million to Texas cities, up 9.3 percent compared to April 2006. Calendar year-to-date, city sales tax allocations are running 7.1 percent higher than last year. Texas counties received sales tax payments of $24.8 million, up 11.1 percent compared to one year ago. Calendar year-to-date, county sales tax allocations are 8.4 percent higher than last year.

Another $12.5 million went to 115 special purpose taxing districts around the state, up 17.2 percent compared to last April. Ten local transit systems received $94.1 million in sales tax rebates, up 9.8 percent compared to a year ago.

For details of April sales tax payments to individual cities, counties, transit systems and special purpose districts, visit the Monthly Sales and Use Tax Allocation Comparison Summary Reports page on the Comptroller’s Web site at http://www.window.state.tx.us/taxinfo/allocsum/compsum.html.

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House Approves bill by Rep. Gonzáles to bring street lighting to colonias in rural areas

By RICARDO LÓPEZ-GUERRA

Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, welcomed House support for passage of House Bill 573, relating to street lighting in unincorporated areas along the border. The bill made it out of the House on Friday, May 11, at a critical time nearing the end of session, where it is expected to receive a hearing and be voted on in the Senate, bringing street lighting one step closer to the colonias.

Gonzáles is the prime author of the measure; joint authors include Rep. Rene Oliveira, D-Brownsville, and Rep. Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City. Rep. Eddie Lucio, III, D-San Benito is a co-author of the bill.

“Last session I worked to secure funding for installation of street lights in the colonias,” said Gonzáles. “The colonia residents provided support and compelling testimony to the Legislature how street lighting could make a huge difference in their neighborhood. I am confident that HB 573 will finally make lighting a reality for these residents.” Cameron County and Hidalgo County commissioners’ courts stood behind Gonzáles’ legislative measures to secure that lighting is delivered to colonia streets and both commissioners’ courts presented resolutions supporting HB 573.

Gonzáles added, “Passage of this bill establishes a better standard of living for residents by reducing crime and increasing security in the community. No neighborhood should be left in the dark, and I am hopeful that this bill will light the way for safer colonias.”

In 2005, Gonzáles passed legislation with the support of colonia residents. “The community support has been tremendous,” she said. “The initial legislation established for federal grant money to fund the installation of street poles and HB 573 gives the border counties a means by which to pay for the electricity to ensure that the street lights are provided.

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Senate approves resolution by Sen. Lucio to extend visa laser card to Mexicans

By DORIS SÁNCHEZ

The Texas Senate on Friday, May 10, gave its thumbs up to a Resolution by Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr. encouraging the U.S. Congress to enact the Secure Border Crossing Card Entry Act of 2007 to extend the laser visa length of stay from 30 days to six months granting Mexican visitors parity with their Canadian counterparts.

“Senate Concurrent Resolution 43 is a way for the Legislature to show support to our Texas Congressional delegation,” said Lucio.

The federal Act, sponsored by U.S. Sen. John Corny, R-Texas, and U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo/McAllen, would extend the length of stay to Mexican visitors to support the economic needs of Texas with the goal of successfully balancing national security with the benefits of legitimate trade and travel.

Bill Summers, President and CEO of the Rio Grande Valley Partnership, said, “According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, from Brownsville to El Paso, more then 120 million visitors cross a year from Mexico into Texas. According to surveys, they spend on average $152 per person per trip. For the state of Texas, that amounts to $3 billion in total expenditures; $417 million in taxes collected; and 63,314 jobs created.”

Lucio added, “We have been approached by several businesses and the banking community along the border to carry this bill.”

Summers compared the dollar value of U.S. commerce crossing the border during one month at Laredo, Texas from Nuevo Laredo equal to the sum value of U.S.-China trade for an entire year.

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Sen. Hinojosa passes bill to prevent dating violence in public schools

By MELISSA DEL BOSQUE

Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, and Rep. Dawnna Dukes, D-Austin, on Tuesday, May 8, passed House Bill 121 to help prevent dating violence in public schools.

Rep. Eddie Lucio, III, D-San Benito is a co-author of the measure.

“This bill takes a proactive approach by requiring schools to address teen dating violence and how to prevent it before a tragedy occurs,” Hinojosa said.

HB 151 requires school districts to include a plan to address dating violence prevention in schools. Schools already include procedures on how to address suicide prevention, conflict resolution and violence prevention.

Sheryl Cates, chief executive officer of the Texas Council on Family Violence, said the passage of the bill would provide an added safety net for youth attending school who may find themselves in an abusive relationship. The Texas Council of Family Violence found that 75 percent of young people in Texas ages 16 to 24 reported they had personally experienced dating violence or knew someone who had.

“With the passage of HB 121, requiring school districts to adopt policies addressing teen dating violence, we are providing enhanced safety for our youth who may be in abusive dating relationships,” Cates said. “This legislation will begin to help students in this situation to get help. Sen. Hinojosa has worked for the safety of victims and the prevention of family violence his entire public career, and this is another in a long line of his successful efforts to improve public policy in Texas.”

Hinojosa thanked Dukes for her leadership in the House and for being a longtime advocate in preventing dating violence. HB 121 will now be sent to the governor for his approval.

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Small contractors would have better access to state contracts under bill by Sen. Lucio

By DORIS SÁNCHEZ

Small contractors in Texas will gain an equal footing in competing for state projects through a bill by Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, that would expand an existing capacity building program.

Senate Bill 704 would add bonding assistance and safety training to the Small Contractor Participation Assistance Program, originally established in 1993 under the Texas Building and Procurement Commission. This legislation would implement and expand the program to include in-depth technical assistance in insurance and bonding, as well as safety training.

It was approved by the Senate on Wednesday, May 2. It is scheduled for a public hearing on Monday, May 14 in the House Committee on Government Reform.

“It is more difficult for small contractors to secure insurance and bonding than to find work,” said Lucio. “Public works contracts tend to be huge multi-million dollar agreements, and few small contractors win these contracts because they lack adequate bonding coverage to handle these large projects. My bill attempts to level the playing field.”

“Sen. Lucio’s bill will give small and minority contractors an opportunity to bid for more public works projects,” said Frank Fuentes, Chairman of the US Hispanic Contractors Association. “In turn, the state will save money through a more competitive bid process.”

Contracts for public works projects of over $1 million would be eligible under the program, which would benefit the state by increasing the number of businesses eligible to submit pubic works bids and lowering the risk of small contractors. The program would also implement a centralized system of purchasing certain coverage and bonds, as well as provide a public outreach plan to encourage participation.

“I believe that a coordinator under this program can provide one-on-one assistance to small contractors and walk them through the procurement process, particularly within facility renovation and building construction projects,” explained Lucio. “Networking with existing public and private contractors would be another resource provided.”

“This is a good program that will improve the small contractor’s access to bonding, increase the number of bids submitted for public works and expand the likelihood that small contractors will be awarded contracts.”

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Measure to establish organ donation registry supported by Rep. Gonzáles goes to governor

By NICK ALMANZA

Texas legislators have unanimously renamed the Texas Donor, Education, Awareness and Registry program (DEAR) the Glenda Dawson Donate Life-Texas Registry to honor the late state representative who received a kidney from her sister.

Senate Bill 1500 by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, was approved by the Senate on Friday, May 4.

Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, is a joint author of House Bill 2145, which is the companion (identical) bill to SB 1500.

SB 1500 is a follow-up to SB 24 and HB 120 (2005) by Zaffirini, which created the state’s organ and tissue donor registry.

It will enable the state’s organ and tissue donor registry to affiliate with the National Donate Life America alliance and campaign, allowing it to educate and reach more potential donors by using Donate Life America’s established brand equity.

“The more Texas increases public awareness and education regarding the importance of organ and tissue donation, the more lives will be saved,” Zaffirini said. “The bill would raise organ donor awareness statewide and would provide a fitting tribute to its champion, former Rep. Glenda Dawson, by making her the namesake of the Texas donor registry.”

Dawson, a transplant recipient, died last September.

“The general public’s response to donating blood is successful because of public education campaigns. I am confident that our efforts will achieve similar public awareness and will also honor my former colleague, Rep. Dawson, who not only championed the organ donor registration, but was a recipient of a kidney donation,” said Gonzáles.

Nationally, more than half of states have renamed their state registries to reference “Donate Life” a nationally known non-profit. By renaming the registry to reference the national non-profit, the State’s program will improve its campaign awareness among the public and share visibility to registries nationwide.

Information about becoming an organ donor is available via the internet at http://www.shareyourlife.org or http://www.texasdear.org.

(Ricardo López-Guerra contributed to this article.)

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House Democrats prioritize teacher pay raise while preserving property tax cut, say legislative leaders

By KEVIN VICKERS

House Democratic Leader Jim Dunnam, D-Waco, on Friday, May 11, led a bipartisan majority in passing an amendment prioritizing a $6,000 pay raise for teachers, librarians and school counselors.

Dunnam amended a bill that directed $2.5 billion to additional property tax cuts. Previously this year, the legislature passed a separate $14 billion property tax cut. The Dunnam amendment requires that teachers receive the $6,000—which will bring them up to the national average in teacher pay—prior to the additional property tax cut becoming effective.

“I voted for the big property tax cut, but additional property tax cuts cannot be our 1st, 2nd and 3rd highest priorities for the state. Today, a bipartisan Texas House majority stood up to (Speaker of the House) Tom Craddick (R-Midland) and said that improving our public schools is more important,” said Dunnam.

Dunnam explained that most of a record $14 billion state budget surplus has already been dedicated to reducing property tax rates by one-third. House Bill 2785 proposed an additional six percent rate reduction that would cost an additional $2.5 billion of state general revenue funds every two years. The Dunnam amendment made raising teacher pay to the national average a requirement for putting the additional rate cut into effect.

“Nothing is more important to our children’s future and our state’s economic future than making sure every child has a qualified teacher in the classroom,” Dunnam said. “With Texas teacher pay lagging almost $6,000 below the national average, the House said today that Texas schools are an important priority and rejected the leadership’s plan to spend almost every last penny of a record state surplus on big tax shifts that primarily benefit wealthy political contributors.”

Rep. Garnet Coleman, D-Houston, Chairman of the Texas Legislative Study Group, noted that the new business tax bill authored by the state Republican leadership in 2006 is falling billions of dollars short of paying for the property tax reductions already in place, and that additional tax rate cuts would drain off state funds needed to restore critical program cuts made in 2003 when there was a state budget shortfall.

“House Bill 2785 would have sent the few who benefit from the proposed tax cuts to the front of the line for state dollars and sent everyone else to the back,” Coleman said. “Today’s vote made it clear that our children’s teachers, full CHIP restoration, access to higher education, and other important priorities are just as important as property tax cuts.”

Rep. Pete Gallego, D-Alpine, Chairman of the Mexican American Legislative Caucus, observed that the House leadership was prepared to dedicate $2.5 billion more to property tax cuts when, just yesterday, the leadership had insisted there was not sufficient revenue available to fund a $3 billion cancer research fund and delayed full funding for cancer research until 2010.

“The legislative leadership’s budget priorities are not only morally wrong, they also don’t make any sense financially,” Gallego said.

“A House majority said today that if money is available to set aside for tax relief tomorrow, there is also the money to use today to improve our schools, restore CHIP and fund cancer research,” Gallego concluded.

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Measure by Rep. García to help military families adopt children is approved by House

By ELIZABETH LIPPINCOTT

Legislation by Rep. Juan M. García III, D-Corpus Christi, which would prohibit discrimination against military families who want to adopt children, passed the House of Representatives on Tuesday, May 8, and now moves to the Senate for consideration.

García introduced the measure, House Bill 3537, after military families across Texas complained that their frequent deployment status and frequent moves were counting against them when they were assessed for suitability as adoptive parents.

“Texas has a waiting list of 35,000 children waiting to be adopted. Yes, in a military family one parent is frequently away. But I believe that is greatly outweighed by the benefits that come with the military lifestyle, including healthcare, housing, daycare, and youth sports ” García said. “It’s important for our adoption rules to embody that.”

HB 3537 provides a safeguard for military families involved in the adoption process. The legislation is designed to dissuade child placement agencies and courts from having a negative view of military life based on the fact that a parent might be deployed or that the family will move periodically.

“A parent who’s in the military may not be home for dinner every night at 6:00 p.m., but that’s because they’re doing hard work that benefits others, and that’s worth making some sacrifices,” García said. “What could be a better lesson for a child to learn?”

García emphasized that the military supports adoptive families with leave policies, health care benefits, educational resources and reimbursement for certain adoption costs.

García, a career military officer, has four children, and his father was also a career naval aviator.

García represents the 32nd District in the Texas House of Representatives. Elected in 2006, he is an attorney and second-generation naval aviator. He lives in Corpus Christi with his wife Denise and their four children.

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Attorney General Abbott takes action against EZ Pawn Shop chain for exposing customers’ records

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott on Tuesday, May 8, took legal action against Texas-based EZCORP Inc., and its subsidiary, EZPAWN, for systematically exposing its customers to identity theft at stores in Texas, including the Rio Grande Valley.

According to documents filed by the Attorney General, EZCORP violated the law by repeatedly failing to protect customer records that contain sensitive personal information.

Investigators with the Office of the Attorney General discovered that several San Antonio EZPAWN stores exposed customers’ personal identifying information by discarding business records in easily accessible trash cans behind the stores. According to investigators, the records included promissory notes and bank statements that contained names, addresses, Social Security and driver’s license numbers, and checking account information.

“Identity theft is one of the fastest growing crimes in the United States,” Abbott said. “Texans expect their personal information to remain confidential. The Office of the Attorney General will take all necessary steps to protect consumers from identity thieves.”

Investigators also found evidence of similar instances of improper document dumping at a dozen other EZPAWN locations around the state, including stores in Austin, Houston, Lubbock and the Rio Grande Valley.

The defendants are accused of violating the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA) and the 2005 Identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act, which requires the safeguarding and proper destruction of clients’ sensitive personal information. Under the law, the Office of the Attorney General has the authority to seek penalties of up to $25,000 per violation of the DTPA and $50,000 per violation of the Identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act.

The Attorney General also charged EZCORP and EZPAWN with violating Chapter 35 of the Business and Commerce Code, which requires businesses to develop retention and disposal procedures for their clients’ personal information. The law provides for civil penalties of up to $500 for each abandoned record.

The Office of the Attorney General is investigating whether any exposed data has been used illegally. Consumers who interacted with EZPAWN stores should carefully monitor bank, credit card and any similar statements for evidence of suspicious activity. Customers should also obtain free copies of their credit reports.

Consumers who wish to file a complaint may contact the Office of the Attorney General at (800) 252-8011 or do so online at http://www.oag.state.tx.us, where they can also obtain information on identity theft detection and prevention.

The May 8 legal action against EZCORP is the Office of the Attorney General’s fifth identity theft enforcement action in recent weeks. In April, Abbott took legal action against CVS/pharmacy and RadioShack Corporation for exposing hundreds of customers to identity theft by failing to properly dispose of records that contained sensitive information.

In March, the Attorney General filed an enforcement action against Jones Beauty College in Dallas for improperly discarding student financial aid forms with Social Security numbers and other personal information. Also in March, Abbott took legal action against On Track Modeling, a North Carolina-based talent agency that abruptly shut down its Grand Prairie office and abandoned more than 60 boxes containing hundreds of confidential client records.

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Senate passes bill by Sen. Zaffirini to establish tax-free purchase periods for college textbooks

By NICK ALMANZA

The Texas Senate on Tuesday, May 8, passed Senate Bill 49 by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, which would provide financial relief to college students by allowing them to purchase textbooks tax-free at the beginning of the fall and spring semesters.

Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, is a co-author of the bill. Rep. Juan Escobar, D-Kingsville/Willacy County, is a co-sponsor the measure.

The bill would establish two 10-day periods per year during which a college student with a valid student identification card could purchase textbooks tax-free.

“The impassioned testimony before the Senate Finance Committee by students supporting SB 49 sends a clear message that college students are in need of financial relief from the escalating costs associated with higher education,” Zaffirini said. “I truly am delighted that this bill was passed by the Senate and thank Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and the student organizations who worked closely with me to pass SB 49.”

This is Zaffirini’s third attempt to pass this legislation. She authored similar bills during the 2005 Regular and Special Legislative Sessions.

The bill must be passed by the House of Representatives before it can be sent to Gov. Rick Perry for final approval.

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New law allows students with disabilities to participate in graduation, receive attendance certificates

By NICK ALMANZA

Gov. Rick Perry on Tuesday, May 8, signed into law Senate Bill 673, known as “Scooter’s Bill,” by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, and Rep. Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands.

Sen. Eddie Lucio, D-Brownsville, is a co-author of the measure.

Effective immediately, it will allow students with disabilities who are in individualized education programs (IEP) and who have completed four years of high school to participate in graduation ceremonies and receive attendance certificates. They would receive their diplomas upon completing their IEP.

“I was proud to sponsor and pass Scooter’s Bill and am delighted that it is now Scooter’s Law,” Zaffirini said. “The new law will provide students in IEP programs with the opportunity to graduate with their peers and obtain a sense of closure as their classmates move on from high school. This is a fitting and pleasant end to Scooter Long’s story of hard work and advocacy on behalf of students with disabilities.”

SB 673 is named “Scooter’s Bill” in honor of Gene “Scooter” Long, a Dallas IEP student who was denied participation in his class’s graduation ceremonies by the Dallas Independent School District.

The new law calls for a consistent policy throughout Texas. What’s more, it will allow students to continue their IEP programs after participating in commencement ceremonies and would not preclude their receiving high school diplomas upon completing the program.

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Texas A&M recruits STC students for early admission to medical school

By HELEN ESCOBAR

“We see the Valley as an area of shortages in many medical fields, but in particular for doctors. Our goal is to recruit students from South Texas College who are eager to take on the challenges of medicine, and who are willing to come back home and help to address the local health care needs,” said Dr. Juan F. Castro, associate dean for Coastal Bend Affairs for the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine. “We are recruiting students now as the turn cycle from medical student, to resident, to doctor takes seven or more years depending on the selected specialty.

We want to ensure that students attending South Texas College through its Dual Enrollment Medical Science Academy and Valley Scholars Program are aware of the Partnership for Primary Care Program, our early admissions program. We see these students who can maintain high academic standards as prime candidates for our College of Medicine.”

Any student involved in STC’s Valley Scholars Program or Dual Enrollment Medical Science Academy (DEMSA) who is interested in becoming a doctor is eligible for the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine Early Admissions Program. To be considered, students must apply and be taking courses at South Texas College in a relevant field of study. They must fill out and submit an application for early admission to the program, have an excellent academic track record, an SAT score of 1200 or above and a successful interview with the Texas A&M College of Medicine officials.

Once accepted to the program, students are guaranteed acceptance into the Texas A&M College of Medicine. In order to maintain their placement, students must maintain their high academic standards, earn their associate’s degree from STC and then transfer to Texas A&M University at College Station to complete their bachelor’s degree. Upon earning their bachelor’s degree, students will be able to automatically take their place at the Texas A&M College of Medicine and continue their studies.

“I can not stress what an amazing opportunity this is for any student who is considering becoming a doctor,” said Dr. Ali Esmaeili, associate dean for Bachelor Programs and University Relations for STC. “Placement at medical schools across the country is extremely competitive and most students must struggle and worry for years about whether or not they will be able to get in. STC students have the unique opportunity to guarantee their admission at the start of their college career. They see the light at the end of the tunnel and know that they are working toward their goal. This program is a huge advantage for students in Hidalgo and Starr Counties and I hope that they will start taking advantage of it now.”

In addition to offering early admission opportunities, the Texas A&M Health Science Center – College of Medicine through its offices in South Texas is willing to provide other tools to keep students motivated throughout the course of their studies.

“We want to provide guest speakers, workshops and other programs that can keep these students focused,” added Raymond Joyce, Partnership for Primary Care recruiter. “At times I see students who are thrilled to be part of the program, but for whatever reason, they get discouraged and do not complete the requirements. STC is a great partner for us because the college has so many support systems in place to ensure student success and we want to do our part to buttress that system.”

Students attending STC in the college’s Valley Scholar’s and DEMSA programs have access to free tutoring, one-on-one guidance and counseling, free college tours, book-sharing systems, as well as a variety of other benefits.d

“We are also looking at ways to include other bright and talented STC students who are not in the DEMSA or Valley Scholar’s Program, but who have shown a zest for medical sciences and have superior GPAs and extracurricular activities,” said Paul Hernandez, dean of Counseling and Advising for STC. “This is such a wonderful opportunity and we believe we can find a way to open it up to everyone in the near future.”

“We know this is a model partnership between STC, Texas A&M University and Texas A&M Health Science Center-College of Medicine, and will benefit students and the community,” concluded Dr. Castro. “We hope that we can develop similar programs in other fields such as pharmacy and dentistry as there are shortages in these areas also.”

For more information about the program contact Dr. Ali Esmaeili, associate dean for Bachelor Programs and University Relations at 872-7270.

Key border leaders pull no punches in condemning planned wall in Texas

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Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas, center, on Wednesday, May 2, emphasized opposition from border leaders to plans by the federal government to build a border wall that could disrupt commerce between Texas and Mexico without increasing homeland security. Salinas was joined at a State Capitol news conference by numerous political and business officials, including, from left: Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen; Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville; Salinas; Rep. Eddie Lucio, III, D-San Benito, and Rep. Tracy King, D-Eagle Pass.  Hinojosa, a U.S. Marine combat squad leader during the Vietnam War, called the proposed barrier “The Wall of Shame”.

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McAllen Mayor Richard Cortéz emphasizes the strong opposition to a planned border wall in deep South Texas that is being considered by the federal government as a way to curb illegal immigration. The wall would hurt the economies of the border region and Texas, Cortéz said during a May 2 press conference in Austin by the Texas Border Coalition. Featured with Cortéz are Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, and Eagle Pass Mayor Chad Foster, chairman of TBC. “No one wants border security more than we do. However, we support security that is smart, takes advantage of our natural geographic barrier – The Rio Grande River – and doesn’t repeat the mistakes of the past,” Foster said. “Building a wall along the Rio Grande River accomplishes none of these goals.”

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Former Cameron County Judge Gilberto Hinojosa (center) proudly displays the Senate Resolution honoring him for his years in public service presented on Tuesday, May 1 in the Texas Senate Chamber by Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville (left). Joining Judge Hinojosa are Gina Hinojosa-Donisi (daughter) with her son Mateo, Xochitl Hinojosa (daughter) and Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen (no relation to judge’s family).

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Presidential candidate John McCain, Texas Border Coalition both oppose construction of border wall

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Presidential candidate and U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona (second from left), reviews plans by the City of Laredo to help curb illegal crossings from Mexico into their community during his recent visit to that community where he met with the Texas Border Coalition, an alliance of elected leaders and economic development officials from the 14 counties which border Mexico. TBC is championing major improvements for border security, and increased commerce and travel through the legal ports of entry along the Texas-Mexico border, says TBC chairman Chad Foster, who serves as mayor of Eagle Pass. But Foster adds that the group stands united against plans that call for paying billions of dollars for fencing – more commonly referred to as a wall – to be constructed along the U.S.-Mexico border. “The Texas Border Coalition has a resolution that we are against the wall,” said McAllen Mayor Richard Cortéz. “Sen. McCain said he was also against the wall. He recognizes there have to be some kind of barriers to protect the border, but he favored more technology, more sensors. He felt the wall was a waste of money.” See related story later in this posting.

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Gilberto Garza, Jr., formerly interim superintendent for the Edinburg school district, on Tuesday, April 24, was appointed permanent superintendent by the Edinburg school board.

In naming Garza as superintendent, the school board provided him with a 14-month contract that runs through June 2008 and a salary of $172,000, plus a $1,000 monthly stipend for auto allowance, cell phone, and other incidental expenses. The school board approved the contract on a 6 – 0 vote, with trustee Jaime Chavana absent for the vote.

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The South Texas Border Business Contracting Expo Planning Committee is looking for Valley businesses interesting in obtaining government and corporate contracts. The STBBCE is scheduled for June 21 at the McAllen Convention Center. Seated Brenda Lee Huerta, McAllen Hispanic Chamber; Robert Chavarría, U.S. Small Business Administration; Froy Garza, Office of Congressman Henry Cuellar; and Desiree Méndez-Caltzontzint, Office of Congressman Rubén Hinojosa. Standing are Elizabeth C. Martínez, The Business Times of the Rio Grande Valley; Beth Walker, Rio Grande Valley Partnership; Minnie Lucio, Cameron Works; Matt Ruszczak, the University of Texas-Pan American Small Business Development Center; Alex Brimer, UTPA Veterans Business Outreach Center; Johnny Clark, Thomas/Price and Associates; Esperanza Pérez, SBDC; Maggie Treviño, Central & South Texas Minority Business Council; and Mark Winchester, SBDC. For more on this story, please see article later in this posting.

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Presidential candidate John McCain, Texas Border Coalition both oppose construction of border wall

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, who is also a candidate for President in 2008, covered a wide array of issues crucial to Texas and the border region, including the opposition to a proposed border wall between the U.S. and Mexico, during a key session in Laredo on Monday, April 16, with the Texas Border Coalition.

The Texas Border Coalition is an alliance of elected leaders and economic development officials from the 14 Texas counties that border Mexico.

“It was a rare and special occasion to have the opportunity to have a sit-down, face-to-face meeting with a presidential candidate,’ said Eagle Pass Mayor Chad Foster, chairman of the Texas Border Coalition. “We had a lot of issues to discuss, but the focus was on immigration reform and especially border security, which is the top priority, not only for Texas, but for the nation.”

As part of his visit with TBC, McCain shared his belief that the nation’s immigration policies must be humanitarian.

“We talked about the illegal acts of people who come here illegally, but the exploitation and the mistreatment of people who come to our country who have no protection under our law — terrible things happen and terrible things are done by coyotes that are unspeakable,” McCain told the Laredo Morning Times and other border news media.

TBC is championing major improvements for border security, and increased commerce and travel through the legal ports of entry along the Texas-Mexico border, but the group stands united against plans that call for paying billions of dollars for fencing – more commonly referred to as a wall – to be constructed along the U.S.-Mexico border.

“The Texas Border Coalition has a resolution that we are against the wall,” said McAllen Mayor Richard Cortéz. “Sen. McCain said he was also against the wall. He recognizes there have to be some kind of barriers to protect the border, but he favored more technology, more sensors. He felt the wall was a waste of money.”

Increased funding for the U.S. Border Patrol, lighting, vehicle barriers, sophisticated high technology sensors, and access roads are among some of the options to a wall that have been proposed to increase border security.

“We were very happy with most of the issues he shared with the border mayors and county judges. We will continue to have a friend in Sen. McCain for us to advance the needs for the southern border, for our national government to favor us more financially to improve our ports of entry. There has been a lot of investment in the infrastructure and personnel in our ports of entry,” Cortéz reported. “Overall, I believe we all left the meeting feeling pretty good that we had a senator who was going to support, substantially, the positions of the Texas Border Coalition,”

Brownsville Mayor Eddie Treviño Jr., who also participated in the TBC session with McCain, shared his thoughts about the meeting, particularly what he called the “wall to nowhere.”

“As border leaders, I believe Sen. McCain heard our united focus and concerns about immigration reform and the proposed ‘wall to nowhere’. We alerted him to the fact that the Secure Fence Act, which calls for the building of the wall, included a provision directing the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security to investigate, study and then make recommendations on how to better secure our border with Canada. We all felt that this same method of fact-finding should have also been utilized as to our border with Mexico before, not after the passage of this legislation. Border security must take into account our border economies, and not take them for granted.”

Among the positions McCain has publicly taken on the issue of immigration are the following proposals:

•Vastly improve border surveillance and enforcement capabilities;

•Increase the manpower, infrastructure and capabilities necessary to block, apprehend, detain and return those who try to enter the country illegally;

•Strengthen the laws and penalties against those who hire illegal aliens and violate immigration law;

•Achieve and maintain the integrity of official documents to stop fraud, verify immigration status

and employment, and enforce immigration law; and

•Encourage immigrants to come out of the shadows so we know who is in this country and develop a

sensible guest worker program that will serve the nation’s best economic and security interests.

Laredo Mayor Raúl G. Salinas noted the significance of the Arizona senator’s meeting with the organization. “We welcome people from all parties and want someone with an open mind to do what’s right for mankind, especially as we go through immigration reform,” Salinas told the Laredo Morning News.

Foster, Cortéz, Treviño, and Salinas were joined at the Laredo session with McCain by other key members of the coalition, including Del Rio Mayor Efraín Valdéz; Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas; Cameron County Judge Carlos Cascos; and Webb County Judge Efraín Valdéz.

Mike Allen, TBC vice-chairman representing the McAllen Economic Development Corporation, said the gathering was the latest in a series of efforts “to continue bringing the border region together on key issues that affect all of us.”

The other members of TBC are: Pat Townsend, Jr., TBC treasurer representing the Mission Economic Development Agency; Brownsville Mayor Eddie Treviño, Jr.; Edinburg Mayor Joe Ochoa; El Paso Mayor John F. Cook; Hidalgo Mayor John David Franz; Maverick County Judge José Pepe Aranda; Mission Mayor Norberto Salinas; Pharr Mayor Leopoldo Palacios, Jr; Roma Mayor Fernando Peña; and Weslaco Mayor Joe V. Sánchez.

The Texas Border Coalition maintains a web site at http://www.texasbordercoalition.org.

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Rio Grande Valley Partnership supports high-security driverslicense, opposes creation of a border wall

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

A proposed new type of drivers license that would help Texans more easily travel in and out of Mexico, while increasing border security, has been endorsed by the Rio Grande Valley Partnership, which also has come out against calls for a “border wall” that would separate the U.S. from Mexico.

The Rio Grande Valley Partnership is a regional chamber of commerce for deep South Texas. Active at many different levels, including economic development and state and federal legislative affairs, it is headquartered in Weslaco.

On Thursday, April 26, the Rio Grande Valley Partnership approved Resolution No. 2007, which endorsed the passage of Senate Bill 2027 by Sen. Elliot Shapleigh, D-El Paso, that proposes the establishment of a pilot program that could lead the the issuance of high-security drivers licenses for state motorists.

Resolution No. 2007 also objects to the federal Secure Border Initiative, a plan that calls for the construction of barriers, most commonly referred to as a “border wall”, between the U.S. and Mexico.

The action by the Rio Grande Valley Partnership is consistent with the positions that have been previously taken by the Texas Border Coalition, an alliance of elected leaders and economic development officials representing the 14 Texas counties which border Mexico.

The Valley Partnership’s Resolution No. 2007 contends that any such border wall, “be it fences, barriers, or other mechanisms, is inhospitable, a stark contrast to the gracious and genteel qualities that characterize local border communities; moreover, its construction, particularly through the application of eminent domain, is insidious, an affront to the pride and privilege of land ownership.”

Such barriers could cost billions of dollars, according to federal government estimates, and opponents say those resources could be better used for other homeland security measures that would not hurt international commerce, economic development, and good will between the two nations.

“As the regional chamber of commerce, the Rio Grande Valley Partnership works to build business and to foster goodwill with our neighbors in Mexico,” said Bill Summers, its president and chief executive officer. “A border wall goes against everything this organization has been working towards for more than sixty years, and everything our local business work towards every day. By our resolution today, we commend Sen. Shapleigh in the Texas Legislature for his proactive efforts to create mechanisms that facilitate business and goodwill, rather than some federal initiatives that wedge barricades against them.”

Measures such as Shapleigh’s SB 2027 are much better and more effective solutions that help improve homeland security, the Rio Grande Valley Partnership maintains.

As proposed, SB 2027 authorizes the Department of Public Safety to initiate a permissive high security driver’s license pilot program, to adopt rules to implement the program, and to enter into a memorandum of understanding with any federal agency for the purposes of facilitating the movement of people between Texas and Mexico, according to the bill analysis of the measure.

SB 2027 was unanimously approved by the Senate Committee on Transportation and Homeland Security on April 24, and is awaiting a scheduled date for action by the full Senate.

According to the bill analysis of SB 2027, recently, the State of Washington enacted a high security driver’s license pilot program to provide enhanced driver’s licenses and personal identification certificates (certificate). Under this program, applicants have the option of choosing standard or enhanced driver’s licenses or certificates. Those who choose an enhanced license or certificate receive a license or certificate that appears standard, but contains a radio frequency identification chip that will include certain information that can be scanned at entry points on the border. Noted advantages of the enhanced license or certificate include lower costs and faster turnaround time compared to a passport. It may benefit both the state and persons traveling between Texas and Mexico to implement a similar program.

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Edinburg school board names Gilberto Garza Jr. as new ECISD superintendent

By GILBERT TAGLE

The Edinburg Consolidated ISD Board of Trustees has named Gilberto Garza, Jr. as the new superintendent of schools for the Edinburg school district.

Garza has been serving as the interim superintendent of schools since last December. He was named acting superintendent last August before the start of the 2006-2007 school year.

In naming Garza as superintendent, the school board provided him with a 14-month contract that runs through June 2008 and a salary of $172,000.

Garza has resided in Edinburg since he graduated from San Isidro High School in 1966. He received his Bachelor’s of Science and Master’s Degree in Education from the University of Texas – Pan American. Other certificates that he has received include supervisory, mid-management and superintendency from UTPA.

He served as a teacher and as a principal at Hargill Elementary, De la Viña Elementary and San Carlos Elementary, before becoming the district’s Director of Elementary Education in 1997.

Garza is married to the former Anita Requenez of Edinburg (a retired teacher) and they have two children and four grandchildren. Garza comes from a family of educators whose siblings are either retired administrators or retired teachers.

In making the announcement, Melba González, president of the school board, said, “Gilbert Garza is a proven leader in education and education administration in the Edinburg school district. His 30 years of experience as a teacher, a principal, and as Director of Elementary Education have made him a well-rounded and respected educational leader.”

“In the period that Gilbert Garza has served as acting superintendent, the Edinburg school district has made many important strides that have taken the district forward,” said González. “Under his leadership, the district has taken measures to address the need for additional classroom space at the elementary level; the renovation of a school facility to serve as a new middle school; and the implementation of a comprehensive program to improve the safety at the campuses for all students and staff.”

“Gilbert Garza has proven that he can lead this great district with great vision, understanding, temperament and respectability for all teachers and campus staff as well as for the Edinburg community,” she added.

The Edinburg CISD is the second largest school district in the Rio Grande Valley. It spans over 945-square miles (largest in the state) and has a student membership of 29,000 plus and more than 4,200 employees.

As an administrator and interim superintendent, Garza will have the huge responsibility of guiding and influencing the direction of an education program that will serve the needs of all students in one of the Rio Grande Valley’s fastest growing school districts.

Carmen González (no relation to Melba González) , vice president for the board, said “Gilbert Garza is the type of leader that inspires the best in others to come out.”

“His leadership and character serve to unite and inspire passion among his teachers and principals, paraprofessionals and classified employees to do the best job they can and not forget that the whole purpose of education is to Teach the Children.”

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Congressman Hinojosa votes for phased pull-out of U.S. troops from Iraq by March 2008

By ELIZABETH ESFAHANI

Rep. Rubén Hinojosa, D-Mercedes, on Wednesday, April 25, joined a majority in the House of Representatives to approve the conference report on the U.S. Troop Readiness, Veterans’ Health and Iraq Accountability Act.

This measure demands accountability from the Bush Administration, delineates a phased plan for the Iraqis to take responsibility for their own future, and outlines a timeline for the redeployment of U.S. combat troops from Iraq. Specifically, the report calls for the redeployment of U.S. combat troops to begin by October 2007, at the latest, with a goal of being completed by March 2008. This represents the approach recommended by the bipartisan Iraq Study Group, which also called for a goal of redeployment being completed by March 2008.

Hinojosa said:

“Today I cast my vote for a plan that will take Iraq in a new direction. While I will continue to see that our military has all the equipment and training they need, I cannot support an Administration policy that puts more troops in harm’s way with no clear goals on how to win the fight.

“It is time the President be made accountable for his gross mismanagement of this war. The Administration did not have accurate information four years ago when we went to war with Iraq and they do not have an accurate picture of the situation now.

“Instead, our troops are now caught in the middle of a civil war between religious groups that have hated each other for centuries. The task of imposing and growing democracy in a place where it has never been is not the job for our military. It must come from the political will of the Iraqi people.

“Only the Iraqis can decide whether they want to put aside centuries of discord and come together to create a stable, democratic country where the rights of every group is recognized. This bill demands that the Iraqi government take responsibility for its own future.

“Now is the time to reevaluate our strategy in Iraq. We need to redeploy our troops so they are not targets and the source of increased tension. We need to show the Iraqi government that they must step up to the plate now and make the hard political decisions necessary to save their country. They will never do this if we continue to prop them up.

“I call upon the President to sign this bill and show his support for our troops and veterans. A veto would only be another case of the President’s destructive irresponsibility.”

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Edinburg’s jobless rate in Marchbest in Valley again at 4.4 percent

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

Edinburg’s jobless rate, which is a key indicator of the strength of the local economy, remained the lowest in the Valley for the third consecutive month in 2007, averaging 4.4 percent in March, an improvement from 4.8 percent in February and 4.9 percent in January.

The city’s unemployment rate was keeping pace with the statewide average in March of 4.3 percent and the U.S. unemployment rate of 4.5 percent.

In 2006, the annual jobless rate for Edinburg was 5.3 percent, while in 2005, the annual jobless rate for Edinburg was 4.7 percent.

In 2006, the city’s jobless rate was the lowest in the Valley during five months, according to the Edinburg Economic Development Corporation, and Edinburg registered the second-best showing for most of the other months last year, edged out only by McAllen.

The EEDC is the jobs-creation arm of the Edinburg City Council.

The EEDC’s five-member governing board includes Mayor Joe Ochoa; former Mayor Richard García,

who is president of the EEDC board of directors; and Fred Palacios, Mike Govind, and George Bennack.

As of March, according to the Texas Workforce Commission, 1,245 Edinburg residents were looking for jobs, while 26,969 local residents were employed.

The jobless rate, also known as the unemployment rate, is the number of persons unemployed,

expressed as a percentage of the civilian labor force.

The civilian labor force is that portion of the population age 16 and older employed or unemployed.

To be considered unemployed, a person has to be not working but willing and able to work and actively seeking work.

The jobless rate for Hidalgo County was 6.5 percent in March, an improvement from 7.4 percent in February and 7.7 percent in January.

The March jobless rate for Hidalgo County represented 17,623 area residents without jobs, while 254,508 residents were employed during the third month of 2007.

McAllen had the second lowest monthly unemployment rate in March – 4.6 percent – or 2,698 of their citizens out of work, while 55,864 residents of the City of Palms were employed that month. In February, McAllen’s jobless rate was 5 percent, while in January, its jobless rate was 5.1 percent.

Harlingen’s unemployment rate in March was 4.9 percent, while Pharr posted a 5.3 percent jobless rate that month.

Mission came in with a 5.4 percent unemployment rate in March, followed by Weslaco at 5.9 percent.

In Cameron County, Brownsville’s unemployment rate in March came in at 5.9 percent.

Cameron County’s jobless rate in March was 5.8 percent. In March, 8,356 residents of Cameron County were looking for work, while 135,427 residents were holding down jobs.

According to the Texas Workforce Commission:

The March seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped to 4.3 percent, down from 4.5 percent in February and 5.0 percent a year ago.

Seasonally adjusted nonagricultural employment in Texas grew by 15,000 jobs in March. This increase followed a revised gain of 32,100 jobs in February 2007.

With an annual job growth rate at 2.3 percent, the Texas economy gained 225,500 jobs over the past 12 months. The Midland Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) experienced the lowest unemployment rate in the state at 2.9 percent (not seasonally adjusted).

The Odessa MSA was second at 3.3 percent, followed by the Amarillo MSA at 3.4 percent.

“Our falling unemployment rate and continued job growth are clear-cut indicators of a healthy Texas labor market,” said Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) Chair Diane Rath. “The Texas unemployment rate now stands at 4.3 percent, below the national unemployment rate of 4.4 percent.”

Leisure & Hospitality posted the biggest gain, adding 5,300 jobs in March. Trade, Transportation & Utilities followed with 4,400 jobs added over the month and 21,600 jobs added in the past 12 months. Professional & Business Services went up by 3,600 jobs over the month, for a 4.0 percent gain since March 2006.

“Sustained job growth drives our state’s economic development,” said TWC Commissioner Representing Employers Ron Lehman. “Employers are recording impressive annual job growth rates in industries, including Mining at 11.6 percent and Construction at 4.2 percent.”

Jobs in Construction increased by 2,100 positions in March, following February’s substantial gain of 7,900 jobs. In the past 12 months, the industry has added 25,300 jobs.

“Employment is up, and that means more workers are finding jobs,” said TWC Commissioner Representing Labor Ronny Congleton. “The labor force in Texas is now at an all-time record, with more than 11,078,300 workers employed.”

Initial claims for Unemployment Compensation in March 2007 were 52,901, down 2.1 percent since March 2006.

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Judge J.D. Salinas pushes for improvements on U.S. Highway 281 north of Hidalgo County

By CARI LAMBRECHT

Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas III and leaders of cities along U.S. Highway 281 recently met to discuss plans to convert the main northbound route from Hidalgo County into an interstate-like non-stop thoroughfare.

The purpose of the “U.S. 281 Coalition” meeting, called by Judge Salinas, was to garner support for the highway’s inclusion in plans for Interstate 69, a trans-national trade route envisioned to be the shortest and fastest link between the economic centers of the United States, Mexico and Canada. Because the majority of cross-border trade moves by truck, I-69 is needed to increase mobility, safety, air quality and fuel economic development opportunities.

There have been discussions about whether to designate U.S. 281 or U.S. 77 as the route for I-69. Factors such as environmental impact studies, cost-benefit analysis and economic considerations will be key determinants. A commission will ultimately make the final decision — both highways could be included in the final plan — but regardless, U.S. 281 needs to be prepared.

“The bottlenecks have got to go,” said Salinas.

Several TxDOT-proposed improvements along U.S. 281 would make it more attractive for the I-69 project. The proposed improvements are:

1) Direct connectors from U.S. 59 Eastbound to IH-37 Northbound and from U.S. 59 Westbound to U.S. 281 Southbound in George West;

2) An overpass in the school zone in Ben Bolt; and

3) A possible tolled relief truck route around Premont or tolled freeway though Premont. Construction is expected to start as early as the end of this year on seven miles of freeway with three overpasses in Falfurrias.

“First and foremost, making these improvements along U.S. 281 is vital to relieving congestion, increasing safety, facilitating trade and improving our evacuation routes,” said Salinas.

“In addition, wherever TxDOT puts I-69 will determine growth. The question we aim to answer is how do we position ourselves to benefit from the economic activity that will be generated from increased trade along this route? What the coalition does collectively impacts the economic future of the entire region.”

Discussions about U.S. 281/I-69 are by no means over. Salinas will meet with the County Judges of Jim Wells, Live Oak and Brooks counties just before a quarterly meeting of the I-69 Alliance from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Friday, May 4, 2007, in Corpus Christi.

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Rep. Martínez votes against voter ID bill, contends it amounts to a “modern day poll tax” on the poor

By SCOTT JENKINES

Rep. Armando “Mando” Martínez, D-Weslaco, on Tuesday, April 24, joined Democratic Senators, leaders from the America Association of Retired Persons, the League of Women Voters, and other groups Monday in opposition House Bill 218, which would require voters to present a qualified voter ID before casting a ballot.

The legislation was approved by the House of Representatives, with all Valley state representatives voting against the measure on third reading, which is the final vote taken on a measure.

Martínez said HB 218 was “an assault on Texans’ voting rights,” contending the bill, if passed into law, which would substantially decrease voter participation in Texas.

“I find it very hard to believe that there are individuals out there who are still trying to make it difficult for minorities and seniors to vote, but that is what happened with the passage of HB 218”, Martínez believes. “We all live in a country where one’s right to vote is the very foundation of our society. When a person is issued a voter’s registration card, that should be sufficient. There is no reason to require and implement additional hurdles for the voting public.”

Passed in the House on a party-line vote, if the “voter suppression bill”, as Martínez labeled it, becomes law, it will require voters to present a photo ID card at the polls, in addition to a valid voter registration card, in order to vote. As a practical matter, this requirement would disenfranchise thousands of elderly and minority Texans by denying the right to cast a ballot that counts, he said.

“A recent study commissioned by the Federal Election Assistance Commission found that, in 2004, states with Voter ID laws, such as HB 218, have experienced a 10% drop in the turnout of Hispanic voters. We should find ways to encourage individuals to go out and vote, not ways to discourage voting,” Martínez said.

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Texas GOP says voter ID legislation will help crack down on voter fraud, protect election integrity

The Republican Party of Texas on Tuesday, April 24, applauded Rep. Betty Brown, R-Terrell, for authoring and passing legislation which would require photo identification to vote in Texas. The Texas House of Representatives voted 76 to 68 to pass House Bill 218 by Representative Betty Brown.

All Valley state representatives voted against HB 281 on third reading, which is the final vote taken on a bill. Those legislators are all Democrats.

“We applaud Rep. Brown for authoring and passing a common sense bill which safeguards the electoral process from voter fraud. Her leadership and perseverance served the voters of Texas well today,” said Hans Klingler, spokesman for the Texas GOP.

House Bill 218 would codify what most Texans do already which is provide some form of photo identification to cast a ballot in Texas. The bill has a fail-safe system for eligible voters over 80 years of age by exempting these individuals from this legislation. Since 2004 Attorney General Greg Abbott, also a Republican, has prosecuted several cases of voter fraud in Texas, including one case in Bee County in South Texas where the accused posed as their deceased mother to vote after her mother had passed away.

“House Bill 218 will ensure that an eligible voter’s ballot is not cancelled out by someone who is casting a ballot fraudulently. This is a safeguard which is supported overwhelmingly in Texas and long overdue,” continued Klingler.

House Bill 218 will now move to the Texas Senate where it will be considered in the coming weeks. Lt. Governor David Dewhurst, a Republican, has signaled publicly his support for the bill.

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Counties could provide street lighting to rural areas under legislation authored by Rep. Gonzáles

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

Texas counties located within 150 miles of the Mexican border would be able to establish, maintain, and charge rural residents for street lighting in neighborhoods that are outside the city limits under a measure filed by Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen.

The legislation, House Bill 573, was approved by the House Committee on County Affairs on Monday, April 24, and is awaiting action by the House Local and Consent Calendars Committee, which sets the date for House votes on noncontroversial or unopposed bills.

It was requested by the Hidalgo County Commissioners Court.

In addition to Gonzáles, who is the prime author of the bill, joint authors include Rep. René Oliveira, D-Brownsville, Rep. Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City, Rep. Norma Chávez , D-El Paso, and Rep. Richard Raymond, D-Laredo. Rep. Eddie Lucio, III, D-San Benito, is a co-author of the measure.

According to the bill analysis of the bill:

Currently, municipalities have the authority to assess fees for the costs of installation, operation and maintenance of street lighting to the citizens that it benefits. However, in unincorporated areas, a county does not have this same authority even when residents of a subdivision are perfectly willing to incur a cost in order to obtain street lighting.

The version of Gonzáles’ bill approved by the House committee will grant authority to certain counties so that they may distribute the cost of installation, operation and maintenance of street lighting to the citizens it benefits, currently a common practice within municipalities and further allows the county to contract with an outside party for the collection of those fees.

House Bill 573 amends Chapter 280, Transportation Code, by adding Section 280.003 to provide counties that have any of their territory within 150 miles of the border the ability to charge residents of unincorporated areas for the installation, operation and maintenance of street lighting. It also adds a provision which ensures that the section does not supersede applicable provisions for street light service contained in the tariff of an electric utility.

If approved by the Texas Legislature and Gov. Rick Perry, the bill would go into effect on September 1, 2007.

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Sen. Zaffirini, Rep. Guillen appointed to conference committee that will hammer out state’s budget

By NICK ALMANZA

Lt. Governor David Dewhurst on Wednesday, April 25, named Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, to the appropriations conference committee that will write the final draft of the $153 billion state budget. The committee comprises five senators and five representatives who will reconcile the Senate and House versions of the appropriations bill.

This is Zaffirini’s seventh appointment to the appropriations conference committee. She is serving her third consecutive term as vice chair of the Senate Finance Committee, on which she has served since 1991.

“I truly am grateful that Lt. Governor Dewhurst again appointed me to the appropriations conference committee, and I am committed to working closely with him and my fellow conferees to produce a comprehensive and cooperative budget that prioritizes families,” Zaffirini said. “My priorities include providing funding for the maximum reduction of community-based and home services waiting lists, which includes more than 90,000 Texans; providing essential funding for early education and higher education excellence; and funding for important programs and projects statewide and in Senate District 21.”

During conference negotiations Zaffirini will work to increase the Senate’s $107.1 million to reduce community-based, home services and care waiting lists and to fund the $75 million in the Article XI “wish list.” Zaffirini also will seek $150 million in new grants for the Instructional Facility Allotment (IFA) that helps poor school districts with facility construction.

Included in the Senate’s version of the budget are funding increases for both the UT Health Science Center in San Antonio (UTHSCSA) and Texas A&M International University in Laredo. Among Zaffirini’s priorities are increased funding for early childhood education, the Texas Early Education Model (TEEM) and advanced research programs within the Higher Education Coordinating Board.

The committee substitute for House Bill 1 by Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa, and Sen. Steve Ogden, R-Bryan, reflects more than a six percent increase over the 2005 budget. The Senate version spends approximately $2.1 billion more than its House counterpart.

Senate Finance Committee members named by Dewhurst to the appropriations conference committee are Senators Ogden, chair; Robert Duncan, R-Lubbock; John Whitmire, D-Houston; Tommy Williams, R-The Woodlands; and Zaffirini.

House Appropriations Committee members named by Speaker Tom Craddick are Representatives Chisum, chair; Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City; Dan Gattis, R-Georgetown; Lois Kolkhorst, R-Brenham; and Sylvester Turner, D-Houston. Conferees will develop a final proposal that will be voted on in both chambers before the session ends on May 28.

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Sen. Cornyn, Texas border sheriffs meet with DHS Secretary on immigration reform, border security

U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, the top Republican on the Immigration and Border Security subcommittee, met with Texas border sheriffs and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff on Tuesday, April 24, in Washington. The meeting, held at Cornyn’s request, focused on issues important to the border region, including border security, immigration reform and funding for law enforcement efforts.

It is essential that local officials along the border continue to have input as we work to secure the border,” Cornyn said. “This meeting was a good opportunity for Texas border sheriffs to voice their needs and concerns directly to Secretary Chertoff.”

The meeting was part of Cornyn’s ongoing efforts to ensure the voices of state and local officials are being heard in Washington. He has continually worked in the Senate to assist the law enforcement community with resources to crack down on violence, drug smuggling and other crimes.

On hand for the discussion were members of the Southwest Border Sheriffs Coalition (SWBSC) from Texas and other border states, including Sigifredo González, Jr., of Zapata County, Texas —Chairman of the SWBSC Intergovernmental Relations Committee. Leaders of the Texas Border Sheriffs Coalition and the National Sheriffs Association also participated.

“We must provide those who work on the front lines of border security every day the resources they need to do their jobs,” Cornyn said. “I will continue working closely with law enforcement officials and other local leaders on the border as we work to improve border security and reform our broken immigration system.”

Cornyn reiterated his support for the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP), which reimburses states and counties for the costs of detaining illegal immigrants arrested in connection with crimes other than immigration violations.He said Congress must provide adequate funding for the program. In addition, Sen. Cornyn co-sponsored an amendment last year to provide $50 million for border law enforcement.

Cornyn said reforming our immigration laws and securing our borders is among the top priorities this year for Congress. “We’ve taken some needed steps to improve border security, but we can and must do more,” he said.

The Southwest Border Sheriffs Coalition unites sheriffs’ departments in counties along the border in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California in their law enforcement efforts.

Earlier this year, Sen. Cornyn hosted a similar meeting in Laredo with Texas border mayors, county judges and Secretary Chertoff.That meeting came as a follow-up to a discussion in Washington co-hosted by Cornyn and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas.

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Sen. Hutchison address border issues with Southwestern Border Sheriffs Coalition

By GEOFF EMBLER

Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX), Chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, on Wednesday, April 25, hosted a meeting with the Southwestern Border Sheriffs Coalition in her Washington, D.C. office to address border security issues and federal funding for costs associated with immigration enforcement.

“We must support and gather input from border sheriffs who are on the ground working to secure our borders,” Hutchison said. “Local officials dealing with these threats must be part of the solution, and I am committed to providing them with the resources they need to safeguard our nation.”

Hutchison has long advocated federal support for border security duties carried out by local officials.

In September 2006, Hutchison announced the Texas Border Sheriffs Coalition would receive a $4.9 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice to provide equipment and supplies for the Operation Linebacker Task Force. She has consistently backed measures that provide funding for increased border security personnel and infrastructure, including the $250 million Border Law Enforcement Relief Program and the State Criminal Alien Assistance Program.

Hutchison hosted a February 9, 2007 meeting with Cornyn, U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and border mayors and local leadership to give them an opportunity to provide local input on border fencing concerns.

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House approves bill by Rep. Gonzáles to set up “Genuine Texas” branding program for industry

By RICARDO LÓPEZ-GUERRA

State Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, on Thursday, April 26, saw passage by the House of Representatives of one of her legislative initiatives, the so-called “Genuine Texas” branding program.

Gonzáles is one of five joint authors of the measure, which calls for the establishment of a branding program to be named “Genuine Texas” for products manufactured in the state.

The legislation, which still has to clear the Senate, would develop a campaign to provide a competitive edge for Texas manufacturing industry by creating the logo for Texas-made goods for consumers to identify.

“The ‘Genuine Texas’ campaign will be the ‘Don’t Mess With Texas’ of this century,” said Gonzáles. “I am excited for this bill’s potential to encourage consumers to support Texas manufactured goods. We have seen the effective efforts through the Texas Parks and Wildlife anti-littering campaign; ‘Don’t Mess With Texas’ and I look forward the implementation of this program that will further fuel Texas manufacturing.”

Under the measure, House Bill 3446, a fee of up to $100 can be charged for the right to use the exclusive state logo, “Genuine Texas”. The branding program would also establish product quality standards for Texas manufacturers, set penalties for violations of improper use of the logo by manufacturers and create an advisory board of members.

“Texans have a long honored legacy of state pride and this bill promotes state pride through support of the manufacturing industry here at home,” said Gonzáles.”While the manufacturing sector is a strong contributor to the State’s economy, the branding program would keep the state competitive against increased cheap labor available overseas which could take manufacturing jobs away from Texas.”

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Sen. Lucio says Senate ready to act on Rep. Flores’ bill to exempt travel trailers from property taxes

By DORIS SÁNCHEZ

Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, author of the Senate legislation that would exempt certain recreational vehicles from ad valorem taxation, announced on Friday, April 27, that the bill has gained full approval from the House and will soon be considered by the entire Senate.

Rep. Kino Flores, D-Palmview, authored the companion bill to Lucio’s in the House.

The bill specifies that because recreational vehicles (RVs) are not real property and are not substantially affixed to real estate or permanent fixtures, owners of these RVs must pay sales taxes on their units and maintain current auto vehicle registrations. Therefore, this property tax has created a hardship for many of these occupants, especially since their average age is 69. Eighty percent of Winter Texans live in mobile RVs.

“This unfair tax impacts so many of our Winter Texans because they are generally the people who own the kind of recreational vehicle that is currently assessed this tax,” said Lucio. “My bill primarily ends the practice of subjecting to ad valorem taxation those travel trailer owners who are not local residents and are not offered the right to participate in local government, like real property owners.”

The Rio Grande Valley benefits from the $450 million in revenues these visitors inject into the economy. However, the usual 150,000 Winter Texans who visit every year is down 20 percent from 2002, when the tax became effective. A constitutional amendment in 2001 inadvertently allowed counties to impose a tax on RVs.

“The increased sales tax revenue and tourism dollars generated by the influx of visitors as a result of lifting this tax will far outweigh any property tax revenue loss in those counties, and as a result there will be no quantifiable harm to school funding,” added Lucio. “Since only a few counties in Texas, including Cameron and Hidalgo, tax these trailers as real property, there should be no significant loss to general revenue.”

This bill also provides a narrow definition of park model travel trailers for taxation purposes that conforms to the existing definition already in state statute, and is also the nationally recognized standard. This bill clarifies that structures that are primarily used for temporary living arrangements, built on a single chassis, and less than 400 square feet are exempt from ad valorem taxation.

The senator added, “We are looking to protect park model travel trailer purchasers from unjust double taxation. Passage of this bill will encourage tourism and economic activity in the state of Texas and help local businesses by encouraging more people to stay in Texas for an extended period of time.”

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Senate passes Sen. Zaffirini’s SB 1052 to provide financial incentives for community college students

By NICK ALMANZA

The Texas Senate on Tuesday, April 24, passed Senate Bill 1052 by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, which would provide financial incentives for students who complete core curriculum requirements at community colleges to transfer to four-year institutions.

Providing incentives for students to transfer from two- to four-year institutions would increase college accessibility and affordability while helping increase attendance and participation at universities throughout Texas. The bill significantly would help close educational gaps within the state and promote student success and institutional excellence.

“The rapid growth of our state, coupled with the goal of enrolling another 600,000 students in higher education, require planning and incentives,” Zaffirini said. “By promoting transfers from two- to four-year institutions, we increase students’ options for success. SB 1052 is essential to closing the gaps in higher education by providing an incentive for students to transfer from two- to four-year institutions.”

The bill must be passed by the House of Representatives before it can be sent to Gov. Rick Perry for final approval.

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Gov. Perry announces drop in border crime as a result of Operation Wrangler III

Gov. Rick Perry on Tuesday, April 24, announced the reduction of crime by 30 percent in the El Paso area during a recent border security operation known as Operation Wrangler III. Operation Wrangler III was a high-intensity surge operation that lasted 30 days in the El Paso border region.

“The success of this border security surge operation demonstrates once again that more boots on the ground, working together as a team, increases our safety and border security,” Perry said. “When criminal organizations are forced to shut down their smuggling activities, our communities are safer, and the quality of life improves for all Texans.”

As in previous state-led surge operations, the objective of Operation Wrangler III was to shut down organized smuggling activity between the Ports of Entry to prevent the illegal crossing of drugs, contraband and people into Texas. Local sheriffs’ offices and police departments worked side-by-side with their state and federal partners in three Texas counties (El Paso, Hudspeth and Culberson counties) and two New Mexico counties (Dona Ana and Luna counties) to deny Mexican criminal organizations and transnational gangs entry into the U.S.

A key benefit of securing the border is crime reduction. Operation Wrangler III resulted in the overall reduction of crime by 30 percent during the 30 day period of operation. The El Paso Sheriff’s Office documented an 82 percent reduction in aggravated assaults and 43 percent reduction in robberies. The El Paso Police Department reported a 16 percent reduction in robberies and 26 percent reduction in sexual assaults during the period of this operation.

“We are sending a clear message that an increased law enforcement presence is the key to securing our border,” Perry said. “Working with numerous state, federal and local agencies we can reduce drug trafficking, human smuggling and other crime in a significant way.”

In addition to the successes of Operation Wrangler III, border-wide surge operations have had a sustained impact on crime along the entire Texas-Mexico border. With 13 of the 18 border counties reporting, January-April of this year saw a 20 percent decrease in overall crime along these border areas compared to the same period of time last year. The 13 counties include Brewster, Culberson, Dimmit, El Paso, Hidalgo, Hudspeth, Maverick, Pecos, Star, Terrell, Val Verde, Zapata and Zavala.

The statistics from local law enforcement agencies in these 13 counties comparing January-April, 2006, to January-April, 2007, revealed the following overall results:

• Criminal Mischief reduced 34 percent

• Theft reduced 30 percent

• Burglary reduced 13 percent

• Aggravated Assault reduced 16 percent

• Sexual Assault reduced 59 percent

• Murder reduced 15 percent

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South Texas Border Contracting Expo Expo to bring contracting opportunities to South Texas businesses

By ELIZABETH MARTÍNEZ

The 2007 South Texas Border Business Contracting (STBBC) Expo will be held on June 20-21 at the new McAllen Convention Center located at 700 Convention Center Blvd. The expo will offer area small businesses and manufacturers an opportunity to obtain contracting awards by government buying agencies, federal prime corporations and other corporate purchasers.

Honorary Co-Chairs of the 2007 STBBC Expo are Congressman Ruben Hinojosa (District 15) and Congressman Henry Cuellar (District 28).

The McAllen Hispanic Chamber of Commerce President and Chair of the STBBC Expo Planning Committee Cynthia Sakulenzki is expecting approximately 150 exhibitors, such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, the University of Texas System Office of Facilities,

Planning and Construction, Texas Department of Transportation, Texas Lottery

Commission, Texas Transportation Institute, Texas Workforce Commission, Texas Health and Human Services Commission, and the University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio.

This exciting event will not only include an exhibit hall filled with agencies and corporations looking to do business with South Texas businesses, but will also include match-making sessions, and four different training tracks that incorporate several seminars that will help businesses succeed in obtaining contracts. Networking events and optional Valley excursions, such as a Maquila Tour, a golf tournament at Palm View Golf Course, and lunch in Progreso, Mexico will be available to help participants acquaint themselves with each other and the region.

To register or for more information on how you can participate in the 2006 STBBC Expo, please call the McAllen Hispanic Chamber at 928-0060 or visit http://www.borderbusinesscontractingexpo.com. Conference cost for small businesses is $50 per person. Sponsorship opportunities are available. Deadline to register is June 1, 2007.

The 2007 STBBC Expo Planning Committee includes representatives from the following organizations: Texas State Technical College, U.S. Small Business Administration, S.C.O.R.E., the University of Texas-Pan American Veterans Business Outreach Program, UTPA Texas Manufacturing Assistance Center, McAllen Chamber of Commerce, Southwest Community Investment Corp., Texas Department of Agriculture Rural Economic Development Division, Rio Grande Valley Partnership, The Business Times of the Rio Grande Valley, Thomas/Price & Associates, Time Warner Fable, Office of Hidalgo County Judge, UTPA Small Business Development Center, Texas Department of Agriculture, Central & South Texas Minority Business Council, and the UTPA HUB Program.

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Senate passes Sen. Zaffirini’s bill to protect against “botnets,” cybercrimes

By NICK ALMANZA

The Texas Senate on Thursday, April 26, passed Senate Bill 1009 by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, which combats the use of “botnets” — networks of compromised computers used to perpetrate cybercrime.

Senate Bill 1009 will prohibit the creation of botnets and penalize convicted violators with significant fines.

“Botnets are being used by criminals around the globe to steal bandwidth from hijacked computers and make money from nefarious Internet activity,” Zaffirini said. “They are used primarily to send messages or software without the user’s knowledge, to make a computer resource unavailable to its intended users, to commit click fraud or to steal personally identifiable information. My bill combats the use of botnets by updating Texas’ cybercrime statute and strengthening laws to protect valuable Texas e-commerce.”

SB 1009 clearly will define the term “botnet” as a collection of computers that become compromised without the knowledge of the owner or operators. Compromised computers either run under a command and control infrastructure or are used to forward transmissions, including unsolicited e-mails and viruses, to other computers with online access. What’s more, the bill would authorize civil penalties for using botnets, including a cause of action for victims, and provide injunctive relief and the recovery of actual damages or $500,000 per violation.

The bill must be passed by the House of Representatives before it can be sent to Gov. Rick Perry for final approval.

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House passes Congressman Hinojosa’s amendment to improve America’s science laboratories

By ELIZABETH ESFAHANI

Congressman Rubén Hinojosa D-Mercedes, on Tuesday, April 24, applauded the passage of legislation that will help reinvigorate and modernize America’s ailing high school science laboratories. The House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the “10,000 Teachers, 10 Million Minds Science and Math Scholarship Act,” which included the Partnerships for Access to Laboratory Science amendment that Hinojosa introduced earlier this year.

“For more than 150 years, lab experiments have been an essential ingredient in a comprehensive science education,” said Hinojosa. “Unfortunately, the quality of today’s laboratory instruction is woefully under-par in most schools. Our future scientists and engineers are attending institutions that lack the resources required to develop their talents.”

Specifically the amendment authorizes a $5 million grant to establish a laboratory science pilot program at the National Science Foundation. Projects funded by the grant will go toward enhancing the quality of instruction and developing models for redesigning laboratories in high-poverty high schools.

Hinojosa’s legislation could not have come at more critical time: The National Research Council recently released a report concluding that the current state of laboratory experiences is poor for most students. The group also found that schools with higher concentrations of non-Asian minorities and higher concentrations of poor students are less likely to have adequate lab facilities than other schools. In fact, the latest Nation’s Report Card revealed an astonishing figure: only one in four Black or Hispanic students take the three major laboratory sciences – biology, chemistry, and physics – needed to pursue science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) majors during college.

“With these types of statistics, it should come as no surprise that we are losing our edge in producing experts in math, science, and engineering,” said Hinojosa.“We must redouble our efforts to engage young people in these fields early on in their academic careers. Our nation’s future competitiveness depends on it.”

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Senate passes SB 1234 to enhance Texas’ higher education master plan

By NICK ALMANZA

The Texas Senate on Thursday, April 26, passed Senate Bill 1234 by Senators Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, and Kirk Watson, D-Austin, which would redefine planning for higher education. It would require the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board (THECB) to redirect its higher education master plan to prepare students to participate effectively in the state’s public affairs and in the global economy.

To meet the goals of closing the gaps in higher education, SB 1234 would provide greater specificity as to how the Coordinating Board develops its plan and would ensure that the state is best able to address the needs of its students and institutions.

“SB 1234 combines three effective bills that will enhance greatly the state’s ability to create higher education excellence,” Zaffirini said. “In Closing the Gaps, Texas established an ambitious plan to ensure that more students are able to receive an outstanding college education. My and Sen. Watson’s bill improves this plan by directing the Coordinating Board to consider more detailed and more specific issues leading to statewide higher education success.”

“This legislation offers a roadmap to make Texas a force in the 21st Century economy,” Watson said.”Texas can and must do a better job of preparing future generations for the possibilities and challenges that lie ahead.Here, we will approach higher education through a long-range lens, and that holds great promise for our children and our state.”

The bill would require THECB’s master plan to define the missions and roles of public institutions of higher education consistently with state needs and goals; establish more effective methods for funding higher education; establish a coherent long-term financial aid strategy that takes into account both needs and merit; strengthen collaboration between two- and four-year institutions; and develop and institutionalize long-term collaboration between primary, secondary and higher education.

What’s more, it includes provisions from SB 1055 by Zaffirini, which would direct the THECB to consider the number of new faculty members needed to achieve the goals of Closing the Gaps, as well as the disciplines in which these faculty members would be needed; the number of qualified persons available to serve as faculty members in Texas and throughout the nation and the demand for their services; and the capacity of institutions in Texas to prepare future qualified faculty members.

SB 1234 includes provisions from SB 1919 by Watson, which would charge the THECB with considering the state’s allocation of and need for resources for medical education, including graduate medical education; geographic distribution of these resources; and the value of associating a medical school with a top-tier academic campus.

The bill also includes provisions from SB 1772 by Watson, which would charge THECB with discovering incentives and requirements for seamless student transitions between and among high schools, community and technical colleges, universities, and health-related institutions, including concurrent enrollment and dual credit; examining the current and projected capacity concerns of The University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University in College Station; methods for ensuring that these institutions maintain their competitiveness with other flagship universities; the creation of additional flagship public research universities; alternative methods of funding universities and community colleges, in particular whether and how research universities should be funded; and a new component of the TEXAS Grant program to include a work study program that targets students in grades P-12 to ensure that they become college ready.

The bill must be passed by the House of Representatives before it can be sent to Governor Rick Perry for final approval.

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Congressman Cuellar announces $4 million renovation of Falcon Dam

By LAUREN SMITH

Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo/McAllen, on Friday, April 27, announced that a $4 million federal grant has been awarded for the renovation of the facilities at Falcon Dam. Located near the dividing line between Starr and Zapata Counties, the Falcon Dam facilities will be renovated internally and externally.

“The renovation of facilities at our international borders is vital to increasing the efficiency and security of our border communities. In Congress, we are working hard to make sure that citizens in these communities benefit from federal funding and resources,” said Congressman Cuellar.

Originally constructed and dedicated on Oct. 19, 1953, the federal facilities at Falcon Dam serve as a point of entry between Mexico and the United States. President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Mexican President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines originally dedicated the facilities and spoke of a lasting international friendship.

“I want to thank Elsie Acevedo from the General Services Administration and Chris Cantú from the Customs and Border Protection for their efforts in making the renovation of Falcon Dam a reality, and I also commend the partnership between federal and local agencies,” said Cuellar.

“Securing federal funds for vital projects in Texas’ 28th District is a key priority of mine. When our communities prosper and grow, all of South Texas and our friends across the border reap the benefits,” said Cuellar. “Enhancing trade and tourism while maintaining and improving border security is a critical issue in border communities, and I will continue work hard to increase access to federal aid for projects in these areas.”

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Senate Passes SB 120 by Sen. Zaffirini to help preventing online solicitation of minors

By NICK ALMANZA

The Texas Senate on Monday, April 23, passed Senate Bill 120 by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, which would help protect children from online solicitation and exploitation by establishing a clearinghouse of educational resources related to Internet safety at the Texas School Safety Center.

The bill also would direct school districts to update their discipline management programs to prevent the use of the Internet for sexual solicitation and would increase the penalty for an adult convicted of online sexual solicitation of a minor.

“Children are especially vulnerable to victimization over the Internet,” Zaffirini said. “More and more children are using the Internet on a daily basis, which provides offenders with easy and anonymous means to find and exploit them. SB 120 addresses this growing problem by increasing the educational resources regarding online solicitation that are available to families and schools and by providing school districts with programs designed to combat and prevent online solicitation of minors.”

SB 120 works in conjunction with Zaffirini’s SB 6, which the Senator passed in March. SB 6 increases the penalty for sexually explicit on-line communications with a minor who is from 14 to 16 years old from a state jail felony to a third degree felony and increases the penalty for on-line sexual solicitation of a minor who is from 14 to 16 years old from a third degree felony to a second degree felony.

SB 6 also will require internet service providers (ISP) to respond immediately to subpoenas, search warrants or other court orders during an emergency; will allow prosecutors to seek consecutive prison sentences for the online solicitation of a minor; direct the Crime Stoppers Advisory Council to use state rewards programs to emphasize reporting and apprehending predators and criminals; and create a clearinghouse of ISP contact information in the Attorney General’s office so prosecutors can access important information necessary to prevent online predatory behavior.

The bills must be passed by the House of Representatives before they can be sent to Governor Rick Perry for final approval.

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University of Texas-Pan American moves spring graduation to new McAllen Convention Center

By MELISSA VÁSQUEZ

This spring semester, The University of Texas-Pan American will be changing the venue for the commencement ceremonies, scheduled for Saturday, May 12, from the UTPA Fieldhouse to the new McAllen Convention Center, located on South Ware Road and Expressway 83.

The University’s decision to move the commencement venue was prompted by the increase in UTPA graduates and their guests over the years said Dr. Ana María Rodríguez, chair of the Commencement Committee and senior vice provost for undergraduate studies. This semester, the 1,452 prospective candidates for degrees include 1,103 for bachelor’s degrees, 336 candidates for master’s degrees and 13 for doctoral degrees.

“Our fieldhouse can only accommodate so many people. When we began to issue a limited number of tickets to students, they began to request that we look at holding commencement at a location where we could accommodate more people. Therefore, the administration’s decision to change the venue was made in response to student needs and with a great deal of student input. The safety of graduates, their families and guests was also an issue that was considered,” Rodríguez said.

The McAllen Convention Center will seat 528 graduates and 4,894 guests, while the UTPA Fieldhouse seats between 450-500 graduates on the floor and 3,700 guests on the bleachers.

The committee took two years in exploring several venues around the Rio Grande Valley before settling on the $62 million facility she said. The committee found the UTPA commencement calendar, which is planned three to four years in advance, and the convention center calendar were a good match for this academic year.

“The McAllen Convention Center is a new venue in the Rio Grande Valley that is able to accommodate a large number of people for one event,” she said. “The staff at the convention center has worked well with us in planning and designing the event, since an event such as this will be a first. There is also ample parking spaces available to accommodate the guests.”

This semester, prospective graduates will be allotted 12 tickets for their family members and guests to comply with the Fire Marshal’s Code of maximum seating capacity for the convention center. In previous semesters they were designated six tickets each. Guests attending the commencement ceremonies will be required to present a ticket to be admitted.

“Graduates, their families, guests and audience can expect grand ceremonies, solemn and celebrative, as they have always been at the UTPA Fieldhouse, but now held in a brand new majestic center,” Rodríguez said.

Also this semester, the University will go to a three-ceremony format starting at 9 a.m. with the College of Education, which features 393 prospective graduates, the largest group in any of the six colleges. At 1:30 p.m. the College of Business Administration (224) and College of Health Sciences and Human Services (240) will share the arena. The final ceremony of the day at 5:30 p.m. will combine the College of Arts and Humanities (223), College of Science and Engineering (218) and College of Social and Behavioral Sciences (154).

Serving as the 2007 spring commencement speakers will be Noé Hinojosa Jr., president and CEO of Estrada Hinojosa & Company, Inc., who will be speaking at 9 a.m.; Edward H. Muñoz, principal of Muñoz Group, who will be addressing the 1:30 p.m. ceremony; and Sylvia M. Courtney, vice president of engineering for Raytheon Company, will speak at 5:30 p.m.

For more information or special accommodations, contact the Office of the Registrar at 956/381-2389 no later than Thursday, May 10.

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Congressman Ortíz details frustrations faced by veterans because there is no VA Hospital in RGV

U.S. Rep. Solomon Ortíz, D-Corpus Christi, testified Thursday, April 26, before the U.S. House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs’Committee’s Subcommittee on Health about the plight of veterans in South Texas who have to travel many hours for health care services that are not available to them near where they live.

Several members of the Veteran’s Alliance of the Rio Grande Valley were in attendance, showing committee members the faces of veterans in need. Veteran’s Alliance members attending the hearing were: José María Vásquez, Rubén Córdova, and Max Belmarez, Polo Uresti, Frank Albiar, and Félix Rodríguez.

Ortíz’s testimony:

Mr. Chairman, thank you for this opportunity to speak on behalf of South Texas veterans and help this subcommittee understand the urgent need for a veterans’ hospital for the men and women who fought for us.

Here with me today are members of the Veterans Alliance of the Rio Grande Valley/America’s Last Patrol – so you can see the faces of the South Texans affected by the lack of a hospital. Here with me are: José María Vásquez, Córdova, and Max Belmarez … and Mr. Félix Rodríguez.

My legislation gives the government flexibility in establishing a way to deal with hospital services in South Texas… but the only real solution for the area is a hospital. Bottom line: veterans’ in-patient health care must be available where the veterans live, not several hours away. These guys have fought, bled and sacrificed for this nation – they need something that belongs to them … a hospital that gets them the care they need where they live – not five hours away.

We know the VA plays the numbers game – but the numbers do not reflect the need… particularly in the Rio Grande Valley. When the VA commissioned their CARES study they recognized the Far South Texas area was in need of acute inpatient care. They decided to meet this demand through contracting or leasing beds in local communities, an approach simply not working. Veterans are still traveling in large numbers to Audie Murphy in San Antonio for care, and for many who are treated for emergencies at area hospitals, the bills go unpaid by VA.

Many veterans are so disgusted by the level of VA health services, they simply do not sign up for VA health care. You have heard me describe the conditions of South Texas Vets; today I want to show you experiences of veterans themselves … veterans who shed blood for our nation … veterans whose health care is utterly inferior. South Texas veterans regularly travel five hours there and back to a 15 minute appointment that took months to get.

Sometimes they need to stay overnight in San Antonio… sometimes, veterans find after the strenuous trip, their appointment has been canceled. We’ve scrubbed the names to prevent any retaliation for truth telling…. And my time will run out before I’m done, but want you to hear the stories I hear:

1) A 21-year-old Iraq war veteran came home badly wounded in his spine. He’s now at Audie Murphy in San Antonio. He was being moved by hospital staff from the bed to a wheelchair – but they moved too quickly and damaged his spine even more. He has a lifetime of going back and forth to San Antonio for treatment … and his family has a lifetime of committing to take him there regularly.

2) One veteran underwent emergency heart surgery; his wife called the local clinic and she was directed to call 911; he was admitted for the emergency surgery locally. His benefits coordinator told him to follow up with a local cardiologist to chart his progress since there wasn’t a cardiologist at the clinic. He did, but VA did not pay and on the third visit, the cardiologist’s office told him to pay up front for all services.

The VA clinic then told him he should have gone to a cardiologist in San Antonio. By now, his sutures were infected and leaking. Eventually, he got an appointment to see a VA cardiologist five weeks later. The stress from all this prompted his psychiatrist to increase the dosage on his meds.

When he got to San Antonio, the cardiologist was surprised to learn he had surgery. He was prescribed more high blood pressure medication. That made him faint from low blood pressure, panicking his wife … she called a home health nurse who suggested stopping all meds and going immediately to the hospital.

He did not want to go the hospital because they had not been paid and he might be refused. He was poor – so the nurse recommended that he drink a coca cola with crackers, which helped temporarily. Due to a faulty medical records system, he was prescribed too much medication. Since then, he travels to San Antonio to monitor his heart.

He travels five hours, has a ten minute procedure done, and once was told to return in 48 hours. He did not qualify for lodging so he returned to the Valley. After two days he returned for a procedure that took under five minutes. That equals two trips to San Antonio in two days … traveling about 25 hours … to be seen a total of 15 minutes.

3) A retired disabled veteran is in the midst of several surgeries to correct service injuries, in numerous visits to San Antonio, the nearest VA hospital to the Valley. When he had shoulder surgery, he spent the night in his car so the anesthesia could wear off… and he didn’t take any pain medication so he could make the four hour drive back home. He had to stop several times along the way to vomit from the pain. He also had to sleep once slept in his car in San Antonio to make an early appointment because by the time he arrived in San Antonio all the rooms available for veterans had been taken.

4) A constituent’s brother had a triple by pass done in San Antonio Audie Murphy Veterans Hospital in 2005. During the course of his recovery at home, he developed complications that needed to be monitored closely. The VA medical provider told him that he needed to be monitored closely; then later that day, got a call from the VA Clinic that he needed to go to the nearest hospital taking Veterans.

Once there, he was moved by ambulance to another area hospital, where he was admitted after advising the hospital he was a Veteran and showed his ID Card. The hospital got the clearance from San Antonio VA and admitted him. His medical bills there have not been paid because the VA is claiming that “VA facilities were feasibly available to provide the care.”

The VA said his brother could have traveled to San Antonio under the dangerous medical problems he was having. His brother does not want to “rock the boat” because of his heart condition and other medical problems. In a sense, he is held hostage by our government.

5) A family member said this: Congress should also hear about the hardship that the vet’s family must also endure. She has a full time job but must miss work, taking leave, to take a loved one to San Antonio. She cannot let him go by himself whenever they do procedures that require anesthesia or manipulation of his neck or spine.

He is usually in so much pain and/or drowsy with medication that he cannot drive. He has a hard time sitting for long periods, and San Antonio is five hours away. They must also make arrangements for the kids if they are not getting back before school’s out. A couple of times he’s had to go alone because she couldn’t leave work or find another driver. Then she is so worried about him driving that she cannot function at work, going out several times to call to make sure he is OK.

She also notes the travel pay is woefully insufficient, given gas prices. They have to fill up twice to get there and back, plus pay for meals. She notes that hospitalized vets would be better off near friends and family to keep them in good spirits.

6) A Vietnam vet still being treated for post-traumatic stress disorder; has two sons, both active-duty military, who have served multiple tours in Iraq. After a late-night phone call from a son saying that he’d been hurt in an IED explosion, his Post Traumatic Stress surfaced … when he called to see the psychiatrist, he was told the soonest appointment was in six months.

7) The district director for the Veterans of Foreign Wars in the Valley says VA provides good medical care. The doctors and staff do the best they can with what they have. The problem is getting into the system to get the care. He says, “We believe we’ve earned the right to see a doctor where we live.”

8) State Rep. Aaron Peña says what isn’t spoken is the sense that veterans are being ignored despite the long history of Hispanics’ service to the U.S. military. We’ve fought in almost every American war … and we’re still being ignored.

9) The disabilities of a Port Isabel veteran who served 2 tours in Viet Nam are made worse by a round trip on a crowded van, and an overnight stay in a dirty hotel. 14 months ago he went to a private emergency room, which then sent him by ambulance to San Antonio to treat a kidney infection. VA still has not paid for the emergency visit – ironically today, April 26, is his deadline to pay the local hospital $10,000 since VA won’t pay.

10) An Iraq veteran is haunted by some of the terrible things he saw in combat leading to depression and thoughts of suicide. His friend got him to go to the VA office … where he was referred to the VA hospital in Waco for evaluation for post-traumatic stress. He was told him he needed to begin regular sessions, and said he’d get an appointment in the mail. Three weeks later, he got a letter from VA that he could see the doctor in eight months.

11) Another veterans notes: “It’s hard to hold a job when you have to miss work four or five times a month to travel to San Antonio for medical appointments.”

12) One veteran has utilized the V.A. health care systems in Reno, Nevada and Fargo, North Dakota, and he reports both were very good. Conversely, his experience with the clinics in Harlingen and McAllen are “ongoing nightmares.” Lately he’s been trying to get an appointment with the psychiatrist in Harlingen. Every time he calls, he’s put on hold and eventually hangs up after waiting and waiting. He was not alone among veterans who suspect some manner of “federal racism” when our nation is only anxious to send border patrol agents, but no hospital to treat military veterans who live here.

13) A daughter who misses her dad says her father served in the U.S. Army and came home needing psychological care catered to what a veteran experiences – and taking into consideration the stigma a Hispanic man feels with depression. She lost her father to suicide and wishes that care was available.

14) Another veteran learned the VA now accepted that Agent Orange could have affected sailors in the Tonkin Gulf. The VA did not respond to him since he was not a “wounded veteran.” He also has diabetes for which they will not treat him. He believes they want to wait until he cannot care for himself at all rather than helping him prevent the devastation of diabetes while he can.

15) A former military wife said her ex husband and daughter now live in San Antonio and her son has plans of retiring there too – merely to be closer to military medical facilities. Veterans are forced to choose between living near home and family, or living near health care.

16) Another veteran notes many Soldiers from the Valley can not afford the trip, much less the expense it takes to visit these facilities. He notes many veterans have died never getting the Medical attention they needed. He calls the VA health system in South Texas a “disastrous situation.”

17) A former sergeant says: the cruel irony of extra stress on various disabilities caused by traveling 5 hours to a VA hospital makes conditions even worse. And like several others I heard from, he issued an invitation for any of my colleagues here today to join them the 5 hour ride to SA in the van.

18) A retired Major notes local access would promote early diagnosis and early cure for ailments that would otherwise generate higher treatment costs if left untreated. He also has the novel suggestion of using hospital ships as a veteran’s hospital.

19) A retired Air Force sergeant – who is covered by Tricare benefits – knows he is lucky to have access to local Medical facilities. Always a soldier, he volunteered to drive the van to San Antonio. He would drive from Raymondville to Brownsville to pick up veterans at 6 a.m. then to San Benito then Harlingen and then back Raymondville, where the actual trip to San Antonio commenced.

He reiterated what many people said: It’s not a straight five-and-a-hour trip since they had to stop various times for rest rooms breaks. And he was prohibited from helping the vets in and out of the van out of liability concerns. Most Veterans he drove had to wait hours to be seen for just a 15 minute visit, then they began the long trek back.

20) The widow of a Vietnam-era vet said he died nine years ago of a heart attack and almost certainly from a lung problem associated with his exposure to Agent Orange. He never pursued a diagnosis because the San Antonio facility was too far and he was not able to make the trip. The one time he did for hearing loss from a mortar concussion while in Viet Nam, he found that the number of people they were trying to serve was too great for quality care. He never went back again.

21) A Captain with the 1st Cav in Iraq was wounded in 2003 by IED that ruptured both ears drums and left his right side littered with pieces of shrapnel, many still remain. He plans to retire in the next four years. He said he’s gotten good treatment while on active duty, but worries about the time when he retires, and no local VA Hospital in the area. He talks regularly with local Veterans that can not afford to make the drive to San Antonio because they can’t afford the gas or can’t drive or have no one to take them.

22) Another veteran echoes many voices in saying south Texas veterans should be treated by local medical resources. He lives in Corpus Christi, but worries about what the cost of transportation does to an aging veteran’s population with higher poverty rates in the Rio Grande Valley. Extended trips place unnecessary physical stress on veterans, it places a financial burden on valley veterans and their families as well.

He sustained a head injury, which resulted in a visible dent in the skull. After headaches and memory issues, the V.A. physician sent him to Audie Murphy for a CT scan; and he had no option but to drive the 300 mile round trip to the VA facility. That trip not only put him at risk, but the safety of other drivers as well.

23) Another veteran invites all of us to come experience the long and painful ride from South Texas to San Antonio to visit a doctor.

24) A South Texan speaks on behalf of friends married to veterans; she is incensed that for health care they must be inconvenienced financially (gas, food, overnight stays for vets and families) and time-wise, which interferes with their jobs.

25) The brother of a constituent is medically retired from the Air Force and must travel to San Antonio every month for his medical treatments. It takes a day out of his life and requires a long ride back and forth.

26) Another retired veteran chooses the expense of private care over the time it takes waiting at the local clinic or taking the time to travel to San Antonio.

27) Another veteran also speaks to the trouble and time consuming nature of going so far for procedures. He knows that by the time you arrive your problems just seem to increase.

28) A Corpus Christi Veteran laid out the context of getting treatment in San Antonio: she said it is a 12 hour ordeal to get to San Antonio, get tended to at Audie Murphy, and return home. It costs two gas tanks and a whole day of work. The $26.00 dollars for travel does not cover nearly the cost.

29) Plácido Salazar, State Veterans’ Affairs Officer of The American GI Forum of Texas tells me that Valley were recently in San Antonio for three days of appointments; they told him that a manager at the associated hotel would not release a room to them until 6:00pm, (using very abusive language); with one of the veterans not getting a meal in more than 24 hours.

Solomon P. Ortíz is member of Congress for the 27th Congressional District in Texas. A Democrat, Ortiz resides in Corpus Christi. He is also an Army veteran.

More Valley lawmakers get on board in support of border light rail plan proposed by Rep. Martínez

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Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas, left, and Maverick County Judge José Aranda have been working in Austin on state transportation issues of mutual concern to the Texas Border Coalition, which is an allliance of elected leaders and economic development officials from the 14 Texas counties that border Mexico. One of those issues, the possible development of a light passenger rail system for the border region, has been approved by a major House committee and could be set for debate by the full House of Representatives as early as Thursday. See related story later in this posting.

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On Saturday, April 28 at 11 a.m., the Edinburg Chamber of Commerce, City of Edinburg, Hecho en Tejas and the Dustin Michael Sekula Memorial Library in Edinburg will host the first Edinburg Books and Brunch Series at the new library, located at 1906 South Closner. Sponsoring the event is Corrina’s Tea Room. The Books and Brunch Series is the first of future literary events to come and will include readings, book signings, coffee, sandwiches and deserts. The first series features writers Dagoberto Gilb, Erasmo Guerra and special guest Dr. Rene Saldaña and is free to the public.Dagoberto Gilb, an award-winning fiction writer (Woodcuts of Women) is the editor of Hecho en Tejas. As part of the Rio Grande Valley book tour, he will be doing several readings throughout the Valley. Hecho en Tejas is an anthology of Texas-Mexican authors dating back to the days of the Spanish explorers. The book’s comprehensive sweep includes ballads and corridos, poetry, essays, short stories, letters, photographs, novel excerpts and political declarations such as Juan Nepamuceno Cortina’s 1859 proclamation declaring the establishment of the Republic of the Rio Grande. The anthology is published by The Southwestern Writers Collection (SWWC) at Texas State University-San Marcos. For more information please call Evana Vleck at 383-4974.

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More Valley lawmakers get on board in support of border light rail plan proposed by Rep. Martínez

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

State Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, and Rep. Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City, have added their support for a far-reaching plan by Rep. Armando “Mando” Martínez, D-Weslaco – contained in his House Bill 2510 – that could eventually lead to the creation of light rail systems along the Texas-Mexico border.

In general, a light rail system uses special trains designed for urban travel, with capacities of up to 250 passengers per train, along with a bus system, to transport people and luggage while avoiding traffic congestion and other bottlenecks associated with larger population centers.

“HB 2510 will allow the citizens of Hidalgo County, along with the counties that border Mexico, to address one of the issues that results from growth – transportation,” Martínez said.”As our areas grow, so will the need for alternative forms of transportation. My bill, HB 2510, addresses this issue. With a population of over 1.4 million in the Rio Grande Valley, a light rail system will prove to be an invaluable form of transportation.”

Although Martínez envisions a light rail system to link the major cities in the Lower Rio Grande Valley, he said he wrote the legislation to allow any of the 14 Texas counties that border Mexico to be able to set up their own versions of light rail.

Gonzáles and Guillen recently added their names as joint authors to Martínez’ House Bill 2510 that would create a light rail district to study, and if necessary, adopt the rules to create and establish a light rail system in the border region.

“I applaud and thank Representatives Verónica Gonzáles and Ryan Guiilen for joint authoring HB 2510. Together, we will make light rail a reality in the Rio Grande Valley,” he said. “Additionally, I want to thank Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas and the entire Hidalgo County Commissioners’ Court for providing a resolution in support for HB 2510. This resolution was very important to the members of the Transportation Committee.”

In addition, according to Scott Jenkines, Martínez’ legislative chief-of-staff at the State Capitol, Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, has agreed to carry the measure in the Senate.

The Martínez/Gonzáles /Guillen measure is on a fast track, receiving unanimous approval from the House Transportation Committee on Tuesday, April 3. It could be set for action by the full House as early as Thursday, April 13.

If eventually approved by the Texas Legislature and supported by Gov. Rick Perry, HB 2510 would provide the legal authority for any border county to set up the creation, administration, powers, duties, operations, and financing of a commuter rail district, including granting the authority to issue bonds and granting the power of eminent domain.

The new governmental entity would not need voter approval to be created; however, any financing plan that would involve the use of local property taxes would require the approval of the majority of voters in a county-wide election.

According to a bill analysis of the measure provided by the House Transportation Committee, which held the public hearing on the bill, a light rail passenger district could provide a new option for border leaders grappling with increasing motor vehicle traffic congestion and the many related problems.

“The Border Region, especially the Rio Grande Valley, is one of the fastest growing areas in Texas as well as the entire United States,” the bill analysis noted. “As populations grow, so do transportation needs. To address the growing transportation needs and associated problems, alternative forms of transportation need to be studied. If deemed feasible and acceptable, such alternative forms of transportation should be considered for implementation.”

Martínez had earlier predicted legislative support by the transportation panel.

“I am very pleased that the Transportation Committee unanimously voted out HB 2510 and sent it to the Committee on Local and Consent Calendars,” Martínez said.”I appreciate Chairperson Mike Krusee’s, and the remaining eight members’, support of my light rail bill.”

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CHIP expansion sought by Texas BorderCoalition receives final approval by Houseof Representatives

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

An additional 100,000 children in Texas by 2009 could be added to the crucial Children’s Health Insurance Program, known as CHIP, following overwhelming approval by the House of Representatives on Tuesday, April 3, of House Bill 109, which is supported by the Texas Border Coalition.

TBC is an alliance of elected officials and economic development leaders from the 14 Texas counties which border Mexico. They represent an estimated 2.1 million residents.

HB 109 cleared third and final reading Tuesday evening on a 126 – 16 vote, and will be picked up in the Senate by Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, D-San Antonio. Rep. Sylvester Turner, D-Houston, who also is the House Speaker Pro Tempore – second in command – was the principal author of the legislation.

The legislation features key priorities for the Texas Border Coalition, including making it easier for working families to purchase the affordable and comprehensive health insurance protections offered by CHIP, which is administered by the state.

“Common sense policies – like reducing paperwork, deducting child care costs when determining eligibility and not counting families’ savings against them – will ensure that more of our children receive health care,” said Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, one of the many co-authors of HB 109.

El Paso County Attorney José R. Rodríguez, chair of the TBC Healthcare Committee, said the organization was in strong support of the HB 109 because it would move “more kids into insurance, saves local tax dollars, helps education and improves our state’s economy.

“People without health insurance are very likely to obtain their medical care from an emergency room,” Rodriguez added. “In fact, uninsured children are five times more likely than insured children to use the emergency room as their primary source for medical care.”

Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, was one of the five primary joint-authors of the legislation and was a key negotiator in ensuring that more children became eligible to receive healthcare under the program.

“The legislation will allow children to receive continuance coverage for a year at a time rather than having to re-qualify every six months. It eliminates a 90-day waiting period for coverage to begin and makes it easier for families to enroll their children for services,” Peña said.

Turner hailed the House passage as a sign of bipartisanship by both political parties.

“Today was a victory for the working poor. The House has shown its support for ensuring the well-being of our children and it’s now up to the Senate to do the same,” said Turner. “All the time and effort that went into drafting this legislation and working on a bi-partisan compromise with Chairman John Davis, Chairman Patrick Rose, and my fellow joint authors, has always been about the children.”

HB 109 addresses key policy changes to the current Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) which will insure approximately 102,224 qualified children per month in Texas by the end of fiscal year 2009.

Turner allowed the bill to stay true to its original intent by keeping the provisions that extend the period of eligibility to twelve months and eliminate a 90-day waiting period for children not previously covered by some type of insurance. As passed, HB 109 protects taxpayers by maintaining and revising the asset and verification tests to increase the limit of allowable liquid assets and vehicle amounts.

Rodríguez provided details on how the border region would be impacted.

According to the Comptroller, in 2005, Texas’ border Metropolitan Statistical Areas (El Paso, McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, Brownsville-Harlingen-San Benito and Laredo) had about 11 percent of all uninsured Texans, or more than 600,000, he said.

“Three of these MSAs – Laredo, El Paso and Brownsville-Harlingen-San Benito – had the highest rates of uninsured among all Texas counties, at 36, 33.2 and 32.4 percent respectively,” Rodríguez said. “The Corpus Christi and McAllen-Edinburg-Mission MSAs were not far behind, with uninsured rates of 28.3 and 27.8 percent respectively.”

From September, 2003, to February, 2007, enrollment in CHIP declined statewide from 507,259 to 325,479. For the same period, along the 14-county border, enrollment declined from 80,958 to 48,084; that is, 32,874 children of working families along the border lost their CHIP benefits, he noted.

Insurance coverage is critical to the education of Texas children, Rodríguez contended.

“Children without health insurance are 25% more likely to miss school because of illnesses, and school districts in Texas lose millions per day because of absenteeism,” he said.

“Employee productivity also increases with insurance coverage because working parents need to take less time from work for their sick children. CHIP is also good for Texas business; a 2003 report by the Perryman Group noted that the program contributes $1.4 billion in Gross State Product and supports 22,562 jobs,” Rodríguez added.

The Texas Border Coalition maintains a web site at http://www.texasbordercoalition.org.

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Sen. Hinojosa counters McAllen Monitor’s editorial; he says CHIP is a government program that works

By SEN. JUAN “CHUY” HINOJOSA

The newspaper editorial by the McAllen Monitor entitled “Privatization works, even if firms don’t,” suggested that the spectacular failure of a politically connected corporation to meet its obligations under a taxpayer-funded state contract to enroll eligible families in social service programs such as CHIP should not be taken as a failure of privatization itself.

Perhaps you also agree with the Houston-area lawmaker who huffed that his family never had insurance when he was growing up so why should anyone else need it.

I don’t agree. The Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) was passed by a bipartisan Legislature and signed into law by a Republican governor because it is that rarest of government programs — one that works. To qualify, families must have jobs but earn too little to afford private health coverage for their children.

For every $1 Texas spends to fund the program, the federal government kicks in $2.60. And local taxpayers no longer have to foot the bill for uninsured children whose families take them to hospital emergency rooms for routine medical care.

In other words, CHIP is government at its best — a little extra help for those who are working hard and paying their taxes. The bottom line of any business is making a profit — period. The bottom line of government should be serving its constituents in a fair and transparent way that is both humane and worthy of the people who it serves.

Competition is good, especially if it makes vital public programs like CHIP more effective and efficient. Privatization for the sake of shifting tax dollars to political cronies makes no financial or moral sense, and it weakens accountability. This notion that government can be run like a business sounds good until you find out that the business some politicians have in mind is Enron or Halliburton. It should also be noted that Accenture is incorporated in Bermuda where it does not have to pay U.S. taxes.

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Planned shopping center in Edinburg lands JCPenney as a major anchor

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

Edinburg and its planned shopping center have landed JCPenney, one of the country’s largest department store retailers, which has selected the three-time All-America City to be part of a 150 store nationwide expansion that began last fall.

The announcement by First Hartford Realty of Manchester, Connecticut, which is developing The Shoppes at Rio Grande Valley, will reportedly result in the construction of a 104,000-square-foot JCPenney retail structure, the first of as many as two dozen stores that will eventually be part of the projected $80 million complex.

The Shoppes at Rio Grande Valley, which is scheduled to be built in stages over the next three years, is located on about 130 acres of currently vacant fields in south-central Edinburg.

The shopping center is bordered by U.S. Expressway 281 and Business 281 to its east and west, respectively, with Trenton Road serving as its southern border.

Ramiro Garza, executive director of the Edinburg Economic Development Corporation, said details on the groundbreaking schedule for the new JCPenney store will be announced later this spring by company and shopping center officials.

However, the news that JC Penney has chosen the Edinburg shopping center is expected to help land other high-quality stores, he said,

“Eventually, the shopping center could result in 800,000-square-feet of retail space, create up to 1,300 jobs, and have a $90 million annual economic impact on the city,” Garza added.

But for now, the addition of a local JC Penney introduces the company’s newest style of store, known as the off-mall concept, to deep South Texas.

According to a JCPenney announcement last October, Mryon E. (Mike) Ullman, III, JCPenney chairman and chief executive officer, explained the retail giant’s expansion plans, including the use of the off-mall stores, by the Plano, Texas-based national corporation.

The announcement continued:

“There is growing demand for JCPenney stores in markets across the country. We are addressing this by launching the most aggressive store opening program in more than 25 years, which will allow us to offer our customers even more access to style and quality at smart prices,” said Ullman.

Fueled by the success of its new off-mall format, continued improvement in operating results and strong free cash flow, JCPenney previously announced that it expects to open at least 50 stores per year from 2007 through 2009. Eighty percent to 90 percent of the new JCPenney stores, including 17 of the 20 opening Oct. 6, will adopt the off-mall format, although the company continues to pursue opportunities to acquire mall stores in attractive locations. The company currently has 25 stores open in the off-mall design.

The off-mall format, covering approximately 100,000 square feet on a single level, features wider aisles, new lighting designs and concentrated customer service centers. The new store layout helps shoppers easily locate major brands such as The Original Arizona Jean Company, Chris Madden for JCPenney Home Collection, nicole by Nicole Miller, SouthPole, Worthington, Stafford, Bisou-Bisou, Oshkosh, Nike and more.

“Our off-mall stores have exceeded our expectations, generating higher sales per square foot than our mall-based stores and more frequent visits by customers,” continued Ullman. “We have a unique advantage in that our off-mall department stores provide a neighborhood presence that offers convenience and accessibility for mid-week shopping, while complementing our mall stores which continue to be a weekend and holiday shopping destination.”

J. C. Penney Corporation, Inc., the wholly owned operating subsidiary of J. C. Penney Company, Inc., is one of America’s largest department store, catalog, and e-commerce retailers, employing approximately 151,000 associates. As of July 29, 2006, J. C. Penney Corporation, Inc. operated 1,021 JCPenney department stores throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. JCPenney is the nation’s largest catalog merchant of general merchandise, and jcp.com is one of the largest apparel and home furnishings sites on the Internet.

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El Paso state senator invokes Jesus Christ in chastising GOP cuts in health programs

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

On the eve of Good Friday, one of the most solemn days in Christianity, Sen. Elliot Shapleigh, D-El Paso, condemned Republican efforts to cut state taxes at the expense of the poor, invoking the teachings of Jesus Christ to demonize the GOP as the heartless party of the rich.

His essay, featured on his political website, http://www.Shapleigh.org, was released at noon on Thursday, April 5, soon after the Legislature had adjourned for spring break and Easter.

No reaction had been developed by Republican leaders as of this article’s deadline for publication.

In his essay on his political website, which was e-mailed April 5 to key media outlets and community leaders statewide, Shapleigh was unforgiving in his judgment of the Republican-controlled Texas Legislature, especially in how the GOP leadership decides to use a multi-billion dollar state budget surplus.

His comments come as a long-standing lawsuit, Frew v. Hawkins, seeking more money to provide health care to poor children comes to a conclusion on April 13

“With a $14.3 billion surplus, what would Jesus do about Frew?” Shapleigh asked. “Throughout the Bible, from Ecclesiastes to Matthew, Jesus teaches us to defend those who are defenseless. Instead, in an 8-6 vote, 7 Republicans and 1 Democrat voted to rob Peter to pay poorer Paul, all to keep tax cuts tucked away for the wealthy.”

Shapleigh declined to identify the Democrat by name.

His website posting laying out his contentions follows verbatim:

By SEN. ELLIOT SHAPLEIGH D-El Paso

What would Jesus do about Frew?

Frew v. Hawkins, of course, is the lawsuit by low-income Texans wanting to fully fund basic medical services for poor children in Texas. Frew was filed in 1993 after years of funding allegedly so low as to violate basic Constitutional guarantees.

During a session when a lawmaker wants to introduce the Bible into classrooms and “In God We Trust” is permanently displayed in the Senate Chamber, we need to ask what would Jesus do about Frew.

So, what would Jesus do?

For decades, conservatives in Austin have cut and cut again basic health care services. As a result, Texas covers fewer Texas children with health care than any state in America. After 13 years of litigation, Susan Zinn, the activist attorney who filed the suit has won. The Frew case has a final hearing on April 12.

Last Friday (March 30), in the Senate Finance Committee, a rider was introduced by Sen. Robert Duncan (R-Lubbock) to take whatever funds the Frew case costs the state from existing funds spent on Medicaid and CHIP. In other words, he wants to rob poor Paul to pay poorer Peter. Why? The reason, of course, is tax cuts.

“[I]f the [Frew] decision requires additional spending when the Legislature is not in session, we’re going to stay within the four corners of the appropriations bill, and we’re not going to the rainy day fund to pay for it,” said Sen. Steve Ogden, R-Bryan, the Senate Finance Committee chairman, on passage of the rider.

Of course, the “rainy day fund” is $8.5 billion in tax cuts tucked safely away in the House version of the budget for 2010-2011, right when Republicans run in their primaries.

These tax cuts are not for you and me; they are for people who make over $85,000. In fact, 95% of all the tax cuts will go to people who make $85,000 or more.

So, the moral choice in the Frew rider is to rob poor Peter to pay poorer Paul, so more of your tax money can go to millionaires.

With a $14.3 billion surplus, what would Jesus do about Frew? Throughout the Bible, from Ecclesiastes to Matthew, Jesus teaches us to defend those who are defenseless.

As Jesus said in Proverbs 22:16, “He who oppresses the poor to increase his wealth and he who gives gifts to the rich—-both come to poverty.”

In Proverbs, Jesus continued, “Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute. Speak up and judge fairly; defend the rights of the poor and needy.”

Over the course of American history, caring for the poor has been a core value.

After the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln made caring for widows and orphans in poverty a priority. Franklin D. Roosevelt, the author of Social Security, said following the Great Depression, “These unhappy times call for the building of plans that build from the bottom up and not from the top down, that put their faith once more in the forgotten man at the bottom of the economic pyramid.”

Later, John F. Kennedy cautioned, “If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.”

Today, when we look into our heart of hearts, Texans know that our first responsibility is to take care of the most vulnerable among us—to defend the rights of the poor and needy.

We are a government of people, by people, for people. We should take care of kids.

Instead, in an 8-6 vote, 7 Republicans and 1 Democrat voted to rob Peter to pay poorer Paul, all to keep tax cuts tucked away for the wealthy.

Do you believe that is what Jesus would do with Frew?

Keep the Faith!

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House Democrats pass restoration of health insurance for 100,000 children

By KEVIN VICKERS

House Democrats successfully passed a bill today that will restore 102,000 children to the rolls of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). The CHIP program was slashed by the Republican leadership in the 2003 legislative session. Shortly thereafter, 250,000 children lost their health insurance coverage.

“The reason this bill passed today is because Democrats across the state pointed out the heartless and immoral nature of the 2003 cuts and we have kept that issue alive ever since,” said Rep. Garnet Coleman, D-Houston. “After the Republican leadership took two steps backward and slashed children’s health insurance in 2003, Democrats fought hard to make sure that we took one step forward today.”

The House Democrats were disappointed that amendments to the bill to make it more comprehensive – in particular one that would have fully restored the 250,000 children to the program – were rejected.

“Fully restoring the cuts made to CHIP and expanding coverage that thousands of more Texas children could receive health coverage is the best public policy we could have advanced with this legislation,” Coleman said. “But at the end of the day, I’m a progressive, and I believe in progress, so I was proud to vote for the bill and restore CHIP coverage for 102,000 Texas children.”

Other amendments offered would have repealed the assets test and other restrictive policies that prevent children from receiving health coverage for CHIP.

“Repealing the assets test would have ensured we don’t punish families for something as simple as saving money for college,” House Democratic Leader Jim Dunnam, D-Waco said. “Our work to fully restore CHIP isn’t finished, but we’ve taken an important first step with today’s passage of HB 109.”

Another amendment would have ensured that the dental benefits package provided through CHIP would cover anesthesia.

“Our children shouldn’t have to suffer through a painful procedure because the state is too cheap to pay for the anesthesia,” Rep. Pete Gallego, D-Alpine said. “My hope is that, when the bill goes to the Senate, Governor Dewhurst will add the anesthesia coverage and maintain the other important restorations within the legislation.”

House Democrats pledged to keep the pressure on as the bill arrives in the Senate. Just as the Democrats have been successful in calling attention to the CHIP issue, the House Democratic leaders said they were hopeful that the bill will improve in the Senate and be signed as soon as possible by the governor.

“Democrats want to do a lot more to help our children, and we have a long way to go to deliver a government whose priorities are in line with the people of this great state,” said Dunnam. “But today is a good day and I am proud of the work my colleagues and I have done to protect the children of Texas.”

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Rep. Peña: Alarming trend in copper theft addressed by Texas House of Representatives

By ORLANDO SALINAS

The Texas House of Representatives on Wednesday, April 4, unanimously approved House Bill 1766 by Rep. Aaron Peña, Jr., D-Edinburg, that would increase the penalty for theft of aluminum, bronze, and copper wiring.

HB 1766 would increase the penalties for the theft of insulated or noninsulated wire or cable that was at least 50 percent aluminum, bronze, or copper and worth up to $1,500. Penalties would increase from misdemeanors to a state jail felony.

As the price of those metals has increased so has there been a global crisis in the theft of items comprised of those materials, the Valley legislator said.

“Aluminum, bronze, and copper wiring are commonly used by municipalities, electric utilities, railroads and telecommunications companies to provide vital services,” said Peña. “Perpetrators are hauling off hundreds of dollars worth of wiring, causing thousands of dollars worth of repairs, lost productivity and commerce but of most concern are the issues of public safety.”

The Department of Homeland Security has reported that the theft of copper has degraded the electric power grid’s reliability, causing outages affecting thousands of customers. The theft of downed power lines and grounding cables following major storms has also hindered recovery efforts in some states.

At least seven individuals were electrocuted last year while attempting to steal copper wire from electric power generation or substation facilities.

“Current Texas law provides penalties for theft that generally vary by the value of the item stolen,” said Peña. “The theft of a train signal wire has a significant business cost but it can lead to deadly accidents and derailments. In these cases the punishment didn’t fit the crime. This law aims to change that and send a message that stealing wire isn’t worth it.”

Home owners, builders and small businesses have also shared their frustrations with the theft of wires from construction and building sites.

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Senate passes child passenger safety bill being carried by Sen. Zaffirini

By NICK ALMANZA

The Texas Senate on Wednesday, April 4, passed Senate Bill 60 by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, which would strengthen current child passenger safety protections.

The bill requires that children 7 years and younger, unless they are four-feet nine-inches tall, be secured in a child passenger safety seat while riding in a motor vehicle.

“This is a bill that will save lives, preclude tragedies and injuries and qualify Texas for $3.2 million in federal funds while saving the state $17 million in health care expenditures.” Zaffirini said. “Each year more than 1,600 children die in vehicular accidents, which is the leading cause of unintentional, injury-related death among children 14 years and younger. SB 60 will strengthen Texas child passenger safety laws and ensure a greater level of public safety.”

In 2005 the Texas Legislature directed the Texas Department of Public Safety Committee on Child Passenger Safety to examine the need for a booster seat law in Texas. The committee advised Texas to pass a law based on national recommendations. SB 60 reflects the committee’s recommended language.

The DPS Child Passenger Safety Committee determined that SB 60 would reduce Texas health care expenditures by more than $17 million and that that an average $30 booster seat generates $2,000 in cost benefit savings. What’s more, by raising child passenger safety standards, Texas also will be eligible for $3.2 million in federal transportation grants each year from 2008 to 2009.

Current law requires only children who are younger than five and shorter than 36 inches be secured properly in child-passenger safety seats during the operation of a vehicle. Children between the ages of five and eight and who are between 36 and 57 inches represent an age group that is at great risk of death or severe injury due to the gap in current law. SB 60 will eliminate this gap and strengthen current child passenger safety protections.

Originally SB 60, as recommended unanimously by the Senate Committee on Transportation and Homeland Security, included a four-month temporary grace period to inform Texas drivers about this new measure and a fine for non-compliance between $100 and $200.

Zaffirini on April 4 amended the bill to extend the warning period from four months to one year and reduce the penalty to $25, instead of up to $200.

“I amended SB 60 because we want to educate parents about the importance of booster seats and child passenger safety, not punish them,” she said. “A one year grace period will allow the state to inform more families and increase the impact this bill will have on public safety.”

The bill must be passed by the House of Representative before it can be sent to Gov. Rick Perry for final approval. The continued progress of this and all bills authored by Zaffirini can be monitored via the Internet at http://www.zaffirini.senate.state.tx.us or by contacting the Texas Legislative Reference Library’s toll free in-state hotline, 1-877-824-7038.

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Gov. Perry urges Legislature to keep transportation projects on track

Gov. Rick Perry on Tuesday, April 3 encouraged the Legislature to support the state’s current transportation system and to ensure vital transportation projects continue as planned. The governor was joined by U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters and Dr. H. K. Park, executive vice president and general manager for Samsung Hard Disk Drive, at the Samsung Austin Semiconductor expansion site currently under construction.

“Our message today is that building needed infrastructure is essential to creating jobs and attracting economic development investments in Texas,” Perry said. “And you can’t accomplish that with a two-year moratorium on needed road projects.”

During the remainder of the session as the Legislature debates critical issues affecting Texas, Perry encouraged the Legislature to consider the successes from past sessions, highlighting key aspects of the existing transportation system. Texas is currently:

• Pouring more concrete and building more roads than any state in the nation; • Attracting multi-billion dollar investments from private partners to build needed roads now; and • Using billions of dollars advanced up front by private concessionaires to build numerous other projects in local communities.

The governor also noted that the land needed for highways will always be owned by Texas, and drivers will always have a non-tolled alternative to toll projects.

“But let no one be confused: there are no such things as freeways,” Perry said. “There are taxways and tollways, and for 50 years we have tried taxways that have been underfunded by Austin and Washington and that have left local communities choking on pollution and brimming with congestion.

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Teacher pay raises, CHIP funding increases included in House state budget, says Rep. Martínez

By SCOTT JENKINES

Rep. Armando “Mando” Martínez, D-Weslaco, helped pass a statewide teacher pay raise on Thursday, April 5, as part of the votes cast during more than 18 hours of debate, and 200 amendments to Texas’ $150 billion state budget bill (House Bill 1).

Martínez voted for an amendment to increase public school employee pay.

“Ensuring that Texas’ children have access to top-notch public schools is my top priority. Our state must do everything possible to attract the best and brightest educators,” said Martínez. “I voted to provide an across-the-board pay raise for every public school teacher, counselor, librarian and school nurse because a great education begins with them.”

He noted that the House version of the state budget also included crucial funding to improve the Children’s Health Insurance Program and other measures important to young Texans.

“I support a state budget that fully funds the children’s health insurance program, improves access to higher education, strengthens our public schools and provides the necessary funds to ensure Texas children are secure now and in the future,” said Martínez. “I voted for amendments that would strengthen House Bill 1.”

The numerous amendments adopted April 5 helped alleviate some of the concerns about the initial shortcomings of the bill. Martínez voted in favor of the amended bill and will work with Sen. Juan :Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, and Sen, Eddie Lucio, D-Brownsville, as it moves through the Senate.

The House state budget bill and the version that will be approved by the Senate, which will not be identical, will then go to a legislative conference committee, where appointed members of the House and Senate will iron out the differences.

“We made a lot of ground on Thursday. We started with a bill that needed some changes, and we finished with a bill that contained some great provisions, like the across-the-board teacher salary increase,” Martínez noted.

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Family violence, stalking victims could more easily qualify for unemployment insurance benefits

By NICK ALMANZA

The Senate Business and Commerce Committee on Wednesday, April 3, unanimously recommended passage of Senate Bill 142 by Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, which would make less burdensome the list of required evidence of eligibility for Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits provided to victims of stalking or family violence.

“Because it is difficult for a victim of domestic violence or stalking to obtain multiple forms of evidence and because some judges in certain counties rarely issue protective orders, the multiple eligibility requirements for UI make it difficult for many victims to access benefits,” Zaffirini said. “This bill would allow victims to present only one form of evidence regarding the violence they are suffering in order to obtain easily the benefits needed to support themselves and their families while evading potentially dangerous domestic situations.”

In 2003 the Texas Legislature passed a measure that allows persons who must leave their job to protect themselves from family violence or stalking to be eligible for unemployment compensation. Victims must substantiate the existence of family violence by providing three pieces of evidence, including an active or recently issued protective order documenting family violence or stalking of the employee; a police record documenting family violence against, or the stalking of, the employee; and a physician’s statement or other medical documentation of family violence against an employee.

SB 142 would make persons eligible for UI benefits if they left the workplace for protection against family violence or stalking and are able to provide only one of the three forms of evidence mandated by the 2003 legislation.

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Dr. Linda Villarreal of Edinburg recognized for her contributions by the House of Representatives

Dr. Linda Villarreal, an internist who has been an active player in promoting improved access to medical care for the poor in Hidalgo County, has been honored for her accomplishments by the Texas House of Representatives.

Highlights of her career are included in House Resolution No. 1297, authored by Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen. HR 1297 was unanimously approved by the House of Representatives on Tuesday, April 3.

The resolution follows verbatim:

WHEREAS, Dr. Linda Villarreal is being honored by the Zonta Club of West Hidalgo County for her outstanding contributions to her community; and

WHEREAS, Dr. Villarreal is known for her competency, compassion, and dedication to practicing preventative medicine, and her endeavors in promoting the health and vitality of her friends and neighbors have earned her their lasting respect and admiration; and

WHEREAS, Outside of managing her own practice, “Dr. Vee,” as she is affectionately called, is a regular volunteer at a local free clinic and is a member of the American Medical Association and the Texas Medical Association-Council on Legislation; this former chief of staff for Edinburg Regional Medical Center is also a mentor to several medical students, a physician advisor for the Texas Medical Foundation’s research pilot program on diabetes, and a member of the Border Health Caucus; in addition, she has worked tirelessly for the Health Services District and given generously of her time and expertise to the American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association, Arthritis Foundation, VAMOS, and Easter Seals; and

WHEREAS, The strength of our communities depends on the dedication of individuals like Dr. Villarreal, whose considerable talents have benefited countless people who live and work in South Texas; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 80th Texas Legislature hereby commend Dr. Linda Villarreal on her years of professional and civic service to her community and extend to her best wishes for the future; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be prepared for Dr. Villarreal as an expression of high regard by the Texas House of Representatives.

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Carol Lynn Looney of Edinburg recognized for her contributions by the House of Representatives

Carol Lynn Looney of Edinburg, who has been part of the economic, educational and cultural advancements of the city, has been honored for many contributions by the Texas House of Representatives.

Mrs. Looney, whose husband, attorney Cullen R. Looney is a former Edinburg state representative, received the public recognition on Tuesday, April 3, when the House of Representatives unanimously passed House Resolution 1296 by Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen.

The resolution follows verbatim:

WHEREAS, Carol Lynn Looney is being honored by the Zonta Club of West Hidalgo County for her outstanding contributions to her community; and

WHEREAS, A graduate of Beaumont High School and The University of Texas at Austin, Mrs. Looney has long benefited her community through her tireless volunteer service, and her endeavors in behalf of her friends and neighbors have earned her their lasting respect and admiration; and

WHEREAS, Through the years, Mrs. Looney has lent her time and expertise as a president of the Freddy Gonzalez Elementary School PTO, board member and chair of the Museum of South Texas History, and as a member of The University of Texas-Pan American International Women’s Board; in addition, she is a member of the Edinburg Junior Service League and St. John’s Episcopal Church, where she is involved in the Altar Guild, and she has ably served as a board member of the International Museum of Art & Science, Gladys Porter Zoo, United Way, and the Tip-O-Tex Girl Scout Council; and

WHEREAS, The strength of our communities depends on the dedication of individuals like Mrs. Looney, whose considerable talents have helped make Hidalgo County a better place in which to live, work, and raise a family; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 80th Texas Legislature hereby commend Carol Lynn Looney on her years of service to her community and extend to her best wishes for the future; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be prepared for Mrs. Looney as an expression of high regard by the Texas House of Representatives.

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McAllen Mayor Cortéz, a member of the Texas Border Coalition, honored by Texas House

By DAVID A. DÍAZ

McAllen Mayor Richard Cortéz, only the second Hispanic mayor in that city’s history, has been honored for his many accomplishments by the House of Representatives with a legislative resolution authored by Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, Rep. Ismael “Kino” Flores, D-Palmview, and Rep. Armando “Mando” Martínez, D-Weslaco.

The measure, unanimously adopted by the House of Representatives, was filed on Friday, March 23, and approved by the full House a week later, on Friday, March 30. In addition to being mayor, Cortéz is on the governing board of the Texas Border Coalition, an alliance of elected leaders and economic development officials from the 14 Texas counties that border Mexico.

Cortéz, through the Texas Border Coalition, has been instrumental on various state and federal legislative initiatives of the organization, including opposing the controversial proposed construction of a wall that would separate the U.S. from Mexico as a way to address the issue of illegal immigration.

Rather, Cortéz and the other leaders of the Texas Border Coalition are championing their own immigration reform recommendations, both at the state and federal levels, with proposals that would strengthen border security while not adversely affecting legitimate travel and trade.

The resolution follows verbatim:

Whereas, Mayor Richard F. Cortéz has truly distinguished himself through his outstanding service to the McAllen community, and he is being honored for his accomplishments at the ninth annual “A Night at the Oscars”sponsored by the Rio Grande Valley Chapter of the Muscular Dystrophy Association; and

Whereas, Elected to office in 2005, Mayor Cortéz has brought to his role a wealth of insight gained over the course of his life as a successful businessman, public servant, and community volunteer;

Whereas, Mayor Cortéz is a certified public accountant with a career that has spanned more than three decades; he is a senior partner with the public accounting and management firm of Burton, McCumber & Cortéz, L.L.P., where he is in charge of the litigation support department; and

Whereas, His civic involvement is equally impressive, encompassing service with the McAllen Economic Development Corporation, McAllen Chamber of Commerce, McAllen Community Development Council, Rio Grande Valley Partnership, McAllen International Museum, and Boys & Girls Club of McAllen and The University of Texas–Pan American Business Council; he has also held leadership positions with the Border Trade Alliance, McAllen Housing Finance Corporation, McAllen Public Utilities Board, and International Bank of Commerce-McAllen; and

Whereas, Mayor Cortéz has worked tirelessly in behalf of his fellow Texans; supported by his wife, Elva, four children, and nine grandchildren, he is a dynamic leader who will undoubtedly continue to be an outstanding advocate for his community and for the state; now, therefore, be it

Whereas, That the House of Representatives of the 80th Texas Legislature hereby honor Mayor Richard F. Cortéz for his dedicated service in behalf of the residents of McAllen and extend to him best wishes for the future; and, be it further

Resolved, That an official copy of this resolution be prepared for Mayor Cortéz as an expression of high regard by the Texas House of Representatives.

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District Clerk Hinojosa, County Clerk Guajardo to host major conference in McAllen on April 12, 13

Hidalgo County District Clerk Laura Hinojosa and County Clerk Arturo Guajardo will be hosting about 100 of their colleagues in McAllen on Thursday, April 12 and Friday, April 13 as part of a major conference of the County and District Clerks Association of Texas, Region VIII.

Region VIII represents 32 South Texas counties.

The session, which will include appearances by Hinojosa’s father, U.S. Congressman Rubén Hinojosa, D-Mercedes, along with Hidalgo County Judge J.D. Salinas, and members of the Hidalgo County Commissioners Court, will be held at the Holiday Inn, 200 W. Expressway, McAllen.

The Thursday session will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., while the Friday meeting will be held from 8 a.m. to noon.

“The purpose of the County & District Clerk Association of Texas is to promote professional standards, to provide the means for education of its members regarding the statutory and constitutional duties of the offices of the county clerk and the district clerk, and to participate in the legislative, judicial and executive processes of government beneficial in the performance of the member’s duties,” said Ricardo Contreras, who issued the announcement on behalf of Laura Hinojosa and Guajardo.

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NAHJ disappointed with decline in percentage of journalists of color in U.S. newsrooms

By DANIELA MONTALVO

The National Association of Hispanic Journalists is once again disappointed by the lack of progress made toward achieving diversity in the nation’s newsrooms.

As pointed out in the 2007 newsroom census released March 27 by the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE), minority representation in newsrooms slipped by 0.25 percent, to 13.62 percent. The percentage of Latino journalists dropped from 4.51 percent to 4.41 percent.

“Our industry is in the midst of rapid change, but one thing remains the same,” said NAHJ President Rafael Olmeda. “Latinos continue to be severely underrepresented in the newsroom workforce. We are asked to adapt to changes in the industry, learn new skills and think differently about the way newspapers deliver the news to readers. Is it too much to ask the industry to adapt to changes in the U.S. population, changes that make newsroom diversity more necessary than ever?”

This year, for the first time, ASNE’s census included journalists working full-time online, an addition that makes it appear in the survey that newsrooms added nearly 2,000 jobs. Including online journalists helped the numbers for minorities, who make up 16 percent of that sector, according to the survey. Without including online journalists, the picture for minority hiring and retention is even more bleak.

Minorities also make up 10.9 percent of newsroom supervisors, another decline from last year.

Through the Parity Project, NAHJ has proven that news organizations that commit to increasing Latino representation can succeed. The project has not only improved numbers; it has improved coverage of the Latino community and relationships between news organizations and their readers. To date, 150 Latinos have been hired at 25 Parity Project partners.

When ASNE committed in 1978 to achieving parity in the nation’s newsrooms by 2000, the intention may have been noble, but ASNE President David Zeeck referred to it Tuesday as a “hot check” because the association did not have the ability to deliver. Today, the industry strives to reach that goal by 2025, but it is clear to NAHJ that it will be impossible for news organizations to achieve parity at the current rate. The population of the United States is increasingly non-white, while the population of newsrooms just took a step in the other direction.

NAHJ believes it is time for diversity to cease being a slogan or a “value.” It’s time for diversity to be an unqualified commitment at all levels, from coverage to hiring to upper management.

NAHJ encourages media organizations to work with our association and other partners in Unity: Journalists of Color to play an active role in increasing representation in our newsrooms. The Parity Project, in addition to being a strong program, should be a model to the entire industry of how commitment backed by action can change a newsroom.

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Senate approves bill by Sen. Lucio declaring April as “Fruit and Vegetable Month”

By DORIS SÁNCHEZ

The Texas Senate on Wednesday, April 4, gave approval to a bill by Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr. that designates April as Fruit and Vegetable Month for Texas.

“Senate Bill 555 was necessary because unfortunately, only 23 percent of Texans report consuming the recommended levels of fruits and vegetables,” said Lucio. “This number is unacceptable and needs to be raised by several levels. Declaring April Fruit and Vegetable Month will help encourage Texans to consume more fruits and vegetables.”

Various studies have proven there are countless health-related benefits of fruits and vegetables. Fruits and vegetables contain antioxidants, vitamins, minerals, and fiber that may prevent many chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease. The Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends adults consume 3.5 to 6.5 cups (7 to 13 servings) of fruits and vegetables daily and children eat 2 to 5 cups per day (4 to 10 servings) depending on their ages. Ninety percent of Americans do not eat the recommended amounts.

“I represent an area of Texas rich with fertile soil and a mild climate, ideal for growing some of the tastiest and most nutritious fruits and vegetables in the country,” noted Lucio. “Nothing can compare to the Ruby Red Grapefruit grown here.

“But no matter where the fruits and vegetables are raised, our children and families should be eating a lot more of them.”

The senator is confident that his bill will “open the door of awareness to the people of Texas and will be part of the strategy to reach out and educate the public of the important contribution of fruits and vegetables in a nutritious diet and healthy lifestyle.”

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Rep. Martínez announces grant writing seminar to seek funding for health and health-related programs

By SCOTT JENKINES

Rep. Armando “Mando” Martínez, D-Weslaco, on Thursday, April 5, announced that a grant writing seminar to help communities seek and obtain funding for health and health-related programs in rural and underserved areas will be held in Weslaco on April 19 and 20.

The seminar will be hosted by the Center for Community Health Development’s (CCHD).

“The center strives to recognize and analyze the practices affecting the health of our community and procedures designed to increase the overall health status,” said Martínez. “Another goal of CCHD is to provide knowledge regarding disease prevention and prevention research to health providers, scholars, and the general population”

The first day of the seminar will concentrate on civic agencies; while the following day will train the health and human service agencies. The seminars will focus on discussing types and sources of funding and reading an RFP. It will also provide valuable tips to successfully write proposals.

“The Center for Community Health Development provides assistance to agencies with understanding and applying data to research and conduct projects,” said Martínez. “It is also a very reliable organization as it will continue its support throughout the entire grant writing process and help in locating potential financial donators.”

For more information, please contact Delia Morales at (956) 688-6325 or view http://www.cchd.us/services.htm

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Financial aid director placed on leave, investigation begun at The University of Texas at Austin

By ANTHONY P. DE BRUYN

Lawrence W. Burt, associate vice president and director of student financial aid at The University of Texas at Austin, on Friday, April 5, was placed on paid administrative leave pending the completion of an investigation into allegations of conflict of interest.

This action results from allegations made on Thursday, April 4, in a letter sent to William Powers Jr., president of The University of Texas at Austin, by the office of Andrew M. Cuomo, attorney general of the state of New York. The attorney general alleged that Burt received stock from Student Loan Xpress Inc., a company that is included on the university’s preferred lender list.

“It is important that the university confirm and ensure the integrity of its financial aid program,” Powers said, “and maintain unimpeachable practices on behalf of students and their families.”

Powers asked James R. Huffines, chairman of the University of Texas System Board of Regents, and Mark G. Yudof, chancellor of the University of Texas System, to authorize the Office of the General Counsel of the University of Texas System to conduct an investigation in collaboration with the university. The investigation will be led by Vice Chancellor and General Counsel Barry D. Burgdorf of the University of Texas System

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Mario Cuomo, New York attorney general, provides details on alleged student loan deceptive practices

On March 15, New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo revealed deceptive practices that he has uncovered in his nationwide investigation into the college loan industry.

According to Cuomo’s announcement, the New York attorney general said in a letter sent to every college and university in New York state, and certain other schools across the country, that he warned them to end or fully disclose potential conflicts of interest in their relationships with private lenders. He also cautioned students and their families to protect themselves against these practices.

Industry practices revealed include: Establishment of so-called “preferred lender” lists without disclosing the basis for selection or the specific benefits associated with these preferred lenders; revenue sharing and other financial arrangements between schools and lenders; denials or impediments to a student or parent’s choice of lender based on the borrower’s selection of a particular lender or guaranty agency; impediments to competition in the lending industry that stifle better loan terms for students and parents.

Cuomo said, “There is an unholy alliance between banks and institutions of higher education that may often not be in the students’ best interest. The financial arrangements between lenders and these schools are filled with the potential for conflicts of interest. In some cases they may break the law.”

Cuomo continued, “I do not want another college-bound class to be taken advantage of by schools or by lenders. Students and their families need to know about the practices in the industry so they can better protect themselves when being steered toward a lender by a college or university. With this knowledge, students have the power to select the lender that is truly best for their situation.”

The New York attorney general has been leading an ongoing investigation into the $85 billion-per-year student loan industry. In February, he requested information from more than 60 public and private colleges and universities nationwide regarding the standards they use to determine which lending companies are included on their “preferred lender” lists. Financial aid administrators often produce such lists to direct their students toward the lenders that are most preferred by the schools but may not be the best deals for students and parents.

On March 15, Cuomo notified over 400 colleges and universities throughout the country, including all in New York state, to end relationships with lenders that have the potential to mislead students and compromise their ability to obtain the best rate for their student loans.

In his letter, Cuomo revealed the following problematic practices in the student loan industry:

1 Lenders pay financial kickbacks to schools based on a percentage of the loans that are directed to the lenders. The kickbacks are designed to be larger if a school directs more student loans to the lender. And the kickbacks are even greater if the schools make the lender their “exclusive” preferred lender.

2 Lenders pay for all-expense-paid trips for financial aid officers (and their spouses) to high-end resorts like Pebble Beach, as well as other exotic locations in the Caribbean and elsewhere. Lenders also provide schools with other benefits like computer systems and put representatives from schools on their advisory boards in order to further curry favor with the schools.

3 Lenders set up funds and credit lines for schools to use in exchange for schools putting the lenders on their preferred lender lists.

4 Lenders offer large payments to schools to drop out of the direct federal loan program so that the lenders get more business.

5 Lenders set up call centers for schools. When students call the schools’ financial aid centers, they actually get representatives of the lenders.

6 Lenders on preferred lender lists agree to sell loans to a single lender so there is actually no real choice for the student.

7 Lenders sell loans to other lenders, often wiping out the back-end benefits originally promised to the students without the students ever knowing.

Rebecca Weber, Executive Director of the New York Public Interest Research Group (NYPIRG), said, “NYPIRG, as a consumer group and a student group, is particularly concerned about deceptive lending practices that appear to target students and their families. The Attorney General is alerting the colleges to the dangers of doing business with predatory lenders and we think that’s a crucial move as this investigation continues.”

Cuomo also urged students and parents to use these findings to consider whether a college or university is currently engaged in questionable practices. The Attorney General’s office has prepared a pamphlet to help those seeking student loans make more informed decisions. The pamphlet is being distributed to every high school in New York State. It is also posted on the Attorney General’s website at http://www.oag.state.ny.us.

The investigation is being handled by Executive Deputy Attorney General for Economic Justice Eric Corngold and Assistant Attorneys General Joy Feigenbaum, Melvin Goldberg, and Kevin R. Harkins.

••••••

UTPA to be featured in PBS documentary series

The University of Texas-Pan American will be featured in one of 13 episodes of the State of Tomorrow documentary television series, which begins airing this month on PBS stations across the state.

The series examines some of the most exciting work being done by researchers and academics in public higher education to address major challenges facing Texans today. The University of Texas Foundation and Alpheus Media, Inc. in partnership with KLRU-TV, Austin PBS, co-produced the series, and it is paid for with private funding from sponsors including AT&T Inc., Exxon Mobil Corp., and IBC Bank, among others.

UTPA will be highlighted in the eighth episode of the series titled “Faces of the New Texas.” The episode focuses on the increasing population of the state, particularly the growing Hispanic population, and education and access. Dr. Blandina “Bambi” Cárdenas, UTPA president, will discuss how higher education can better serve and reflect its community.

“We are proud The University of Texas-Pan American was chosen to participate in this series and this particular episode, which will highlight our growing Hispanic student population and our dynamic efforts as a University and member of the UT System to make access to higher education possible and affordable for all,” Cárdenas said.

Also featured in the episode will be The University of Texas at Brownsville and The University of Texas at El Paso.

The wide-ranging series explores major challenges in areas including public health, homeland security, energy policy, economic development and education, and highlights new research in biosafety, nanotechnology, and proton therapy.

Faculty from Texas A&M, Texas State, Texas Tech, University of Houston, University of North Texas and University of Texas systems are featured in the series, representing a collaboration among Texas’ public higher education groups that is thought to be unprecedented.

“Public higher education offers solutions to many of the major challenges facing Texas, and it is important for Texans to know that whether or not they ever set foot on our campuses, we work to ensure that they are the beneficiaries of education’s service to society,” said UT System Chancellor Mark G. Yudof.

The State of Tomorrow series, which began airing on Sunday, April 8, will be broadcast beginning at 7:30 p.m. each Sunday at 7:30 p.m. on the local PBS station, KMBH-TV 60 (Time Warner Cable Cable Channel 10).

Construction in Edinburg sets new record with $191.7 million in 2006


Construction in Edinburg sets new record with $191.7 million in 2006 - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Mayor Pro Tem Noe Garza, featured third from left, helps Mayor Joe Ochoa, featured in dark jacket, on Thursday, January 18, as the city’s political and business leaders participated in the proverbial ribbon cutting at the $18.5 million, 117,000 square foot supercenter located at 2802 W. University Drive. Also included in the ceremony was Council member Alma Garza (no relation to Noe Garza), featured in the back row to the mayor’s left. With 40,000 items in stock, and an adjacent garden center, Lowe’s in Edinburg – which features appliances and products for home improvements – is predicted to create up to 175 direct and indirect jobs and have an annual economic impact of $25 million, according to Richard García, president of the Edinburg Economic Development Corporation. The store, which opened for business on January 13, helped Edinburg reach a record for new construction in 2006, said Ochoa. See story on the city’s construction activities later in this posting.

••••••

Construction in Edinburg sets new record with $191.7 million in 2006 - Titans of the Texas Legislature

State Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville (featured center), proudly displays a plaque of appreciation from Dr. Shirley Reed, president of South Texas College, and Paul S. Moxley, president and secretary of the board of directors for Texas State Bank, during a legislative breakfast on Friday, January 19, at the STC campus in south McAllen. Lucio, Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, Rep. Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, and Rep. Ismael “Kino” Flores, D-Palmview, were honored for their many contributions to STC by the STC Board of Trustee and area business and community dignitaries. Lucio was the author of the legislation in 1993 that created STC, along with then-Rep. Roberto Gutiérrez, D-McAllen, who sponsored the measure in the House of Representatives. STC, which was originally called South Texas Community College, has an estimated 18,000 students enrolled this fall, making it one of the largest institutions of higher education in South Texas.

••••••

Constructionin Edinburg sets new record with $191.7 million in 2006

Total construction activities in Edinburg during 2006 totaled almost $192 million, an increase of more than $22 million over the $169.3 million mark set 2005, the Edinburg Economic Development Corporation has announced.

The EEDC is the jobs-creation arm of the Edinburg City Council.

It is governed by a five-person board of directors, which includes Mayor Joe Ochoa,former mayor Richard García, who is the EEDC board president, and FredPalacios, Mike Govind, and George Bennack.

The construction level surpassed the previous record of $171.1 million, set in 2004.

New constructionof single-family homes and commercial buildings, not including government or religious facilities, led the way in 2006.

Single-family homes, which does not include apartments and other multi-family dwellings such as duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes, accounted for almost $70.5 million of the total construction activities last year, up from more than $66.2 million in 2005.

In 2006, 765 new single-family homes were constructed, compared with 742 new homes in 2005.

New commercial buildings valued at almost $70 million were built in 2006, up considerably from the almost $40.2 million level reached in 2005.

Multi-family residences in 2006 accounted for more than $18.7 million in new construction, compared with more than $31.7 million in 2005.

The values of the construction are listed in building permits issued by the city’s Code Enforcement Division.

Construction
activities of non-taxable facilities – government buildings, churches,
schools, not including UT-Pan American – reached almost $9 million
in 2006, compared with almost $17.5 million in 2005.

Building
permits are permits taken out in order to allow excavation and to protect
public safety.

Building
permits represent the estimated cost of construction, not the selling
price.

The building
permits do not include the price of the lot.

A start
in construction is defined as the beginning of excavation of the foundation
for the building.

A building
permit is permission issued by a city’s planning department to oversee
and approve any changes to structures.

They are
documents designed to guarantee that any construction work, from remodeling
to demolition to building a new home or business facility, meets the
city’s building codes.

•Doctors
Hospital expansion continues

The continuing
expansion of Doctors Hospital at Renaissance was reflected in its receipt
of the most valuable building permit in December.

The medical
complex, which is expected to invest as much as $150 million in its
second site, received a building permit valued at $5 million for a medical
facility, that is being built at 5502 S. McColl Road, in the Doctors
Center Subdivision.

Walgreen’s
was issued a building permit for the second-most valuable project in
December for a new facility, valued at $1.7 million, that is being
built at 1520 S. McColl Road in the Bond & Bond Subdivision.

The third-most
valuable project approved for construction in December is a commercial
building, owned by José Chapa, and valued at $720,000. It is being
built at 1623 W. University Drive in the West Manor Unit 1 & 3 Subdivision.

Developer
Juan Luis Alcorta received building permits in December for six multi-family
developments, each valued at $200,000, located in the Summer Winds and
Summer Winds II Subdivisions on Orlando, Phoenix, and Tampa streets.

The most
valuable home authorized for construction in December is being built
by Jaime Lozano. The house, whose construction value is listed at $200,000,
is located at 2301 Big Valley Circle in the Big Valley Subdivision.

For the
month of December, total construction activities, which include everything
from installing plumbing to building the structures, saw building permits
approved for $14,929,924 in governmental, residential and commercial
construction, up from the December 2005 figure of $6,588,675.

For 2006,
total construction activities were $191,782,397, compared with $169,589,043
in 2005.

A more
detailed breakdown of the December 2006 figures for Edinburg features
the following highlights:

•Commercial
construction

In December,
new construction of commercial buildings, not including multi-family
residences, was reported at $8,235,950, compared with $547,000
for the same month in 2005.

In 2006,
new construction of commercial buildings reached $69,775,422, compared
with $40,266,530 in 2005.

Commercial
alterations in December totaled $614,156, compared with $57,665 in December
2005.

In 2006,
commercial alterations reached $10,617,621, compared with $9,461,295
in December 2005.

•Home
construction

New construction
of single-family homes in December 2006 reached $3,324,600, compared
with $4,943,860 in December 2005.

In 2006,
building permits were issued for residential homes valued at $70,446,664,
compared with $66,205,764 in 2005.

In 2006,
building permits were issued for the construction of 765 single-family
homes, compared with 742 in 2005.

In December,
work began on 33 single-family residences, compared with 51 homes in
December 2005.

In December,
alterations for single-family residences were valued at $388,218, compared
with $108,150 for the same month in 2005.

In 2006,
building permits were issued for residential alterations valued at $5,564,650,
compared with $2,758,656 in 2005.

•Multi-family
residences

New construction
of multi-family residences in December reached $2,367,000, compared
with $867,000 for the same month in 2005.

In 2006,
new construction of multi-family homes totaled $18,745,740, compared
with $31,756,569 in 2005.

In 2006,
building permits were issued for 182 multi-family residences, or 406
units, compared with 320 multi-family residences, or 739 units, in 2005.

For the
month of December, building permits were issued for 21 multi-family
residences, or 54 units, compared with 19 multi-family residences, or
40 units, in December 2005.

•Alterations/repairs

Alterations/repairs
involving nontaxable facilities, such as churches and government buildings,
but not including UT-Pan American, totaled $7,636,300 in 2006, compared
with $1,654,229 in 2005.

The city
does not issue permits for construction work at UT-Pan American.

•Top
December construction projects

Highlights
of construction in December of commercial buildings, not including multi-family
residences, valued at $100,000 or more include:

•Doctors
Hospital at Renaissance, 5502 S. McColl Rd ($5,000,000);

•Walgreen’s,
1520 S. McColl Road ($1,700,000);

•José
Chapa, 1623 W. University Drive ($720,000);

•Dr.
De Dios Cans, L.P., 206 Conquest Blvd ($370,000);

•Eddy
Bentacourt, 1801 W. Trenton Road ($200,000).

Highlights
of construction in December of multi-family buildings (duplexes, triplexes,
fourplexes, and apartment buildings) valued at $100,000 or more include:

•Juan
Luis Alcorta, 1410 Phoenix Street ($200,000);

•Juan
Luis Alcorta, 1506 Phoenix Street ($200,000):

•Juan
Luis Alcorta, 1408 Tampa Street ($200,000);

•Juan
Luis Alcorta, 1525 Orlando Street ($200,000);

•Juan
Luis Alcorta, 1510 Tampa Street ($200,000);

•Raúl
Fabela, 1916 Upland Drive ($140,000);

•Raúl
Fabela, 1910 Upland Drive ($140,000);

•Juan
A. García, 2214 Candlelight Lane ($130,000);

•Thurmond
Reed, 622 Logan Drive ($130,000);

•Thurmond
Reed, 702 Logan Drive ($130,000); and

•Michael S. Campbell,
618 DFW Drive ($130,000).

Highlights
of construction in December of single-family homes valued at $100,000
or more include:

•Jaime
Lozano, 2301 Big Valley ($200,000);

•Eldwin
R. Vargas and Thelma Caballero, 1821 Fawn Circle ($190,000);

•Michael
Galola, 2611 María Luisa ($184,000);

•Jesús
Ramos, 706 Amistad ($160,000);

•Jaime
Lozano, 467 Dalabo Drive ($160,000);

•Carlos
González, 3721 Inez Street ($136,900);

•Rey
Benavidez, 419 Frio Drive ($120,000);

•Rey
Benavidez, 3823 Inez Street ($115,000);

•Pilar
Brito, 704 Steamboat Drive ($110,000);

•Pilar
Brito, 712 Steamboat Drive ($108,000);

•Gilbert
Vera, 3808 Inez Street ($105,000);

•Elias
Lozano, 2607 Denise Circle ($100,000);

•Elias
Lozano, 2613 Denise Circle ($100,000);

•Elias
Lozano, 2609 Benji Circle ($100,000);

•Randy
Rives, 3109 Kenyon ($100,000);

•Victor
López, 1320 Hickory ($100,000); and

•Javier
Moreno, 2624 Flipper Drive ($100,000).

Highlights
of repairs or additions in December of commercial buildings valued at
$100,000 or more include:

•Dan
Gerlach, 3102 S. McColl Road ($350,000); and

•Lowes
Home Center, Inc., 2802 W. University Drive ($135,956).

By DAVID A. DIAZ

[email protected]

For more information
on the people and politics that impact Edinburg, please log on to
http://www.EdinburgPolitics.com

••••••

Three Valley senators
land plum spots on powerful Senate Finance Committee

Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst
has appointed three Valley state senators to the powerful Senate Finance
Committee, which develops the state budget for the full Senate.

Sen. Juan “Chuy”
Hinojosa, D-McAllen, Sen. Eddie Lucio, Jr., D-Brownsville, and Sen.
Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, whose district includes Starr County, were
put on the powerful money committee by Dewhurst on Friday, January 12.

Zaffirini was named vice-chair
of the Senate Finance Committee, while Lucio remained chair of the Senate
International Relations & Trade Committee. Hinojosa was also
named vice-chair of the Senate Jurisprudence Committee.

The Senate committee assignments
come in advance of the highly-anticipated move, possibly this week,
by Texas Speaker of the House Tom Craddick, to appoint House members
to their respective panels.

A legislator’s position
on certain committees can significantly increase their influence in
pushing measures for their home districts, such as more money for state
universities and roadways.

Hinojosa, Lucio, and Zaffirini’s
committee assignments follow:

• Hinojosa: Vice-chair,
Jurisprudence; Criminal Justice; Finance; Natural Resources; and Subcommittee
on Agricultural, Rural Affairs and Coastal Resources;

• Lucio: Chair, International
Relations and Trade; Business and Commerce; Finance; Subcommittee on
Emerging Technologies and Economic Development; and State Affairs; and

• Zaffirini, Chair, Subcommittee
on Higher Education; Vice-Chair, Finance; Administration; Education;
and Health and Human Services.

Dewhurst announced the
15 standing committees and five subcommittees, including a new subcommittee
to address the critical issues of flooding and evacuations in Texas.

“It was important
to me to get the Senate organized and moving forward by appointing committees
by the end of the first week of the session. After personally contacting
all 31 senators late Friday evening, I thanked them in advance for the
hard work they will put in over the course of the next five months for
the people of Texas. I believe the lineup of these committees puts the
right people in the right places to work toward making Texas a better
place to live, grow a business and raise a family,” Dewhurst said.

Senators serve on more
than one committee. The Valley senators committee appointments
follow:

••••••

What do Arnold Schwarzenegger
and Eliot Spitzer have that Rick Perry needs?

By State Sen. Juan “Chuy”
Hinojosa

Governors across the country,
including Texas’ own Rick Perry, are preparing their State of the State
speeches. In fact, the recently reelected governor of California and
the newly elected governor of New York have already delivered theirs.
And each of them took the opportunity to announce that affordable health
care will be top priorities for their administration in 2007, including
comprehensive children’s health care initiatives and efforts to reduce
the number of uninsured adults in their states.

What will we hear in Texas
about these issues? After all, more of our residents are uninsured than
anywhere else in the country and health care costs threaten to overwhelm
middle-class families, small business owners, hospitals, physicians
— and our future economic growth.

The need to fix our health
care crisis transcends partisan politics. Gov. Spitzer is a liberal
Democrat and Gov. Schwarzenegger – like Gov. Perry – is a conservative
Republican.

Nor is it a matter of geography.
California, Texas, and New York rank first, second, and fourth in the
number of uninsured working-age adults. They also rank first, second,
and fifth in the number of uninsured children. If anything, the problem
is more pervasive here because the percentage of Texans without insurance
coverage – 31 percent of working-age adults and 20 percent of children
– places us far ahead of every other state in the nation.

It isn’t because health
care providers haven’t raised the issue, either. In careful reports,
a coalition of the state’s medical schools, the Texas Medical Association,
and others have offered dire predictions if Texas fails to act now to
stop the vicious cycle of uninsurance.

But where health professionals
may have fallen short is in not partnering with the single most powerful
force in Texas politics: the business community. By failing to make
the business case for dealing with the uninsured, the issue was AWOL
from the 2006 elections and is still a non-issue today, as lawmakers
gather for the legislative session and Gov. Perry prepares for his third
term.

Gov. Schwarzenegger calls
his own state’s high number of uninsured residents “a hidden tax
on every person in this state” and “a terrible drain on our
economy.” Gov. Spitzer says that “expanding access to health
care will reduce state spending significantly in the long run.”

Here’s the situation in
Texas:

• One in every four Texans
– 5.6 million people – is uninsured. In Houston, one of every three
people has no access to basic health services.

• Taxpayers,
Texans with insurance, and employers who offer health benefits pay extra
for caring for the uninsured, adding $1,551 to the average Texas family’s
private health insurance premium.

• Some
79 percent of uninsured Texans either work themselves or live with a
family member who does. These employed but uninsured Texans work mainly
in small firms, which are the largest generators of new jobs.

• Uninsured
patients are more likely to forego or delay treatment for acute illnesses
or injuries, or to go without needed treatment for chronic conditions
or illnesses. For employers, that means their sick workers will get
sicker and be off the job longer.

• Many
uninsured patients are forced to get their health care in already overcrowded
emergency rooms at three times the cost of a physicians office and often
at taxpayer expense.

And here are a few steps
for Gov. Perry and our state leaders to consider:

• Expand the “three
share” pilot project in Galveston County, where employers, employees,
and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) are picking up equal
shares of health insurance premiums for workers in small businesses
that can’t otherwise afford to provide health care benefits.

• Encourage
doctor participation in Medicaid by raising reimbursement rates.

• Bring
home the dollars we deserve from Washington, D.C., where hundreds of
millions in available federal funds are waiting for us if we will simply
take advantage of the generous federal matching funds for Medicaid and
CHIP by enrolling all eligible Texans in those proven programs.

• Ease
the burden on local taxpayers by aggressively pursuing available federal
reimbursements for school-based Medicaid services.

• Invest
in proven nursing programs at state colleges and universities to address
the record nursing shortage.

• Pilot
test other innovations that would help uninsured working Texans buy
into various state-run insurance programs.

We don’t need to copy the
California or New York models. This is Texas, after all. We have unique
challenges and – of course – that huge share of our population without
health insurance. What we need is a Texas plan. And we need our state
leaders to champion it.

Without a comprehensive
initiative to solve the health care crisis, Texas will not be able to
sustain a healthy economy or build a future of progress and prosperity.
Other states are moving forward with bold initiatives to reduce their
uninsured. If Texas wants to remain an attractive place to do business,
we should, too.

Sen. Juan “Chuy”
Hinojosa represents Senate District 20, which stretches from the Coastal
Bend to the Rio Grande Valley.

••••••

Estella L. Treviño
honored by Legislature for her contributions on behalf of public housing,
elderly

Mrs. Estella Lane Treviño,
a statewide leader in public housing programs and for efforts to help
the elderly, has been honored for her many contributions to Texas by
the state House of Representatives.

House Resolution 57, authored
by Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, hailed Treviño for her “exceptional”
work in helping tens of thousands of area and state residents during
a public service career that spans more than three decades.

Treviño, a political activist
and Edinburg icon whose career has included service as a justice of
the peace, has brought positive recognition to herself and her community.

The legislative resolution,
which was approved by the House of Representatives on January 11, reads
as follows:

H.R. No. 57

R E S O L U T I O N

“WHEREAS, Estella
L. Treviño received the 2005 Hall of Fame Award for Outstanding Service
from the Texas chapter of the National Association of Housing and Redevelopment
Officials in recognition of her exceptional contributions to public
housing in the Edinburg community; and

WHEREAS, For the past 32
years, Ms. Treviño has served as the executive director of the Edinburg
Housing Authority, where she has been a passionate advocate for public
housing and the elderly; and

WHEREAS, Through the Family
Self-Sufficiency Program, Ms. Treviño has broadened the agency’s mission
to encompass helping residents acquire marketable skills, and she has
enabled more than

60 families to achieve
the American dream of home ownership in the agency’s Sunrise Estates
subdivision; and

WHEREAS, Ms. Treviño has
further enriched the quality of life for area residents by incorporating
community rooms, learning centers, and educational and recreational
programs into Edinburg

public housing; in 1973,
she was instrumental in the development and construction of The Towers,
a 100-apartment complex designated for the elderly; and

WHEREAS, Under Ms. Treviño’s
leadership, the agency has been recognized with numerous honors, including
the Outstanding Services Award, the Specific Activity Award for Outstanding
Programs from the Drug Elimination Program, the Award for Excellence
in Youth Sports, the Family Self-Sufficiency Program Award, and the
Texas NAHRO Member of the Year Award; and

WHEREAS, “Ms. T,” as
she is affectionately known to her legion of friends and admirers, is
a long-standing member of the Texas Silver Haired Legislature; at the
age of 83, she remains committed to providing decent, affordable housing
and promoting the skills necessary to achieve home ownership to the
citizens of Edinburg; and

WHEREAS, Representative
Aaron Peña has justly recognized Estella Treviño by authoring this
resolution in her behalf during the Regular Session of the 80th Texas
Legislature; now, therefore,

be it

RESOLVED, That the House
of Representatives of the 80th Texas Legislature hereby congratulate
Estella L. Treviño on her receipt of the 2005 Hall of Fame Award for
Outstanding Service from the

Texas chapter of the National
Association for Housing and Redevelopment Officials and extend to her
deep gratitude for her years of service to the community; and, be it
further

RESOLVED, That an official
copy of this resolution be prepared for Ms. Trevino as an expression
of high regard by the Texas House of Representatives.”

••••••

Judge J.D. Salinas attends
Lyceum meeting in Midland

While most of us huddled
up in our homes during the recent cold weather snap, Hidalgo County
Judge J.D. Salinas braved the weather to travel to Midland this weekend
and attend a quarterly Texas Lyceum meeting.

Texas Lyceum, a non-profit,
non-partisan organization, is made up of 96 men and women from throughout
the state of Texas who have demonstrated leadership in their community.
The diverse group is comprised of government officials, business owners,
doctors, lawyers, academics and others who discuss and debate the most
pressing issues facing Texas.

“Group meetings like
this help us generate new ideas and help me make better decisions,”
Salinas said. “Some of them have tried the things we’re thinking
about doing and they know what works and what doesn’t.”

“The Texas Lyceum brings
together some of the best experts and many different opinions on the
most timely issues and helps us form an effective plan of action,”
Salinas said. “It’s a win-win situation for everyone who attends
and I appreciate both the opportunity to learn from their experiences
and the chance to tell them what works for us here.”

Houston Mayor Bill White;
Dr. George Martin, President, St. Edward’s University; David Gonzales,
Vice President, Corporate Social Responsibility; and Dr. Mary Evans
Sias, President, Kentucky State University, will be among the speakers
Salinas was scheduled to hear this weekend.

••••••

State lawmakers conduct
tour of South Texas, Edinburg

A group of state legislators
visited Hidalgo and Starr counties, including Edinburg, from January
18 – 24, as part of a major tour, sponsored by the Rio Grande Valley
Partnership.

The visit was organized
to lobby, educate and inform state leaders about deep South Texas..

Several members of the
Rio Grande Valley legislative delegation, including Peña, Rep.
Verónica Gonzáles, D-McAllen, Rep. Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City,
Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, and Sen. Eddie Lucio,
Jr., D-Brownsville, were on hand to personally escort many of their
fellow lawmakers.

“The Partnership does
a tremendous job every session putting this tour together,” said
Peña. “It is such an important tool in showing our colleagues
firsthand the tremendous potential and growth in the Rio Grande Valley.”

The Partnership scheduled
visits to the new Weslaco City Hall, McAllen’s Quinta Mazatlan World
Birding Center and South Texas College, the Food Bank of the Rio Grande
Valley in Pharr, Edinburg’s new Children’s Hospital and Museum of
South Texas History.

On Saturday, January 19,
the went to Mission to tour the Rio Queen Citrus processing facility,
the Los Ebanos Ferry, and then the historic plaza of Rio Grande City.
They wrapped up the evening visiting members of the Tamaulipas Legislature
atop the Weslaco-Progreso International Bridge for a “Fiesta
de Hermandad.”

Before departing back to
Austin on Sunday the legislators were scheduled to make a trip into
Cameron County to tour the Rio Grande Regional Seawater Desalination
Pilot Plant and the Port of Brownsville.

“The Rio Grande
Valley is set to assume a more prominent role in the leadership of this
Texas Legislature,” said Peña. “We have a unique opportunity
to ensure that our public schools and universities have the tools necessary
to keep producing world class leaders. We are going to continue working
hard to provide access to healthcare to the young and old. It is so
important to keep showcasing our rich cultural vibrancy and robust economy.
It is indeed a pleasure to welcome our colleagues to South Texas.”

The Rio Grande Valley Partnership
has been organizing these legislative trips since 1975. In 2005 the
legislators toured communities in the Cameron and Willacy Counties.

••••••

Gov. Perry calls on
Texans to “imagine the possibilities

In his third gubernatorial
oath-of-office address, Gov. Rick Perry on Tuesday, January 16,
called on Texans to embrace the ideals of freedom, equality and selflessness.
He challenged Texans to imagine the possibilities of a Texas with limitless
opportunity.

“Imagine the possibilities
in a Texas where every child is educated, every graduate has access
to a good job and every life deemed precious. Imagine the possibilities
in a Texas blind to color, class and ethnicity and where no one is invalidated
because of their heritage, but valued because of their humanity. Imagine
the possibilities in a Texas where every man, woman and child is able
to put behind the past, to grab hold of their promise, to press on to
be who they were created to be,” Perry said.

Perry said that even though
Texas has not had a history of complete solidarity, he called on all
Texans to come together and embrace the common ideals of freedom, equality
and selflessness.

“My vision for Texas
is a tremendous tapestry of diversity woven together by common threads.
We are of many faiths, traditions, heritages but we are all Texans.
And in Texas, it is not your identity that matters most, but your ideals,”
Perry said. “And even when we disagree, we can engage our differences
in a discussion that unifies rather than divides and that lifts up the
hopes, dreams and aspirations of all people without casting a single
soul aside.”

The governor said that
a free society has a responsibility to those in poverty, the young and
the aged and to those who are sick and live with disabilities. He also
said we have a responsibility to future generations to leave them a
world that is safe, an environment that is healthy, an economy that
is strong and a government that is honest.

“Young Texans must
never be taught about rights without also learning about responsibilities,”
Perry said. “For more than a generation our culture has emphasized
a message of self-indulgence at the expense of social obligation. We
have reaped the consequences in the form of teen pregnancies, divorced
and broken families, and a cycle of incarceration that joins young men
with their fathers behind bars.”

“The fabric of our
society is not government or individual freedom; it is the family,”
Perry said. “And the demise of the family is the demise of any
great society.”

Perry addressed the divisive
issue of border security and immigration by quoting the prophet Isaiah:
“come now, and let us reason together.” “We are both
a nation of laws and immigrants; the former protect us, the latter enrich
us,” Perry said. “We must secure the border with manpower,
not unmanned walls. We must have a guest-worker program that recognizes
the economic contributions of foreign workers and the desperate conditions
that bring them here. And we must oppose amnesty because those who come
here illegally should not be able to receive citizenship ahead of those
who migrate here legally.”

Finally, Gov. Perry outlined
his bipartisan agenda for a new term. “Together, we must work to
make our border more secure and our neighborhoods safer. We must find
solutions to the high rate of the uninsured and to the high cost of
health insurance. We must commit to excellence in higher education as
it prepares the workforce of the future, and we must ensure that property
tax relief is not only substantial but long-lasting. We must pass budget
reforms that protect the taxpayers,” Perry said. “Texas is
better off when Republicans and Democrats work together because our
potential is too vast to be spoiled by a politics leavened with partisanship.”

••••••

Democratic Party leader
Radnofsky takes aims at alleged Republican missteps involving Hispanics

By Barbara Ann Radnofsky

While national Republicans
attempt to attract Hispanics to their party, Texas Republicans have
no joint strategy and attack each other with increasing frequency. They
start 2007 as the minority in DC, with loss of power base and torn between
factions, as they shoot themselves in the foot.

1. The Republican governor
of Texas hosted his good friend, singer Ted Nugent, as the finale for
his innaugural ball. The entertainer used machine guns as his props
as he wore the Confederate battle flag and attacked folks who don’t
speak English as their first language. The governor’s spokesman: “Most
people had a really good time and enjoyed the show.” Houston Chronicle,
Jan 18 2007. The governor is rumored to be seeking the Republican vice
presidential slot.

2. The two Republican senators
from Texas, finding themselves in the minority, now backtrack from their
repeated, on-the-record votes for a doubled walled border fence at the
borders with Mexico. They hosted mayors from Texas border areas who’ve
argued their areas from Brownsville to El Paso would be economically
devastated by the double walled fence for which their senators voted.
The senior senator is rumored to be seeking the Republican vice presidential
slot.

3. The chairwoman of the
Republican Party in Texas criticized favored RNC Chair-to-be Sen. Martinez,
who was born in Cuba, for his pro-amnesty positions. She was reported
as “definite Martinez ‘no’ vote.” (Houston Chronicle Jan 18,
07). No word on whether she also seeks the Republican vice presidential
slot. It should suffice for today that the Republican governor and senior
senator continue their long standing feud as they jockey for position
in Republican leadership. The governor’s campaign ads attacked the inability
of the state’s federal leaders to bring federal dollars to Texas.

Barbara Ann Radnofsky of Houston
was the Texas Democratic Party candidate for U.S. Senate in 2006.

••••••

Border leaders’ input
crucial to fence plan

By Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison

Securing our nation’s borders
should be among the highest priorities of the new congressional leadership
because continued failure to do so endangers our nation’s security.

This is not a question
that affects only states that share an international border; it demands
immediate attention because it affects every American.

Throughout last year’s
debate on comprehensive immigration reform, I stressed the need to secure
our borders — not only our border with Mexico, but also our northern
border with Canada, our maritime borders, coastlines and ports of entry.
I have consistently voted in favor of strong border security initiatives,
including reinforced fencing in strategic areas.

Other measures should be
taken as well, including the deployment of additional Border Patrol
agents, port of entry inspectors, immigration and customs personnel
and drug enforcement agents. I have also supported the purchase of additional
equipment, such as encrypted two-way radios, body armor and night-vision
goggles.

Not only fencing but additional
physical barriers are needed. Improved roads for patrols, lighting,
cameras, electronic sensors and other infrastructure upgrades are needed.
Only with such a multitiered, layered system will we be able to achieve
our objective.

It is essential that those
who know the border best are part of the process. Security measures
will be far more effective if those who live and work along the border
have a say in critical decisions, such as the location of fences. Congressmen
who live thousands of miles from the border have neither the expertise
nor background to make such decisions unilaterally.

In that spirit, I have
arranged for mayors from cities along the border to meet today with
Sen. John Cornyn, myself and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff
to give the secretary insights that can be provided only by those immersed
in border issues every day.

The Secure Fence Act of
2006 authorizes 700 miles of fencing along our southern border, and
the mayors attending today’s meeting represent more than 2.1 million
Texans directly impacted by this law. It is imperative that the voices
of all Texans be heard, including those of state and local governments,
Indian tribes and private property owners.

Throughout the process
that led to passage of the Secure Fence Act, Sen. Cornyn and I were
frustrated that local officials representing areas specifically cited
in the act — particularly in the El Paso, Del Rio-to-Eagle Pass and
Laredo-to-Brownville sectors — did not have the opportunity to participate
in decisions regarding the location of fencing and other physical infrastructure
near their communities. We repeatedly attempted to remedy this omission
during the 109th Congress, and today’s meeting with Secretary Chertoff
is a result of those efforts.

Fencing has proven to be
an effective deterrent to crime along the Texas-Mexico border. For more
than a decade, we have had a border fence in El Paso, where apprehensions
decreased dramatically following fence construction.

More recently, in May 2005,
a fence was constructed in Laredo. About 1.2 miles of strategic fencing
has kept the students and faculty of Laredo Community College and local
residents safe from the perils of illegal narcotic trafficking.

Both fences were built
because local communities, in collaboration with their Border Patrol
sector chiefs, recognized the effectiveness of strategic fences in controlling
illegal entry and narcotic and human trafficking.

The United States is bound
to Mexico by ties of history, blood, culture and land.

Our expanding commerce,
growing trade and history with Mexico are like the Rio Grande, which
unites us. Our border should bring health and life to both sides. It
must be a shared resource from which we both benefit. It can be a symbol
of the heritage we will always share.

We do not need to isolate
ourselves from our friends. We can secure our borders with infrastructure
and technology that protect our sovereignty and citizens and that make
economic sense.

We have a historic opportunity
to repair our immigration system, and I look forward to playing a key
role in shaping comprehensive legislation in the 110th Congress. We
must secure our borders first; and to keep our borders secure and our
economy strong, we must work toward a solution that addresses the needs
of commerce.

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison is a Republican
U.S. senator from Texas

••••••

Lt. Governor Dewhurst
sworn in for a second term

Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst
was sworn in on Tuesday, January 16, to a second term as Texas’
41st Lieutenant Governor. The Lieutenant Governor also serves as President
of the Texas Senate.

Dewhurst took the oath
of office in the State Capitol Tuesday morning, using Sam Houston’s
Bible and surrounded by his family. “When you elected me the first
time, it had to be an act of faith. This time I trust I’ve earned your
confidence,” said Dewhurst in his inaugural remarks.

Dewhurst has made putting
Texas Children First the cornerstone of his second term. He is asking
the Texas Legislature to pass tougher laws dealing with child predators,
put defibrillators in public schools and take illegal steroids out through
mandatory, random drug testing.

“Texas Children First
is a package of legislation based on a simple, unassailable premise–that
safe and healthy children learn. Safe and healthy children learn, they
grow, and they go on to lead lives that strengthen our state and make
us proud,” said Dewhurst.

Before taking office as
Lieutenant Governor, Dewhurst served as Texas Land Commissioner. Dewhurst
is a successful businessman, rancher and proud veteran. Before taking
public office he was a civic leader in his hometown of Houston. Dewhurst
has also served in the United States Air Force, Central Intelligence
Agency and the United States State Department. He is a graduate of the
University of Arizona.

To read his complete inaugural
address, please log onto, http://www.ltgov.state.tx.us/.

••••••

Congressman Cuellar
cosponsors bill to lower costs of student loans

On Wednesday, January 17,
Congress passed HR 5, the College Student Relief Act, which was cosponsored
by Congressman Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo/McAllen. This bill will
help make higher education accessible and affordable by cutting the
interest rates in half on certain subsidized student loans over the
next five years. Interest rates on subsidized student loans for undergraduates
would be cut from the current 6.8 percent to 3.4 percent.

“The cost of attending
college has continued growing at an unprecedented rate,” noted Cuellar.
“A college education is now out-of-reach for many working families.
The cost of public universities has increased by 41 percent after inflation
since 2001 and jumped by 17 percent after inflation for private universities.”

Once fully phased in, this
bill would save the typical borrower, with $13,800 in subsidized federal
student loan debt, approximately $4,400 over the life of the loan. Additionally,
cutting interest rates has widespread bipartisan support, with 88 percent
of the American public supporting interest rate cuts.

“Our economy relies heavily
on having a highly-skilled and well-educated workforce,” continued
Cuellar. “For America to remain the preeminent global economic player,
we must ensure that our students have access to all levels of education.
This bill is a step forward in helping working families send their children
to college.”

••••••

Congressman Hinojosa
hails cuts in interest rates for student loans

Congressman Rubén Hinojosa,
D-Mercedes, on Wednesday, January 17, ) addressed the U.S. House of
Representatives on H.R. 5, the College Student Debt Relief Act of 2007.
Below are his remarks as prepared for delivery:

Mr. Speaker, I am proud
to rise in support of H.R. 5, the College Student Debt Relief Act of
2007.

Last year the 109th Congress
cut $12 billion from the student loan programs. These savings were not
re-invested in helping low and moderate income families send their children
to college.

Instead, the $12 billion
from the student loan program was used to underwrite the irresponsible
deficit spending generated by tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.
Those cuts severely hampered our nation’s ability to close the college
access gap for Hispanic and other low and moderate income students.

The 110th Congress has
a new set of priorities. HR 5 will cut in half the interest on subsidized
student loans by the year 2011. This legislation will save the average
borrower $4,400 over the life of the loan.

The student loan programs
have become an important piece of the access puzzle for Hispanic families.
This interest rate reduction is part of the solution.

Hispanic students borrow
less on average than other groups. The reluctance to assume debt that
could be difficult to repay has pushed many Hispanic students into attendance
patterns that jeopardize their ability to persist until graduation.
Nevertheless, according to the report, How Latino Students Pay for College,
Excelencia in Education, the average loan amounts exceeded the average
grant amounts by more than $1800.

It is of critical importance
to the Hispanic community that we provide assurances to borrowers that
there are protections to help them meet their student loan obligations.

We are committed to addressing
the other pieces of the access and affordability puzzle as well.

We will move forward to
ensure that academic preparation is no longer a missing piece of the
puzzle. Today, there are many gaps and leaks in the educational pipeline.
For Hispanic students, the on-time high school graduation rate hovers
around 50 percent and the college-ready rate is less than 20 percent.

We will make sure that
the early awareness of the financial aid piece of the puzzle is not
missing. A recent survey conducted by the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute
found that more than half of Hispanic parents and 43 percent of young
adults could not name a single source of college financial aid. Certainly,
we can do better.

Finally, and most importantly,
we will invest in the most important piece of the puzzle – the Pell
grant.

The Advisory Committee
on Student Financial Assistance estimates that in 2003, more than 400,000
college-qualified low-income students did not enroll in a four-year
college, and 170,000 did not enroll in any college at all because of
financial barriers.

The maximum Pell grant
has remained frozen for 4 years. That must change.

But first, with H.R. 5,
we will right a wrong and place savings from the student loan program
where they belong – with our low and middle income students.

I urge all my colleagues
to support this down payment on college access and affordability and
to vote yes on H.R. 5.”

••••••

Perry designates property
tax relief for senior citizens, tax rebates emergency items for Legislature

Gov. Rick Perry on Friday,
January 12 declared legislation authorizing property tax relief for
senior citizens and legislation authorizing state tax rebates as emergency
items for the 2007 legislative session. The emergency designation will
allow lawmakers to begin considering these issues in the initial 30
days of the legislative session.

“I want to see a constitutional
amendment on the May ballot so that seniors get the maximum amount of
tax relief on this year’s tax bill the same as other homeowners,”
Perry said. “Just because senior citizens have their tax rates frozen
doesn’t mean they should be left out in the cold when it comes to
additional rate relief.”

“To keep government fiscally
responsible, state leaders need the authority to rebate surplus funds
directly to taxpayers,” Perry said.

The text of the Governor’s
message to the House and Senate follows:

I, RICK PERRY, Governor
of the State of Texas, pursuant to Article III, Section 5, of the Texas
Constitution and by this special message, do hereby submit the following
emergency matters for immediate consideration to the Senate and House
of Representatives of the 80th Legislature, now convened:

Legislation authorizing
the reduction of ad valorem taxes that may be imposed for public school
purposes on the residence homesteads of the elderly or disabled to reflect
any reduction in the rate of those taxes.

Legislation providing that
state appropriations made for the purpose of directly reducing local
property taxes and state appropriations made for the purpose of returning
state funds to the public do not count against the constitutional state
spending limit and authorizing the legislature to provide for the grant
of public money for the purpose of returning state funds to the public.

Statement from Speaker
Tom Craddick

“I applaud the emergency
declaration by the Governor. This will allow the legislature to consider
these issues in an expeditious manner. If it is the desire of the members
to pass such legislation, the opportunity exists that such constitutional
amendments could be brought to the voters of this state for their consideration
on a May ballot.”

Statement from Rep.
Ryan Guillen, D-Rio Grande City

“I fully support the
effort to reduce school taxes on the residence homesteads of the elderly
or disabled. The property tax cut passed last year must be applied fairly
and equally to all taxpayers.”

••••••

Sen. Zaffirini wants
state, school districts to provide online sites to warn
young people of sexual predators

State Sen. Judith Zaffirini,
D-Laredo, has filed Senate Bill 120 to provide young people with Internet
sites to help them avoid being lured by sexual predators and child molesters.

Her legislation follows:

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED

AN ACT

relating to the prevention
and prosecution of and education concerning the offense of online solicitation
of a minor.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE
OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:

SECTION 1.

Title 1, Code of Criminal
Procedure, is amended by adding Chapter 5A to read as follows:

CHAPTER 5A.

ONLINE SOLICITATION OF
MINOR

Art. 5A.01.

EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS.

(a) The attorney general
shall maintain on the attorney general’s Internet website a link that
enables an Internet user to access free of charge information and educational
materials designed to prevent the commission of the offense of online
solicitation of a minor under Section 33.021, Penal Code, or any substantially
similar offense.

(b) The information and
educational materials described by Subsection (a) must be:

(1) appropriate for use
in a classroom setting in a public primary or secondary school; and

(2) designed to educate
minors concerning ways to avoid becoming a victim or perpetrator of
the offense of online solicitation of a minor under Section 33.021,
Penal Code, or a substantially similar offense.

(c) The Internet link maintained
under Subsection (a) may link the Internet user to information and educational
materials that are prepared by the attorney general, another state agency,
or a private entity that operates in the computer or computing industry,
including an Internet service provider or a computer software provider.

SECTION 2.

Section 37.083(a), Education
Code, is amended to read as follows:

(a) Each school district
shall adopt and implement a discipline management program to be included
in the district improvement plan under Section 11.252. The program must
provide for:

(1) prevention of and education
concerning unwanted physical or verbal aggression, sexual harassment,
and other forms of bullying in school, on school grounds, and in school
vehicles;

and

(2) prevention of the offense
of online solicitation of a minor under Section 33.021, Penal Code,
or a substantially similar offense by educating students concerning
ways to avoid becoming victims or perpetrators of that offense.

SECTION 3.

Section 33.021(f), Penal
Code, is amended to read as follows:

(f) An offense under Subsection
(b) is a state jail felony, and an offense under Subsection (c) is a
felony of the second degree, except that an offense under Subsection
(b) [or (c)] is a felony of the second degree and an offense under
Subsection (c) is a felony of the first degree if the minor is

younger than 14 years of
age or is an individual whom the actor believes to be younger than 14
years of age.

SECTION 4.

(a) The attorney general
shall post the Internet link required by Article 5A.01, Code of Criminal
Procedure, as added by this Act, not later than December 1, 2007.

(b) Each school district
shall modify its discipline management program to comply with Section
37.083, Education Code as amended by this Act, as soon as possible after
the attorney general posts the Internet link required by Article 5A.01,
Code of Criminal Procedure, as added by this Act, and not later than
the first day of the 2008-2009 school year.

(c) The change in law made
by this Act in amending Section 33.021, Penal Code, applies only to
an offense committed on or after the effective date of this Act. An
offense committed before the effective date of this Act is covered by
the law in effect when the offense was committed, and the former law
is continued in effect for that purpose. For the purposes of this section,
an offense was

committed before the effective
date of this Act if any element of the offense was committed before
that date.

SECTION 5.

This Act takes effect September
1, 2007.

Titans of the Texas Legislature