Saturday, March 28, 2009

Duncanville City Council/School Board to Meet @ 7:30 A.M.

What the heck is going on here?

Ladies and gentlemen, taxpayers need to be represented, and that doesn't mean at 7:30 a.m. when people are at work or on the way to work. On April 1, a Wednesday, according to Duncanville District 3 Councilman Paul Ford, both the Duncanville school board and the Duncanville City Council plan to have a joint meeting.

Thankfully, we have taxpayer advocates in Cindy Werner on the DISD board and Ford/District 5 Councilwoman Johnette Jameson who can ask the questions and report what is going on.

Council Meeting with School Board on Wednesday Source: PaulFordReports.com

This will take place on April 1, 2009, at 7:30 AM in meeting rooms 1-3 at the Library/Recreation Center. The purpose is to discuss the Natatorium and the possibility of some sort of joint funding for it between the City and the School District.

Why 7:30 AM? Haven't a clue, but come if you can!


Thursday, March 26, 2009

Don't Mess with Texas Tea Party - April 15th!



Don’t Mess with Texas Tea Party
Join us as we rally in protest of the Stimulus!

We have a lot to be proud of in Texas! Texas is #1 in job creation, most Fortune 500 companies, top state for business, fastest growing state in the country, top exporting state, and our tort reforms rank top in the nation!

We don’t need the federal government burdening our citizens with more taxes and debt!

Help us in telling them they should leave us alone! We don’t want or need their stinkin’ stimulus!

Date: Wednesday, April 15, 2009 (Tax Day)

Time: 11:30am – 1:30pm

Location: Austin City Hall, 301 W. 2nd Street, Austin TX 78701

Click here to RSVP online or to RSVP on facebook click here: http://tiny.cc/Dro5v


Confirmed Speakers include: Governor Rick Perry, Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams, Texas House Representative Wayne Christian, Michael Quinn Sullivan (Empower Texans), Peggy Venable (Americans for Prosperity-TX) and many more!


Partnering Organizations thus far: Americans for Prosperity, Austin Young Republicans, College Republicans at St. Edward’s University, College Republicans at Texas State, Libertarian Party of Texas, Texas College Republicans, Texans for Fiscal Responsibility, Texas Republican Assembly, Travis County Republican Party, Williamson County Republican Party, Williamson County Republican Women, Williamson County Young Republicans, Young Conservatives of Texas


For information on how to become a Partnering Organization, please email Michele Samuelson at Michele.Samuelson@gmail.com or Eliza Vielma at Eliza@afptx.org.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Your tax dollars working to oppose you

Most Texans want lower property taxes and support lowering the appraisal cap on homesteads – or on all property. Here is the view from the Texas Association of Counties (your tax dollars at work) of the Ways and Means hearing this week on property tax caps.


”…So many county officials signed in against the appraisal cap bills on Wednesday that one committee member quipped there must have only been five counties not mentioned in the long list of names read opposing the bills.

”Tarrant County Judge Glen Whitley testified against the bills, with Tarrant County Tax Assessor-Collector Betsy Price testifying to answer committee members’ questions regarding the effective tax rate and the fact that counties do not receive a windfall from the supplemental rolls after all protests have been settled.

”Rural county judges met at the Capitol that morning, and many later attended the hearing, signing in to officially oppose the bills, as did Dallas County Commissioner Mike Cantrell who planned to testify but found himself caught in another committee at the time.

”The Texas Association of Counties, County Judges and Commissioners Association, Texas Conference of Urban Counties and Texas Municipal League joined the individual county officials in opposing the bills, as did representatives of business and the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP).

”… We will keep you posted regarding further action on these bills, as well as the upcoming committee schedules regarding appraisal reform and revenue cap bills.”

You may recall, TAC is the organization that is paying former Local Ways and Means Chairman Fred Hill as much as $200,000 a year to lobby the legislature. We don't know when he stopped working for his constituents and started working for TAC, but he had the lobby contract in hand as he left the legislature Jan. 13. In addition to the TAC contract, he also has contacts from other taxing entities totalling well over a half-million dollars a year.

Your tax dollars at work - working against you.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Texas is Number One - AGAIN!

This is Sunshine Week and we are proud to announce that Texas is -- again -- Number ONE! in on-line transparency. Yes, read it and weep, Californians - Sunshine Week  

We have written on it: AFP Responds to Texas' Rank as No. 1 in Transparency 

Here is Gov. Perry's press release: In Case You Missed It, Texas Ranked #1 In Online Transparency (it outlines what 20 categories are considered in determining online transparency). 

We realize the virtues of Texas are far too great to enumerate...but we will name just a few...
#1 - Texas: State Online Transparency
#1 - Texas: Job Creation -
- in the 12 months ending in January 2009, Texas gained 19,900 jobs...
- From December 2007 to December 2008, Texas accounts for 80% of the entire job gains in the nine states with increased employment
- In the past 5 years, the Texas economy added over 1.2 million new jobs.
#1 - Texas: Most Fortune 500 Companies
#1 - Texas: Top State For Business
#1 - Texas: Fastest growing state in the country
#1 - Texas: More wind energy than any other state (some people would just say more "hot air")

In short, Texans don't think in terms of the audacity of hope but in the certainty of superiority.

OK, I know humility is a virtue - this bloggers' apologies for the last comment.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Wise words Congress needs to hear (again)

"You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it." –Adrian Rogers

Elected officials line up to oppose taxpayer protections

Today, City representatives from Plano, Cedar Park, Irving, Sugar Land, Ft Worth, City of Mansfield, Tarrant County and others lined up to oppose taxpayer protections.

All came before the legislature opposing taxpyaer protections in the form of lowering to 5% (from the current 10%) appraisal caps on homesteads.

To hear their squealing, you would think they were discussing bills which would limit their ability to raise revenue.

No bills before the Ways and Means Committee are recommending that. The bills are simply requiring that local officials “own up” to the practice of raising taxes.

A Plano representative even admitted that local elected officials campaign for re-election claiming they “haven’t raised taxes” when they didn’t need to raise the rate to get more revenue from taxpayers…the appraisal increases did that.

City officials touted their cities’ attributes…attributes funded on the backs of taxpyaers.

Someone from the City of Mansfield claimed they have “lowered our taxes four times” but was asked to clarify – they had actually lowered their tax rate but have been able to increase revenue (thanks to appraisal increases.)

Bottom line: local elected officials don’t want to honestly address taxpayers and say, “we need to raise your taxes” but hide behind the skirts of the appraisal districts to do that for them.

It’s a dishonest practice which needs to end. Clearly, local officials are not eager to "come clean" with their constituents. – Peggy Venable

Grave Robbing doesn't require a shovel these days

Grave robbing: The Scales of Justice Now the Scales of the Fat Lady’s Song

Like it or not, Mr. Howard K. Stern, the fat lady has sung.

The 14-year-old case of Anna Nicole Smith claiming that her deceased husband, J. Howard Marshall II, had verbally promised her a portion of his estate has run its course, and then some. And the answer stays the same: In the case of Marshall v. Marshall, Smith’s estate is owed nothing.

Smith’s lawyers, nothing if not creative, tenacious and greedy, ran her case through just about every judicial venue available, wasting others’ time and resources, and denying justice to those more deserving. The pair began their quest with the Texas probate court and then went west to try their hand in a federal bankruptcy court in California. Next they were off to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, before scoring a hearing by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Click here to read full story

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

How Does the Tax Appraiser See Your Home?

Your house As Seen By:

Yourself....


Your Buyer...



Your Lender...



Your County Tax Assessor ...



Your Appraiser...








Thursday, March 12, 2009

Obama taxes every aspect of our lives

Obama’s cap and trade will be the largest tax bill in history. And everyone will be hit. It won’t just hit us at the gas pump. We’ll pay more for everything from electricity to food.

Read about it here: http://www.americansforprosperity.org/022709-obamas-energy-tax

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Davis electricity proposal a bad deal for Texas

A popular joke making the rounds these last few months has been that the good citizens of Louisiana now have a bumper sticker that says “Thank God for Illinois!” The ethical craziness that once plagued the Bayou state has been forgotten ever since Rod Blagojevich and Roland Burris became role models for government graft and corruption.

In this legislative session with electricity regulation back on the table, the hazard we now risk is whether or not our friends in California, home to rolling blackouts and high energy prices, will one day have their own bumper sticker that says “Thank God for Texas!”

State Sen. Wendy Davis (D-Fort Worth), along with state Rep. James Keffer (R-Eastland) have introduced a bill to allow local governments to collectively negotiate bulk-rate electricity prices for their constituents. Residents who don't like their plan can "opt out."

But the Davis-Keffer proposal raises a few eyebrows.

First, why should Texans have to opt out of something they might not have wanted in the first place?

If someone is happy with the plan they have it is fundamentally unfair to force them into a government plan and then make them go through the trouble of resigning from it.

Second, according to the Texas Public Policy Foundation, in Dec. 2001 the lowest per kilowatt hour, adjusted for inflation, was 11.4 to 12.6 cents. In Feb. 2009 and with a deregulated market, the price was 8.9 to 10.4 cents, a decrease of 19 percent.

Competition lowers prices. The same study also found that since deregulation the five companies that had a monopoly on Texas electricity have seen a 56 to 80 percent drop in their market share. Today, the average Texas consumer can choose from 23 different providers offering 85 different rate plans. Two years ago it was 17 providers and 36 plans respectively.

There is a virtue to letting people run their own affairs, and that tradition is why many people here proudly say "Thank God for Texas!"


Thank you, Rep. Will Hartnett

We are sitting here in the House Ways and Means Committee hearing with folks from around the state. The first bills are all calling for increasing the homestead exemption from $15,000 to as much as $45,000. That sounds good. Homeowners would pay school property taxes on less of their property. But property taxes would be shifting from homeowners to the businesses in that district...businesses which provide jobs and set the cost of goods and services.

So Dallas Rep. Hartnett asked one bill sponsor this: "You mean you want to lower taxes for homeowners and shift $1.5 billion to all other taxpayers?" Well, yes.

He then pointed out to another of the bill sponsors that these bills could raise the rent for apartment dwellers.

Thanks for the astute questions, Rep. Hartnett.

Here's the bottom line: it's the spending, not just the taxes. Shifting taxes from one set of taxpayers to another could make us all poorer.

We need to be spending the existing local property taxes more wisely. Schools now spend only about half their funding on instruction. And local government revenue in Texas is growing four times faster than Texans' paychecks. It's time we give taxpayers the right to control government growth and determine just how much government we want and are willing to pay for.

AFP-Texas supports SB 700 and HJR 1575 by Sen. Dan Patrick and Reps. Carl Isett and Dan Paxton, respectively. Those bills represent true local control.

Obama: promises broken

With one stroke of his pen, Obama is set to break promises -- and break hearts. What a disappointment for Obama lovers everywhere. Americans for Prosperity's policy expert, Phil Kerpen, writes on Fox News Forum:

http://foxforum.blogs.foxnews.com/2009/03/11/kerpen_obama_omnibus/

Yes, Obama is set to sign a notoriously pork-filled bill –the so-called “omnibus” or “porknibus” bill, stuffed with at least $7.7 billion of wasteful pork-barrel earmarks, including such vital national priorities as swine odor research in Iowa and Harry Reid’s beloved Las Vegas Natural History Museum.

The swine odor research may be needed in Washington, D.C., not just in Iowa.

Live blog on Voter ID Senate Debate - Day 2

Monday, March 9, 2009

God bless Texas - TLR did!

At a Texans for Lawsuit Reform luncheon in Austin, in a most informative and entertaining speech, Atty Gen. Greg Abbott talked about the success of lawsuit reform in Texas. More doctors are practicing medicine, and fewer frivolous lawsuits. Of note, the omnibus tort reform bill HB 4 sponsored by former Rep. Joe Nixon, has been very successful. Most Texans don't know that the class action lawsuits which result in hundreds or thousands of plaintiffs getting nothing more than a coupon also provides justice to the ambulance-chasing lawyers who file those suits. If filed in Texas, instead of getting six-figure attorney fees when citizens get coupons, the lawyers who file those bills get paid like the plaintiffs they abuse do -- in coupons. Gotta love Texas!

Austin launches light rail - is it a good idea?

I've long read about the efforts to promote light rail in US cities and the enormous expense it incurs. I lived in Washington, D.C., and saw how the Metro subway works -and it works. But light rail in Austin? Not so sure.

My neighborhood assiciation had a speaker from Austin Metro touting the launch of light rail in Austin. I also was interested to see Paul Burka (Texas Monthly) on his blog - highlighting the problems with light rail. It's worth a read:
http://www.texasmonthly.com/blogs/burkablog/?p=3046

Is an answer to the commuter's prayers? Is it a good investment? Does it take enough cars off the roads to justify the expense? Or are taxpayers footing the bill for a boondoggle? Time will tell - but it wouldn't be the first time for Austin.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

I'm a Stein Girl

I love Ben Stein.

The only reason I watch CBS’s Sunday Morning is to hear Ben. I’m disappointed when he’s not on. And downright disappointed when some of the other commentators are.

Whether it is talking about Thanksgiving or taxes, Ben and I usually agree. I’m sure he’ll be happy to know that.

This Sunday, Ben Stein provided Obama some advice. He also gave that same advice to Wall Street and to Main Street.

Be optimistic.

Obama’s gloom and doom scenarios are sending unemployment skyrocketing. He blames the Bush Administration. Personally, I’d like to see which Bush spending measures then-Sen. Obama voted against.

I’d like to know what leadership Sen. Obama provided the country as Fannie and Freddie were lending more and discounting borrowers’ credit history or ability to afford what they were buying.

That’s history.

The future lies in our ability to project optimism. Optimism that Americans can succeed – and fail.

If we think we will succeed, then people will invest in businesses, consumers will buy, and employers will hire.

Ben Stein spelled out the recipe for our country’s recovery. It’s spelled o-p-t-i-m-i-s-m.

Obama wants America to fail

It appears to me that President Barack Obama wants the America that our fathers and forefathers fought for to fail. He wants to turn this country around – away from capitalism and toward socialism.

And he is using extortion to do so. If States don’t take the so-called stimulus money under his terms, the citizens can’t receive their own hard-earned tax dollars at all. Forget that the money Congress is obligating how comes both from enterprising Americans and our future generations. Forget that in taking the stimulus money, we are obligating our children and grandchildren to higher taxes and unprecedented government spending.

I agree with Rush Limbaugh. I don’t want America to fail – I want my country to succeed. To do so, we must have a capitalistic system where entrepreneurs are encouraged to succeed, and pick themselves up when they fail.

I’m a West Texas gal. I grew up in Midland and Odessa. My dad didn’t go to college, but he was the smartest, hardest-working man I knew. John Meek wore a short-sleeved shirt in the summer. We used folding lawn furniture in our den while my Dad was launching his own business – John Meek Oil Field Equipment Company. He had fought in WWII and when he got out of the Marines; his older brothers had already made their fortune in oil. He ventured off on his own and started his company with little more than a wing and a prayer.

There were good times, and bad times. Mostly, times were tough.

Dad would leave the house early in the morning driving his pick-up to his business, and spending most of the day in the oil fields of West Texas, delivering equipment. He had employees – but he was always “hands on” and while he was out making deals on equipment, my mother kept his company’s books.

When my Dad took his shirt off, he had the markings of a working man – looking as if he were wearing a white t-shirt, with dark brown arms and pale chest and shoulders.

The only time he wore a suit was when we went to church, and he always had a handkerchief in his pocket – whether it was work pants or dress pants.

My Dad was the epitome of the American dream.

I believe in an America which allowed my Dad to succeed – and to fail. We had good times, and bad times.

But he was free from overly cumbersome regulations and taxation. He lived the American dream.

I’ve been a single mom who didn’t ask for or receive any government help. My daughter and I are paying for her college education through our hard work and student loans. Meanwhile, low income students can receive grants and graduate debt-free.

Her education – coupled with hard work and personal responsibility – will allow her the chance to succeed.

I agree with Rush Limbaugh – this a great country.

So it makes sense I would want the America that I love to succeed – but socialist policies to fail. They always do.

And I want my daughter to live in a country which allows her the opportunity – not the guarantee – to achieve the American Dream.

-- Peggy Venable

Friday, March 6, 2009

Stock Market Since Stimulus

How are we doing on that stimulus?

The audacity of hope -- or hypocrisy.  Spending taxpayers' dollars -- along with stealing it from our children and grandchildren -- was designed to provide economic stimulus.  How are we doing on that?  


 Unless Obama and his tax-dodging cabinet members have redefined economic stimulus, I thought the line should be going the other direction.  Must be something like his proposing the largest budget in history and the following week hosting a "fiscal responsibility" summit the next.  

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Daryll Hanna is i-g-n-o-r-a-n-t

Daryll -- or is it Darryl or Daryl - Hanna is ignorant.

As it was snowing in DC, a cast of characters protested global warming at the US Capitol. It seems a coal plant powers the Capitol. And here we thought it was from all the hot air in the building!.

Daryll Hanna – actress and environmental activist – participated in a protest to prefer “green” over the DC power plant which is coal-powered.

“We have the technology to use wind and sun power,” she claimed. We do only if we don’t want to be warm in winter and cool in the summer.

She referred to the “devastation” resulting from mining coal. However, after having worked at the US Department of the Interior and knowing what former coal mining areas look like, Hanna is misinformed.

Also, if we only used sun and wind power, Hanna and her Hollywood friends would lose a lot of power –as would the rest of the country.

Hanna seems nice - and we need not do any blonde jokes - but she is clueless.

Turn out the lights, Hollywood is closed for business. They are going green, right, Hanna? Splish, splash – crash!

Monday, March 2, 2009

Taxpayers can track Texas "stimulus" money

It's hard to describe the "stimulus" bill as a "love it or hate it" situation since Americans either hate it or belong to the "it's better than nothing" crowd.

But at least transparency will allow everyday citizens to keep track of their tax dollars being put out of business.

Texas taxpayers will be able to follow the funds from old Porkulus via a new Web site, Comptroller Susan Combs announced last Friday.

"Tracking the Stimulus" allows visitors to view a spreadsheet with line items of the money allocated for Texas. The list includes the money slated for projects, unemployment benefits and tax credits. The information is preliminary and will be continually updated.

The Web site includes e-mail alerts for when the spreadsheet is updated. The "stimulus" bill itself is available as a PDF file ... all 407 pages of it.

View the website here.

Sign up for e-mail updates on the Texas stimulus money here.

Gov. Perry got it right and needs to stand tall

Example: The "stimulus" bill provides Texas with $500 Million for unemployment, but obligates the state to spend an additional $100 million/year from now to eternity. Is that a deal or extortion?


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123535040968044863.html

Governors v. Congress
The stimulus sets a long-term budget trap for the states.

Debt-laden state governments were supposed to be the big winners from the $787 billion economic stimulus bill. But at least five Republican Governors are saying thanks but no thanks to some of the $150 billion of "free" money doled out to states, because it could make their budget headaches much worse down the line. And they're right.

The National Governors Association winter meeting in Washington, Saturday, Feb. 21, 2009.

These Governors -- Haley Barbour of Mississippi, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, Butch Otter of Idaho, Rick Perry of Texas and Mark Sanford of South Carolina -- all have the same objection: The tens of billions of dollars of aid for health care, welfare and education will disappear in two years and leave states with no way to finance the expanded programs. Mr. Perry sent a letter to President Obama last week warning that Texas may refuse certain stimulus funds. "If this money expands entitlements, we will not accept it. This is exactly how addicts get hooked on drugs," he says.
Consider South Carolina. Its annual budget is roughly $7 billion and the stimulus will send about $2.8 billion to the state over two years. But to spend the hundreds of millions of dollars allocated to the likes of Head Start, child care subsidies and special education, the state will have to enroll thousands of new families into the programs. "There's no way politically we're going to be able to push people out of the program in two years when the federal money runs out," Mr. Sanford says.

The Medicaid money for states is also a fiscal time bomb. The stimulus bill temporarily increases the share of state Medicaid bills reimbursed by the federal government by two or three percentage points. High-income states now pay about half the Medicaid costs, and in low-income states the feds pay about 70%. Much of the stimulus money will cover health-care costs for unemployed workers and single workers without kids. But in 2011 almost all the $80 billion of extra federal Medicaid money vanishes. Does Congress really expect states to dump one million people or more from Medicaid at that stage?

The alternative, as we've warned, is that Congress will simply extend these transfer payments indefinitely. Pete Stark, David Obey and Nancy Pelosi no doubt intend exactly this, which could triple the stimulus price tag to as much as $3 trillion in additional spending and debt service over 10 years. But the states would still have to pick up their share of this tab for these new entitlements in perpetuity. Thanks, Washington.

Governors are protesting loudest over the $7 billion for unemployment insurance (UI) expansions. Under the law, states will increase UI benefits by $25 a week. The law also encourages states to cover part-time workers for the first time. The UI program is partly paid for by state payroll taxes imposed on employers of between 0.5% and 1% of each worker's pay. Mr. Barbour says that in Mississippi "we will absolutely have to raise our payroll tax on employers to keep benefits running after the federal dollars run out. This will cost our state jobs, so we'd rather not have these dollars in the first place."

The problem for these Governors is that they may be forced to spend the federal money whether they want it or not. Representative James Clyburn of South Carolina slipped a little-noticed provision into the stimulus bill giving state legislatures the power to overrule Governors and spend the money "by means of the adoption of a concurrent resolution." Most state legislatures are versions of Congress; they can't say no to new spending.

These five Governors deserve credit for blowing the whistle on the federal trap that Washington has set for their budgets. They stand in contrast to most of the other Governors, who are praising the stimulus as a way to paper over their fiscal holes through 2010. But money from Congress is never as free as it looks, as the banks can attest. Don't be surprised if two years from now states are still facing mountainous deficits. They will have their Uncle Sam to thank. - WSJ

(And their lack of having a backbone) - Peggy Venable