While rain slicked the streets of Austin, lawmakers heatedly debated legislation that would use $2 billion from the state’s Rainy Day Fund to
pay for the state water plan, an increasingly urgent issue for
lawmakers. But, after hours of stop-and-go debate, a procedural error
derailed the legislation.
The bill’s author, state Rep. Allan Ritter, a Republican from rainy Southeast Texas, said House Bill 11 was “doorknob dead.”
You know, it's too bad that Ritter couldn't use any of the goodwill he had among Democrats -- you know, from all those years he spent being one -- to save his water bill.
House Democrats, who organized a point of order to kill the bill,
said they resorted to that parliamentary tactic only because their
demands to put more into Texas’ schools, and fully undo the cuts from
2011, were going unheeded. Rep. Sylvester Turner (D-Houston) said they’d
like to see the House pass a 2-2-2 plan: $2 billion for roads, $2
billion for water and $2 billion more for public schools, all paid out
of the Rainy Day Fund.
Texas Monthly‘s Paul Burka described the Democrats’ dilemma:
This is also the last point in the session when the
Democrats will have any leverage. The moment the gavel falls to certify
the final passage of HB 11, the Democrats will lose whatever power they
have.
But with a
reputed 80 votes, and needing 100, it's not just the Dems who stand in the way. (The statehouse is split 95 R and 55 D.) The TP doesn't care much for the bill either, but that's because they don't want to spend
anything.
House Bill 11 also faced challenges from the House’s tea party
faction, which has been itching for a fight all session. To appease the
brawlers, the House GOP caucus chair Rep. Brandon Creighton (R-Conroe)
presented what one lawmaker called a “nuclear bomb”: an amendment
stipulating that if the bill didn’t get a vote of two-thirds of the
House, then it would be funded out of general revenue by imposing a $2
billion across-the-board cut. In other words, Creighton would force
lawmakers to choose between water and everything else in the state
budget.
The proposal, said Turner, puts “water first and everything else is
second. By definition your amendment has picked a winner and everyone
else stands to lose.”
Creighton’s rejoinder was that everyone would suffer from not funding
the water plan. “Whoever is impacted by small reductions in the budget
will benefit for years from this move,” he said.
But before the amendment came to a vote, the point of order killed the bill.
The bill could get passed if the Republicans with half a functioning brain could reach Sly Turner's common ground on funding education and transportation. But Ritter says it's dead, so I guess we should take him at his word.
It’s unclear how the House gets the water plan funded now. Any
transfer from the Rainy Day Fund, as is preferred by Gov. Perry and
other top Republicans, would require a two-thirds vote. The Senate
passed a proposed constitutional amendment last week pulling a total of
$5.7 billion from the Rainy Day Fund, including $2 billion for water.
However, Ritter said that legislation “has a snowball’s chance” in the
House.
Ritter and the Democrats pointed to another bill sitting in
committee, House Bill 19, which spreads $3.7 billion from the Rainy Day
Fund to water and roads.
Without 100 votes, something will have to give to fund the state water plan.
It's called compromise. It's defined as Republicans giving up something -- their apparent desire NOT to fully fund public schools -- in order to get what they want. Which, though difficult for them to manage, beats the kind of intransigence they have demonstrated on other legislative items (such as Medicaid expansion).
Or they could just postpone the scuffle until
a special session.
State Rep. Lyle Larson,
R-San Antonio, commenting after Turner’s point of order won out, voiced
determination to see a water bill through. “If we don’t fix this, I
think a lot of people’s political careers will be on the line,” he said.
Since Larson is the guy who
advanced term limits legislation over the objections of the governor, hopefully it's Rick Perry's political career he's referring to.