Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Lets leave NCLB behind, shall we?


Seeing Texas Talk blog on House Bill 3 and Senate Bill 3 Relating to public school accountability, curriculum, and promotion requirements, I too thought Hallelujah! Though I am not a teacher, I have many family members and friends who are teachers. One in particular has talked about having to ‘teach to the test or TAKS’ and how it puts undue stress on 3rd graders and the teachers. I really don’t believe that you should be stressed out in 3rd grade. The only thing you should be stressed over if you are 8 is when the next Harry Potter movie is coming out.

Besides the students being stressed, the teachers are run ragged trying to get the kids prepared for the TAKS testing and aftermath. Because after the TAKS tests are over, you only have a short time to actually get down to being able to teach everything that should have been teaching throughout the school year. Also if the students, as a whole percentage wise, consistently do make the acceptable range on the tests the teacher’s job may be on the line. If this teacher is in a poor district with little resources and the students’ home life is not conducive to learning, poor scores over all may not reflect on that teacher. More stress….

In talking with a high school teacher friend of mine, he said that most of the kids he sees in his classes are not ready for college level courses even though they may have passed the TAKS testing. A Houston Chronicle article on the HISD schools progress in improving overall students testing scores also had some that worried that many schools put way too much emphasis on the TAKS testing.

I am hopeful that this bill that has now passed both House and Senate committees and is on the intent calendar will be passed and put into place soon. I think it is very important for everyone that we place more emphasis on teaching and learning and less on standardize testing.

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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Texas HB 2094




After reading through several articles and getting madder or depressed or being reduced to only thinking of one or two expletives to write about any of them, I had to step back and go have a beer. As Homer says, “Ummmmmm….. Beeeeeeeeeeer” But not just any beer but a fine craft brewed beer from an independent brewer. Much more flavorful and deep than mass market beers out there. Each brewer adds something of themselves to the process.



Back to being disgusted with the legislatures (Yes the federal and state) and thinking that it’s ALL rigged and there is no way to stop bills or move other bills ahead based on public opinion. Then something happens that makes me set back and think, well maybe it’s not ALL rigged. One was an OSHA proposed regulation that would have had an effect on availability of ammunition and reloading supplies. There was a public comment period in which both my husband and I sent in one of those pre-written letters to OSHA. I really did not think that anything would come of it but because of the comments sent in, the regulation was amended. One of the first times in recent memory that something like that had actually worked out the way that I wanted it too.

Now I can chalk up another bill that made it out of committee in the Texas House. This is one that is near and dear to my heart , HB 2094 that would allow small brewers to sell beer on premises. For some small breweries such as Live Oak this means if I wanted to me could go to the brewery directly and purchase some very fine pale ale or HefeWeizen or maybe even Big Bark.

This bill that had been introduced the first time in 2007 died in committee and this year’s version seemed doomed to meet the same fate. However last Thursday things started looking up. The Houston Chronicle ran a story on it last Friday and had been calling around to committee members to see how they would vote. So a bill that had been doomed because of, most likely, back room power brokers had new legs. By shedding the light of day on the bill with people going on record about it, this started this bills own ‘call in’ to let your legislators know how you feel about it. The bill made it out of committee today. I am kind of hopeful it will make it to the floor this session.

It’s not a big deal bill, nothing really earth changing but it reminds me that the system does work. This shows however that if you just set back and grouse about whatever the legislature did or did not do and you did not say anything thing about it to them, you have no room to complain. Also it shows that newspapers still can be powerful and most of all that people can get around a cause and bring it before our elected officials to effect change. But you have to speak up!

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Focus on Texas .... not GOP


In reading getting back to our roots, I was reminded that lately it does seem like that Mr. Perry is trying his best to be the biggest right wing, most conservative, makes Ms. Palin look liberal and be in Rush Limbaugh’s top 5 favorite people than to focus on his job of governor. He really should remember that he won re-election after having almost 61% of the voters vote AGAINST him.

It sounds like to me as though Mr. Perry is running for a presidential or vice presidential nod and maybe trying to show up Kay Bailey Hutchinson, his rival for the republican candidacy for governor in 2010. Perry appears to be talking out of both sides of his mouth however in that after Hurricane Ike he wanted FEMA to pay 100% of clean up costs, rather than the normal 75/25 spilt, and also wanted FEMA's help with the recent wildfires but yet wants the federal government ‘out of Texas hair.’

Historian Tory Gattis writes that Texas is primed to be the next big wave in growth in the US, following the growth waves of the East Coast, Midwest and West Coast. Texas should be preparing for that wave by strengthening our public schools, grow our research universities and finance the state’s water plan now. Those are just some of the big decisions legislators have before them in this session. That’s what Perry should be focusing own in my opinion, to grow our state and not his political right wing clout.

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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Maybe Disney came come up with a plan....


While reading about the Texas legislature wanting to do something about roads but not wanting to do the unpopular thing and raise taxes to pay for it I was reminded of when we lived in Pflugerville. At the time Pflugerville still had just a volunteer fire department and a small police force operating out of an all in one police station-city hall –jail in beautiful downtown P-ville. But P-ville had grown from a little spot in the road back in ’86 when I moved to Austin to a full fledged bedroom suburb in early 2000’s, It was time to raise taxes and pay for a full time paid fire department, new larger police force and station with a larger jail because of all the new ‘Otis’s’ in town. (If you get that reference you have told someone recently to turn the music down too)

But it was time as the town had too many citizens for a small police force and volunteer fire department to handle and so I cast my ballot to raise my property taxes to pay for the police, fire and ambulance in P-ville. Growing up is hard and owning a home is part of that and all that goes along with that such as property taxes. But those were services that were needed and had to be paid for in part by me the taxpaying citizen. It would be nice to never grow up and live in ‘Neverland’ and not have to think about nearly everything that you own or do being taxed to pay for something and that something’s upkeep. However the legislature seems to think that there are fairies and elves that will build and repair Texas roadways and rail systems. Not raising the state gas tax that helps build new roads and bridges in the last 18 years has put a real burden on the system. It is estimated that the funds that are coming in by 2012 will all be used to maintain and pay debt incurred in building existing roads. With all the new people driving in Texas we need new roads and bridges to be built so that we can zip around and not have to leave hours early just to get to where we are going.

I am not a fan of paying more for gas but also understand that everything costs more to do over time. Why there has not been a system in place of incrementally raising the state sales tax on gasoline that way you do not have to endure a drastic hike all at once? Is it just the legislature wanting to live in ‘Neverland’ so that they can say they never raised taxes? That is the Texas thing to do it seems, low taxes and lower services.

Hightower said it first it seems

What we will drive on if the ledg does not act soon

Friday, April 3, 2009

State Board of Education says its Beer:thirty


This blog is by Dave Mann the Texas Observers reporter who got stuck with the assignment of setting in a Texas State Board of Education meeting that turned into a 6 hour debate over the final version of science textbook standards and curriculum. Textbook companies who produce science textbooks will have to publish the results of this as content in their products which is used throughout the U.S. Also it sets the curriculum for the next decade on what will be taught in Texas in Science classes. This is interesting to me, as I worked for several years for a textbook publishing company. I worked with bids and contracts, having to meticulously make sure that every I was dotted just so because if it was not, the local level Board of Education’s would toss the bid out. I find it both extremely funny and quite sad that most of the proposed amendments to the standards were submitted hand written in the same format and neatness as my grocery list. I have had a bid thrown out because of an incorrect font yet proposals on the state level, that it takes 10 minutes just to decipher what the amendments were saying , are ok?

I think Mr. Mann does a good job of reporting what went on from a pro evolution leaning stand point. That the State Board had a year to hammer this out and was still debating topics as low level as word choice and handing in substantive amendments that were hand written is worrisome. His reporting -- though pro-evolution-leaning -- showed that even on the Education Boards level there need to be some cause for concern as it seemed throughout this meeting, that should have been more of a voting and signing party, it was a tedious “insert the word ‘all’ here” affair.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009


Redistricting commission


Bill to take partisanship out of redistricting gains force in Legislature.


Texas House should support redistricting reform


The citizens of the state of Texas need a non partisan approach to the job of Congressional redistricting. Too often the State legislature is unable to get the job of redistricting done due to partisanship. A very messy power grab in 2003 by the new republican majority in the State legislature that lead to eleven Texas Senate Democrats fleeing the state for Oklahoma and New Mexico for 46 days in a quorum busting effort to prevent the passage of the redistricting legislation. This ultimately failed, however the U. S. Supreme Court did throughout the District 23 as in valid citing a Section 2 violation of the Voting Rights Act.

State Senator Jeff Wentworth, R-San Antonio, has been introducing legislation to create an independent redistricting commission since 1993. This commission would have 4 Republican and 4 democratic appointed members plus a none voting chairperson that would be chosen by the members. The members of this commission would hold no elected office or be involved in party of electoral politics while serving on the commission.

I think that Texans would benefit from a bipartisan redistricting commission such as the one proposed. It would remove one of the most overt demonstrations of partisan power by taking it from the political parties in the Legislature. The commission should, being bi-partisan, create more sensible congressional districts for the state. Our present congressional map is considered by many gerrymandering at its worst.


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Thursday, March 5, 2009

Bye-Bye, Boys' Club


In all honesty, I did not spend a lot of time looking at the Texas legislature candidates up for election for the November races. I live in Williamson County and it has been a VERY Republican strong hold forever. I was shocked to find out on November 5th when I bothered to look at the Texas races that Williamson County of all places elected a DEMOCRAT and a woman at that. Had to place a call to my UT-ex poly sci major buddy that used to live in my neighborhood that had moved out of state to tell him, I heard the phone clatter to the floor as he dropped it in shock.

I was excited to find this article in Texas Observer about the ‘old boys club’ having a chuck taken out of in the legislature. A grassroots organization, Annie’s List, is helping women to run for and win office. These women are pro choice but after that they are a progressive diverse bunch and Annie’s List helps monetarily, personnel and training wise for the campaign trail.

Reading about this got me excited about following the Texas legislature because of with more women in house we are looking at a bigger push for issues that are close to home, improving education, pay equality, health care and combating domestic violence.

Annie's List

Diana Maldonado