Leaving Children Behind

Link that lead me to this article was on PolitiFact - Texas
Paul Krugman on Monday, February 28th, 2011 in an op-ed column.
"Says taxes paid by the poorest residents of Texas are above the national average."
PolitiFact - Texas ….. The Truth-O-Meter Says: TRUE!!!

".... In practice, however, when advocates of lower spending get a chance to put their ideas into practice, the burden always seems to fall disproportionately on those very children they claim to hold so dear.

Consider, as a case in point, what’s happening in Texas, which more and more seems to be where America’s political future happens first.

Texas likes to portray itself as a model of small government, and indeed it is. Taxes are low, at least if you’re in the upper part of the income distribution (taxes on the bottom 40 percent of the population are actually above the national average). Government spending is also low. And to be fair, low taxes may be one reason for the state’s rapid population growth, although low housing prices are surely much more important.

But here’s the thing: While low spending may sound good in the abstract, what it amounts to in practice is low spending on children, who account directly or indirectly for a large part of government outlays at the state and local level.

And in low-tax, low-spending Texas, the kids are not all right. The high school graduation rate, at just 61.3 percent, puts Texas 43rd out of 50 in state rankings. Nationally, the state ranks fifth in child poverty; it leads in the percentage of children without health insurance. And only 78 percent of Texas children are in excellent or very good health, significantly below the national average.

But wait — how can graduation rates be so low when Texas had that education miracle back when former President Bush was governor? ... "


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Leaving Children BehindBy PAUL KRUGMAN Published: February 27, 2011

Infographic: Tax Breaks vs. Budget Cuts

"House leaders are unfortunately restricting their proposed budget cuts for the remainder of fiscal year 2011 to nonsecurity discretionary spending in an attempt to tame a $1.3 trillion deficit. This approach is especially shortsighted since the Federal Treasury loses twice as much revenue due to tax breaks than Congress appropriates on all nonsecurity discretionary spending.

The chart (in link below) compares the 10 safety-net programs slated for deep cuts with the cost of the tax breaks that should also be considered for reduction or elimination to bring the budget into balance. The column on the left is a list of safety-net programs that have already been targets of the House leadership’s budget ax. The column on the right is the cost to specified tax breaks (see either bottom of pages linked below for sources).


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Original Article - Infographic: Tax Breaks vs. Budget Cuts By Donna Cooper | February 22, 2011

Citizen Pressure To Avoid Education Cuts Growing

DALLAS, TX (KERA) - Public school teachers facing layoffs are taking their message to state lawmakers in Austin today. Their noon rally follows a Saturday march for education funding that drew an estimated 11,000 to the capitol. KERA's Shelley Kofler reports a growing number of Texans are pressuring officials -especially the Governor- to find money for schools.

After traveling for hours from across the state thousands of parents, teachers and students marched to the state capitol warning lawmakers to abandon plans for deep education cuts.

Some 150 Arlington parents and supporters poured out of three charter buses rented for the trip.

Parent: We are going to monitor how they vote on education. Our message to them is we will see you at the ballot box. Parent: I want to send a message to our legislators: we're here for change. I'm looking forward to change in a system I think is broken.

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Original Article KERA News (2011-03-14)
By Shelley Kofler

Texas 175th


Texas Independence Day
March 2, 1836

The Republic of Texas was created from part of the Mexican state Coahuila y Tejas as a result of the Texas Revolution. Mexico was in turmoil as leaders attempted to determine an optimal form of government. In 1835, when President Antonio López de Santa Anna abolished the Constitution of 1824, granting himself enormous powers over the government, wary colonists in Texas began forming Committees of Correspondence and Safety. A central committee in San Felipe de Austin coordinated their activities.[1] In the Mexican interior, several states revolted against the new centralist policies.[2] The Texas Revolution officially began on October 2, 1835, in the Battle of Gonzales. Although the Texians originally fought for the reinstatement of the Constitution of 1824, by 1836 the aim of the war had changed. The Convention of 1836 declared independence on March 2, 1836, and officially formed the Republic of Texas.

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Treaties of Velasco
April 21, 1836

The Treaties of Velasco were two documents signed at Velasco, Texas, (which is now Freeport, Texas) on May 14, 1836, between Antonio López de Santa Anna of Mexico and the Republic of Texas, in the aftermath of the Battle of San Jacinto (April 21, 1836).

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Texas Monthly - The Great Terquasquicentennial Road Trip

"Some people call it a quartoseptcentennial, or a septaquintaquinquecentennial (seriously), but you’d better save your breath. You’ll need it on this wide-ranging 6,000-mile voyage commemorating Texas’s 175th birthday." (see Link below)

As indicated by the Texas Monthly Magazine, there are three different Spanish translations used to define what the Texas Birthday / Anniversary is to be called. One in the Title, Terquasquicentennial, and two in the opening sentence to their article, quartoseptcentennial, and septaquintaquinquecentennial. So being curious, I wondered what do we call it and have investigated further....

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Read Full Article : Happy 175th Birthday Texas »

Links :

Texas Independance and the Republic of Texas (Wiki)

Treaties of Velasco (Wiki)

Texas Monthly - The Great Terquasquicentennial Road Trip
by Nate Blakeslee, H. W. Brands, Jordan Breal, Pamela Colloff, David Courtney, Alison Finney, Megan Giller, Michael Hall, Stephen Harrigan, Skip Hollandsworth, Stacy Hollister, Kate Hull, Katharyn Rodemann, Patricia Sharpe, John Spong, Mimi Swartz, Brian D. Sweany, Andrea Valdez and Katy Vine

Number of Austinites living in poverty increases in 2009


More Austin residents lived in poverty in 2009, and some of the most striking increases were seen among families and young children, the census bureau said today.

According to figures from the census’ American Community Survey, which are based on a nationwide sampling of U.S. households, 18.4 percent of all people in Austin were in poverty last year, up from 17.1 percent in 2008. By another measure, 14,000 more Austinites lived in poverty in 2009, said City of Austin demographer Ryan Robinson.

Among families, poverty rose from 11.9 percent to 13.5 percent during the same period.

Analysts said some of the most troubling figures for Austin were among children. According to the census bureau estimates, 27 percent of related children under 18 and 31.5 percent of related children under 5 lived in poverty in 2009 — 5 percent and 6 percent increases, respectively, from 2008.

Hispanics, the city’s largest and fastest-growing minority, were more likely than blacks, Asians and non-Hispanic whites to be in poverty in 2009. An estimated 29.5 percent of Hispanics were in poverty, compared to 22.3 percent of African Americans, 8.6 percent of Asians and 11.4 percent of non-Hispanic whites.

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This is the complete article. (Click on title to take you to original.).

Rebel defends the forgotten people of Texas' colonias

... "We used to ride around in the ambulances a lot, and I saw the conditions people were living in out here. I saw their shacks. I saw their dirt roads. I saw their suffering."

Upon investigation, he learned they were residents of colonias, the unincorporated communities that began cropping up in the borderlands in the 1950s, when developers foisted off cheap plots of land with no running water, sewage systems, electricity hookups, fire hydrants or paved roads to low-income families. Such communities have not only proliferated in the 60 years since, they've migrated north – to areas surrounding Corpus Christi, Austin and Houston. Some even consider Sandbranch, the historically African-American neighborhood 14 miles southeast of downtown Dallas, to be a colonia, as it lacks so many basic services. The secretary of state's office has counted nearly 2,300 colonias housing more than 400,000 Texans.

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Colonias

Colonias can be found in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California, but Texas has both the largest number of colonias and the largest colonia population. Approximately 400,000 Texans live in colonias. Overall, the colonia population is predominately Hispanic; 64.4 percent of all colonia residents and 85 percent of those residents under 18 were born in the United States. There are more than 2,294 Texas colonias, located primarily along the state's 1,248 mile border with Mexico.

Read more about Colonias
Colonias (Wikipedia)
South Texas Colonia Initiative, Inc

About the Photo :
Lara Jo Regan, USA, for Life.
Texas, USA, 2000.
Uncounted Americans: The mother of a Mexican immigrant family makes piñatas to support herself and her children, in Texas.

World Press Photo of the Year: 2000
Read more about Photographer Lara Jo Regan

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Health Reform and Coverage Expansion: What’s In It for Texas?

Article from :
Center for Public Policy Priorities / Texas Voice for Health Reform
900 Lydia Street
Austin, TX 78702    www.texasvoiceforhealthreform.org

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Health Reform and Coverage Expansion: What’s In It for Texas?

Health Reform bills in the Senate and House (as of the start of the August recess) are not identical, but they share major features.  At this point, both bills provide major benefits to Texans from every walk of life, and millions of uninsured Texans would gain coverage.

In this fact sheet, CPPP provides rough estimates of the scale of impact and benefits for Texans from health reform coverage expansion proposals.  Because the House bill is more clearly defined at this time, most examples below are from that bill. We will update this fact sheet to reflect House and Senate developments.

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Texas Stands To Gain Most From Health Reform - 2009

Article from : Center for Public Policy Priorties
For Immediate Release: 09/10/09
Contact: Derrick Crowe 512-320-0222, ext 112 or crowe@cppp.org

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CENSUS DATA SHOW TEXAS STANDS TO GAIN MOST FROM HEALTH REFORM

Austin, Texas – New data released today by the U.S. Census Bureau show that in 2008, Texas remained the state with the highest uninsured rate in the nation with an uninsured population that now tops 6 million people. With so many Texans lacking health security, Texas has more to gain than other states from national health reform legislation, which the Congressional Budget Office projects will cover 94 percent of Americans under age 65.

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Thanks to Senator Eliot Shapleigh and his team, El Paso, Texas.

Current Press Releases: Senator Eliot Shapleigh

Note : SENATOR SHAPLEIGH WILL NOT RUN FOR TEXAS SENATE IN 2010 October 16, 2009

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Texas on the Brink - Source

Texas on the Brink: How Texas Ranks Among the 50 States.

Without the courage to invest in the minds of our children, and steadfast support for great schools, we face a daunting prospect. Those who value tax cuts over children and budget cuts over college have put Texas at risk in her ability to compete and succeed. (clicking on any of the "Read more" links for any of the "Texas on the Brink" referenced below will open a PDF file on Senator Sahpleigh's site)

Special Thanks to Senator Eliot Shapleigh and his team, El Paso, Texas.

Current Press Releases: Senator Eliot Shapleigh

Note : SENATOR SHAPLEIGH WILL NOT RUN FOR TEXAS SENATE IN 2010 October 16, 2009

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SUMMARY OF ALL YEARS 2003 to 2009»

Texas on the Brink - 2009

How Texas Ranks Among the 50 States - January 2009 ~ Fourth Edition

Texas on the Brink - 2009

... From humble beginnings, we built a state with the firm belief that every Texan might rise as high and as far as their spirit, hard work, and talent might carry them. With education and determination every Texan might achieve great success – home ownership, reliable healthcare, safe neighborhoods, and financial prosperity.

In Texas today, the American dream is distant.

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SUMMARY OF ALL YEARS 2003 to 2009»

Texas on the Brink - 2007 “Distant Dream”

How Texas Ranks Among the 50 States - January 2007 ~ Third Edition

Texas on the Brink - 2007

Since 1836, Texas has stood as an icon of the American dream. Blessed with land, rivers, oil, and other abundant natural resources, early Texas welcomed everyone from cattle ranchers to braceros, from cotton farmers to Chinese railroad workers.  These pioneers built a great state, and together we fulfilled a destiny.

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SUMMARY OF ALL YEARS 2003 to 2009»

Texas on the Brink - 2005

How Texas Ranks Among the 50 States - February 2005~Second Edition

Ours is a great state. Since 1836, Texas has been built by those who believe that any Texan should have the opportunity to rise as high and far as their spirit, hard work and talent might carry them.  Texans work hard to educate their children and are full of hope for a prosperous future, which is the heart of the American Dream.  Today, that dream is distant, and our state is at a crossroads. Many believe that the 78th Regular Legislative Session marked the passage from compassionate conservatism to just plain old mean spirit.

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SUMMARY OF ALL YEARS 2003 to 2009»

Texas on the Brink - 2003

How Texas Ranks Among the 50 States

You get what you pay for. In Texas, we do not get much because we do not pay for much. Compared to other states, Texas ranks near the bottom in spending for education, health care, environmental protection, workforce development, public safety, and other services and protections. Our failure to invest in ourselves puts our children at risk and our future in jeopardy.

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SUMMARY OF ALL YEARS 2003 to 2009»

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