The Texas Senate issued its final approval Tuesday to a suite of bills that, if enacted, will prohibit transgender people from using certain restrooms, unilaterally ban hemp products and curtail the ability for cities and counties to raise property taxes. The series of votes early into this year’s second special legislative session advanced the upper chamber’s more conservative priorities.
Republican senators also passed legislation giving the Texas attorney general more power to prosecute election-related crimes and a bill preventing local officials from using taxpayer dollars to pay lobbyists to advocate on behalf of their interests at the Texas Capitol.
Two of the bills were authored by State Sen. Mayes Middleton, R-Galveston, who called his measure to limit transgender people from entering restrooms that don’t match the sex they were assigned at birth “common-sense.” He also said a second bill he wrote, which cracks down on publicly funded lobbying, is “a very tough bill.”
“And it’s because so many are profiting off our taxpayers,” he said.
Democratic senators, for their part, opposed the majority of the bills that were up for a vote.
State Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, said efforts to ban transgender people from using restrooms outside the sex assigned at birth could invite litigation. San Antonio Democrat José Menéndez said lawmakers convened to pass legislation in response to the deadly July 4 weekend flash floods that killed at least 135 people in Central Texas, including 27 girls at Camp Mystic.
“It’s despicable that someone would spend their time policing a restroom, a place where people go to relieve themselves, change their children’s diapers, or help someone else use the restroom because they can’t do so on their own,” he said. “Every single Texan deserves privacy, and their privacy should be protected.”
Gov. Greg Abbott’s agenda for this special session nearly mirrors the first. However, work during that session was stalled when Texas House Democrats left the state to prevent Republicans from passing a new congressional map the seeks to give the GOP five additional seats in the U.S. House.
The Senate votes Tuesday came one day after the upper chamber passed flood-related legislation, which Democrats supported. Among those bills was one that seeks to improve safety measures at youth summer camps following the deadly July 4 flash floods that killed at least 135 people in Central Texas, including 27 girls at Camp Mystic. During floor discussion, Sen. Paul Bettencourt, R-Houston, said with the release of data by the Upper Guadalupe River Authority, officials in the three counties affected by the tragedy are now in favor of flood warning systems.
The legislation now heads to the Texas House.
Here’s a look at the bills the Senate has approved:
Flood preparedness, camp safety and emergency response
Senate Bill 2 would create a training program for justices of the peace on how to handle bodies during disasters when many people die, establish licensing requirements for emergency management coordinators and set up a registration system for disaster response volunteers that could include criminal history checks. The Senate proposal further requires all campgrounds in floodplains to develop evacuation plans, which they would have to activate any time the National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning. It would also require campground cabins to have ladders so people could climb onto rooftops as a last resort. The bill passed unanimously.
Source: Texas Tribune BY Jayme Lozano Carver and Carlos Nogueras Ramos
Photo: Credit: Ronaldo Bolaños/The Texas Tribune