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Governor calls first of several special sessions

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From Enterprise Staff

Although May 29 was slated to be the last day of the 88th session of the Texas Legislature, Gov. Greg Abbott called an immediate special session to focus on property taxes and border issues, issuing a proclamation identifying agenda items for the special session that began at 9 p.m. May 29.

“I will soon be signing laws that advance our state and the future of all Texans, including laws that:

•End COVID restrictions and mandates;

•Provide more than $5.1 billion to secure the border and fund the Texas National Guard, the Texas Department of Public Safety, and the border wall;

•Designate Mexican drug cartels as foreign terrorist organizations;

•Prosecute fentanyl deaths as murder;

•Protect women’s sports and female collegiate athletes;

Focus community colleges on preparing Texas students for high skill careers;

Increase electric power generation to secure the Texas power grid;

Hold rogue district attorneys accountable;

Protect children from life-altering gender mutilation;

Ban illegal DEI hiring practices in our colleges and universities;

Add $1.4 billion to make Texas schools safer;

Require armed security at all schools;

Provide access to mental healthcare for students at all schools; and

Require regular safety checks of school buildings.

“Despite these major achievements, more must be done for the people of Texas. Many critical items remain that must be passed. Several special sessions will be required. To ensure that each priority receives the time and attention it deserves to pass into law, only a few will be added each session,” Abbott said.

“Special session No. 1 will focus only on cutting property taxes and cracking down on illegal human smuggling. We must cut property taxes. During the regular session, we added $17.6 billion to cut property taxes. However, the legislature could not agree on how to allocate funds to accomplish this goal. Texans want and need a path towards eliminating property taxes. The best way to do that is to direct property tax reduction dollars to cut school property tax rates,” Abbott said.

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