Published May 13, 2023 by Taylor Landin
This week, Senate Finance hears bills to support innovation in space and semiconductor manufacturing, economic development legislation lands in Senate committee, flood mitigation initiatives move forward, and an update on four bills to keep an eye on.
Economic Development Bill Referred to Senate Committee
Last week, the Texas House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved House Bill 5, the Texas Jobs and Security Act, by Representative Todd Hunter (R-Corpus Christi). This week, the bill was referred to the Senate Committee on Business & Commerce, chaired by Senator Charles Schwertner (R-Georgetown).
What’s next: As expected, the bill is likely to sit in the Senate for several days while Lt. Governor Patrick and Senate leaders determine how the bill will move forward.
Why it matters: The bill creates a new state economic development program, attracting business investment to Texas. The bill would also support our state’s grid reliability, create high-quality jobs, provide money for Texas’ K-12 public schools, improve our supply chain, and enhance the state’s national security.
What we’re hearing: In a recent poll*, Texas voters expressed strong support for a new statewide economic development program:
Legislature Invests in Resiliency
The Legislature has taken a multi-faceted approach to invest in resiliency as the budget looks to appropriate around $1 billion in flood mitigation and infrastructure projects.
House Bill 1:
• $350 million in general revenue for Flood Infrastructure Fund (FIF)
• $275 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds for FIF
• $500 million for projects sponsored by the Gulf Coast Protection District (GCPD)
Senate Bill 1:
• $400 million in federal ARPA dollars for FIF
• $500 million for projects sponsored by the GCPD
What's next: The conference committee has nearly finished its work negotiating the differences between the two versions of the budget.
Houston in Focus: On Wednesday, the Senate Committee on Natural Resources & Economic Development heard House Bill 2416 by Representative Dennis Paul (R-Houston). The bill would create the Gulf Coast Protection Trust Fund. The fund, administered by the General Land Office (GLO), will be used for infrastructure developments to protect property, human life, and economic vitality from severe weather events within the Gulf Coast Protection District (GCPD). The Coastal Texas Program will be the likely beneficiary of that fund.
The GCPD is the state-local sponsor of the Coastal Texas Program, better known as the Coastal Spine or the Ike Dike, a proposed barrier flood gate and levee system located along the Texas coastline. The $13-17 billion dollar gate system, which will serve as a dual surge protection and flood mitigation mechanism, is funded through a governmental partnership of 65% federal with a 35% state-local match. Both budget bills provide $500 million to the GCPD to fulfill the state and local match requirements.
Senate Finance Committee Hears Space Commission & CHIPS
Texas Space Commission:
Texas CHIPS Act:
On the Move: Four Bills to Watch
Criminal and Business Courts:
Nursing workforce:
Advanced Recycling:
Session Reaches Critical Period, Legislative Deadlines Loom
This week the House hit its first major calendar deadline with Thursday being the last day for the House to consider second reading for House Bills and House Joint Resolutions.
Any house bill not heard on the house floor by midnight last night is now dead.
The Senate passed Senate Resolution 557, which speeds up the process by allowing floor consideration of bills on the intent calendar for one day (rather than two), beginning on May 15.
What it means: We are entering the pivotal time of session where calendar deadlines can derail legislation and prevent passage. As the Legislature inches closer to the final days of session, moving bills quickly through the remainder of the legislative process is essential.
Go deeper: see all dates of interest for the 88th legislative session and the end-of-session deadline calendar.
During the 88th Legislative Session, the Greater Houston Partnership will provide a weekly update on newsworthy items from Austin. You can view more policy news and archives of our weekly updates here. Subscribe here to get our weekly legislative updates