Tag Archives: Railroad Commission

Terrible story playing out in Beaumont

It pains me terribly to watch this story play out in a city I grew to love while I lived there.

The Beaumont Independent School District is no longer “independent.” The Texas Education Agency, led by Education Commissioner Michael Williams, is about to take over the public school system.

http://www.beaumontenterprise.com/news/article/TEA-to-install-board-of-managers-at-BISD-5620989.php

This is not pretty. However, it contains a lesson that other school systems across the state ought to heed with great care.

I lived in Beaumont for nearly 11 years before moving way up yonder to the Panhandle in January 1995. I saw the Beaumont district go through a lot of pain starting in 1984. The TEA at one point brought in monitors to watch the district’s every move up close and personal. The district worked its way through some messy administrative issues then.

Now it’s come to this.

Williams has named seven managers to oversee operations at the school district. The superintendent has been stripped of his duties. The board members are out of office. The managers comprise local leaders with a keen interest in restoring trust to the public school system. Of the seven people named, I know only one of them: Jimmy Simmons, president of Lamar University.

I’m not up to speed on all the particulars of what ails the Beaumont district. Near as I can tell, the district has fallen into a spasm of incompetence, fiscal mismanagement to the max, conduct that borders on malfeasance — all of which has destroyed the public’s trust in its school system.

I’ve been acquainted with Commissioner Williams for a number of years, going to his days as a Texas railroad commissioner. He’s an aggressive, proactive guy. He’s a West Texan, a lawyer from Midland. He doesn’t appear to suffer fools … at all!

The lesson here for the other 1,000-plus school districts is to ensure you keep your houses in order, spend your money wisely, do the best job possible educating the students in your charge — and do not anger those students’ parents.

I hope this Beaumont story ends well. If it does, it will emerge a better public school district. It might even become a great one.

Good luck, board of managers.

Ideology paints non-ideological campaigns

Glenn Hegar is the Republican nominee for Texas comptroller of public accounts.

He wants to be the state’s bean-counter in chief. Hegar also wants voters to know that he’s a strong conservative. Does he necessarily tout his financial credentials? Not exactly. He talked during the primary campaign about his pro-life position and his religious devotion.

Interesting, yes?

Ryan Sitton is the GOP nominee for railroad commissioner. He said the same thing about himself as Hegar. He mailed out campaign literature touting his strong conservative credentials, including his strong support of gun owners rights.

Also interesting.

What’s strikes me, though, about these two examples is that the principals are seeking offices that have nothing to do with abortion, or God, or guns ownership. Hegar wants to be the comptroller, whose main job as defined by the Texas Constitution, is to provide legislators and the governor with an accurate accounting of the state’s fiscal condition. The job Sitton seeks is focused even more narrowly. Railroad commissioners regulate the oil and natural gas industry. That’s it. Heck they don’t even set policy for railroads or rail cars, which used to be part of their job.

We’re hearing a lot of ideological talk among candidates, almost exclusively on the Republican side, who are running for nuts-and-bolts offices.

I understand why legislative or congressional candidates would want to establish their ideological credentials with voters. They seek to write laws. The other folks simply carry out the laws enacted by lawmakers and signed by either the governor or the president of the United States.

I am hoping that as the fall campaign commences we hear more from the candidates about how they intend to manage the offices they seek and less from them about irrelevant ideology.

Miserable campaign about to end

I have to agree with those who have described the Texas Republican runoff campaign as one of the most miserable in recent memory.

Heck, it might be the worst in anyone’s memory.

The lieutenant governor’s GOP runoff between incumbent David Dewhurst and state Sen. Dan Patrick has devolved into a mud fest “featuring” the release of Patrick’s medical records in an attempt to imply that the Patrick might suffer from latent emotional scars from a previous bout with depression.

The attorney general’s runoff between Dan Branch and Ken Paxton has become a contest over which guy is more crooked than the other one.

The Railroad Commission race between Ryan Sitton and Wayne Christian has brought forth allegations that one of the candidates, Christian, is a closet greenie who’s unfriendly to the state’s oil and gas industry.

http://www.texastribune.org/2014/05/25/texas-conservative-candidates-ride-out-hard-hits/

The Republican Party is at war with itself. It’s the Establishment vs. the Tea Party. The Establishment has been winning statewide battles around the country. I’m not sure the civil war is playing out quite that way in Texas, where the establishment wing of the GOP has become just as conservative as the tea party wing. Watching these people trying to outflank each other on the right is akin to watching someone walking a tightrope over a bottomless abyss.

It hasn’t been much fun to watch.

I’m ready for it all to end, which it will when the ballots are counted Tuesday night.

Hance leaving Tech chancellor’s office

Kent Hance’s announced retirement shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone.

The former Texas state senator, congressman, railroad commissioner and now university administrator has been in the public eye since The Flood, or so it seems. He’s outgoing, gregarious, funny as the dickens, homespun yet sophisticated and he carries himself with a West Texas aplomb that is impossible to duplicate.

Texas Tech University’s chancellor is retiring next year and will assume the role as “chancellor emeritus,” whatever that means.

http://www.texastribune.org/2013/10/11/kent-hance-to-step-down-as-texas-tech-chancellor/

A university chancellor’s main role is to raise money. Hance surely could do that.

The native of Dimmitt has a unique place in Texas political history: He is the only politician ever to defeat George W. Bush for elective office, doing so in 1978 when both men were running for the West Texas congressional seat being vacated by the legendary U.S. Rep. George Mahon. Hance was a Democrat back then, but he would switch to the Republican Party years later.

My association with Hance goes back to my first year in Texas. In 1984, I arrived at my post in Beaumont to work on the editorial page of the Beaumont Enterprise. Hance was running for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by the late Sen. John Tower.

In that year’s Democratic primary for the Senate seat, Hance finished second in a three-way near dead heat with state Sen. Lloyd Doggett and former U.S. Rep. Bob Krueger. Doggett would beat Hance in a runoff a few weeks later. Hance came to Beaumont to try to persuade the newspaper to endorse his candidacy and I was blown away by the man’s wit and charm.

I had heard the stories about his campaign in 1978 when he put on his good ol’ boy charm to beat Bush for the West Texas seat in Congress. He brought it with him to Beaumont in 1984 as well. Indeed, he has kept it all through his public life.

His time at Tech’s helm was marked with plenty of success. The school is setting student enrollment records seemingly every year. He came to Amarillo a couple of years ago to declare that, in his view, Texas Tech ought to consider expanding its medical center complex in Amarillo to a full four-year medical school.

An expansion, he said, would require Amarillo to demonstrate it can support such a move.

I don’t yet know where that will go. My hope is that as chancellor emeritus, Hance will be able to keep that flame burning.

Thank you for your service, Kent.