- YOU'LL DECIDE IF TEXAS STARTS A NEW $2 BILLION WATER PLAN
- FAR FEWER STANDARDIZED TESTS FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS
- HISTORIC CLASSROOM SPENDING CUTS MOSTLY RESTORED
- FAR-RIGHT CONSERVATIVES LEAVING UNHAPPY
- DEMOCRATS CAN CLAIM VICTORY -- FOR NOW
- SECOND CHANCE FOR TROUBLED $3 BILLION CANCER-FIGHTING AGENCY
- MORE SPENDING TO EASE CONGESTED HIGHWAYS A DEAD END
- POWER STRUGGLE AT UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS CONTINUES
- TRANSPARENCY PUSH WINDS UP IN THE DARK
- PERRY DIDN'T GET TAX CUT DEMANDS AND STAYED MUM ON FUTURE
Lawmakers set aside the money to get drought-parched Texas through the next 50 years with enough water. But if voters don't ratify a November ballot measure to create a new water fund, those dollars go unspent and a signature issue of the session goes down in defeat.
They'll only take five to graduate instead of 15. An overhaul of curriculum requirements will also let some students receive a diploma without taking Algebra II.
Public schools won back $4 billion stripped during a 2011 budget crunch. It was far more than most expected, but critics grumble it only gets per-student spending back to the same level as four years ago.
They didn't get tougher abortion restrictions and blasted GOP budget-writers for spending too much. The biggest political drama wasn't Republicans vs. Democrats, but restless conservatives unhappy with party leaders who controlled the checkbook and the bill pipeline.
They made restoring school spending their No. 1 goal and succeeded. But if Gov. Rick Perry winds up reviving divisive social issues during the 30-day summer session, Democrats could get steamrolled by the GOP majority.
The Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas will go on, fully funded, despite an ongoing criminal investigation into how the agency spent taxpayer dollars. But everyone on its 11-person governing board is ousted.
Expensive plans to ramp up road construction proved a bridge too far. A big bipartisan appetite for more transportation projects was bigger than the stomach to pay for it.
The Senate confirmed Perry's three appointments to the University of Texas System regents, including a Texas A&M graduate, no less. But it came with a warning that firing popular Austin campus president Bill Powers would make sure "all hell would break loose."
Lawmakers formed a new committee on transparency to prove they were serious about open government. But all that talk amounted to no major changes, and Perry has already vetoed a bill that would have required politically active nonprofits to disclose donors.
Perry wanted $1.8 billion in tax cuts, but lawmakers met him only part of the way. The real question for Perry now is whether he'll run for re-election in 2014, step aside from politics or embark on another presidential bid.
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