Senate Finance Committee holds first public hearing on the state budget

School Finance Texas Legislature
Date Posted: 2/08/2021 | Author: Monty Exter
Today marked the first day the 87th Texas Legislature began its public work on the only bill they must pass per the Texas constitution – the state budget.
The House and the Senate take turns every two years on which chamber will introduce the budget bill. In 2019, the 86th Legislature passed the budget via House Bill 1. For 2021, the two-year state budget will be contained in a Senate bill, although both chambers have shared their respective proposals for what that bill should include.
This morning the Senate Finance Committee held the first public hearing on Senate Bill 1, and public education was certainly one highlight of the meeting. In closing remarks, Committee Chair Sen. Jane Nelson (R-Flower Mound) laid out her priorities for the budget this session. Priority one was fully funding House Bill 3, the school finance legislation passed last session. This was followed by providing the resources to defeat COVID-19, reigniting the Texas economy, and strengthening public safety. Chair Nelson also shared that she had distributed a budget priorities questionnaire to her follow senators and that every one of the 30 other senators had also listed maintaining public education funding as their number one budget goal this session.
The House and Senate budget writers are tasked with making up the difference between their draft budgets which propose just under $120 billion in discretionary spending and the slightly more than $112 billion they have available to spend, according to the State Comptroller. Between accounting tools, federal relief, and the Economic Stabilization Fund (a/k/a the “Rainy Day Fund”), lawmakers have ample dollars and tools to bridge the gap. But they will have to work together to decide the best way to provide the resources schools, students, and all Texans need to get back on track after the year 2020, including the difficult 2019-20 and 2020-21 school years.
The Senate Finance Committee will begin its work in earnest tomorrow with the first of three weeks of marathon hearings. The committee will hear testimony from state agencies’ staff and the public regarding the various topical sections of the budget known as articles. Article III, which includes the budget for public education, higher education, and the Teacher Retirement System (TRS), is scheduled to be discussed at committee hearings later this month. The committee will hear from the Texas Education Agency and TRS beginning Monday, February 22, and wrapping up the testimony Wednesday, February 24.
Stay tuned here on Teach the Vote for the latest news related to education and the Texas Legislature.
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU

04/25/2025
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: April 25, 2025
Contact your state senator to push for action on HB 2. Plus: Make a plan to vote in May 3 local elections, where school matters might be on your ballot. Early voting is underway.

04/25/2025
Texas Senate sends private school voucher bill to the governor as other education bills move through the process
This week in the Senate, committees heard bills dealing with student rights, Holocaust education, and educator misconduct, along with a vague electioneering bill.

04/25/2025
Texas lawmakers move vouchers near the finish line with school finance only halfway through the process
In the words of Davy Crockett, the “party handcuff” finally broke the public education blockade against vouchers in Texas.