Author Archive

Op-Ed: Addressing Our Water Needs

February 14, 2013

State Representative Phil King

Texas faces its third year of a drought and our reservoirs are only 65 percent full, the lowest levels since 1990. The need for water is one of the highest concerns of the Legislature as our state is on track to experience the second worst drought on record. To illustrate the problem, Texas’s population is projected to jump from 25 million to 46 million by 2060. Within that time water supplies are estimated to decline while the needs of our residential, industrial, and agricultural communities substantially increase.

That is why last week I signed on as a Joint Author to HB 11, which will fund our state water plan by withdrawing $2 billion from the state’s Economic Stabilization Fund (reserve fund). This bold legislation, lead authored by Representative Ritter of Nederland, will establish a permanent fund to assist regional entities in funding water projects, including both water infrastructure and reservoirs. Properly structured and managed, its affect can be far reaching.

This investment is large even by Texas standards. But it pales when compared to the $7.62 billion lost to the Texas economy from the 2011 drought alone. For Texas to maintain a strong economy that will create jobs and economic opportunity, we must aggressively address our water needs. This is a very serious problem and must be given thoughtful consideration, debate, and input. Please let me know your thoughts and counsel at [email protected] or on Facebook at facebook.com/PhilKingTX.

State Representative Phil King serves Parker and Wise counties in the Texas House of Representatives.

King Urges Boy Scouts to Uphold Moral Values

February 6, 2013

State Representative Phil King joined other elected officials in this open letter to the Boy Scouts of America:

As state elected officials, we strongly encourage the Boy Scouts of America to stick with their decades of support for family values and moral principles. Capitulating to the liberal social agenda not only undermines the very principles of scouting, but sets the stage for the erosion of an organization that has defined the American experience for generations of young men.

Scouts begin each meeting with an Oath, “to do my duty, to God and my country, to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake and morally straight.” By caving in to pressure from the social left, the national leadership would violate each of those principles.

Worse still, the contemplated national policy would throw to the wolves chartering organizations and scout troops that choose to stick with scouting’s historic and legally protected policy. Left to defend themselves from legal attacks, we fear many churches and other entities will choose to simply abandon scouting altogether – it will be the safer course, and one hastening the organization’s eventual collapse.

Rest assured that while adopting this ill-considered and wrongly devised policy might earn temporary kudos, you can never do enough to appease those who want to see the scouts robbed of their moral authority.

We urge you to be morally and physically strong. We urge you to protect all that scouting has been, and all that it can remain.

Letter Signers:

Texas Agriculture Commissioner Todd Staples

Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson

Congressman Kenny Marchant (R-Bonham)

State Senator Ken Paxton (R-McKinney)

State Senator Kelly Hancock (R-Fort Worth)

State Senator Brian Birdwell (R-Granbury)

State Senator Dan Patrick (R-Houston)

State Senator Larry Taylor (R-Friendswood)

State Senator Donna Campbell (R-New Braunfels)

State Representative Giovanni Capriglione (R-Southlake)

State Representative Pat Fallon (R-Frisco)

State Representative Scott Sanford (R-McKinney)

State Representative Jeff Leach (R-Plano)

State Representative Matt Krause (R-Ft. Worth)

State Representative Ron Simmons (R-Carrollton)

State Representative Steve Toth (R-The Woodlands)

State Representative Scott Turner (R-Frisco)

State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford)

State Representative Jodie Laubenberg (R-Parker)

State Representative Tan Parker (R-Flower Mound)

State Representative Van Taylor (R-Plano)

State Representative Stephanie Klick (R-Fort Worth)

State Representative Bill Zedler (R-Arlington)

State Representative Bryan Hughes (R-Mineola)

State Representative Drew Springer (R-Muenster)

State Representative Dan Flynn (R-Canton)

State Representative Cecil Bell Jr. (R-Magnolia)

State Representative Matt Schaefer (R-Tyler)

State Representative James White (R-Woodville)

State Representative Rob Orr (R-Burleson)

State Representative James Frank (R-Wichita Falls)

State Representative Dwayne Bohac (R-Houston)

State Representative David Simpson (R-Longview)

State Representative Greg Bonnen (R-Friendswood)

State Representative Rick Miller (R-Sugar Land)

State Representative Jonathan Stickland (R-Bedford)

State Representative Charles Perry (R-Lubbock)

State Representative Jason Isaac (R-Dripping Springs)

State Representative Larry Phillips (R-Sherman)

State Board of Education Member Ken Mercer (R-San Antonio)

State Board of Education Member David Bradley (R-Beaumont)

Collin Country Commissioner Pct 3 Chris Hill (BSA Circle Ten Lone StarDistrict Chairman)

Collin County Judge Keith Self

Collin County Commissioner Pct 1 Matt Shaheen

King: “I am Eager to Serve on Energy and Pensions Committees”

January 31, 2013

Contact Information:
(817) 381-8282

AUSTIN – The following statement may be attributed to State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford):

“Today I received two new committee assignments, the House Committee on Energy Resources and the House Committee on Pensions. I am exceptionally pleased with these two opportunities.”

“Energy production accounts for over one-fourth of the Texas economy and is an essential driver of our economy in the Barnett Shale area. The Pensions Committee oversees management and investment of some of the largest pension plans in the United States, some of which are experiencing difficulties right now. The Teacher Retirement System alone has over $110 billion in net assets, serving one of every twenty Texans.”

“Both of these committees deal with extremely important topics facing Texas and I am eager and honored to have the opportunity to get to work on these critical issues.”

Estes, King have Bills in Hopper as Session Opens

January 9, 2013

Weatherford Democrat

Staff Reports

Texas lawmakers have a lot they hope to accomplish over the course of their 140-day legislative session that began Tuesday.

Their first order of business was electing a Speaker of the House, and Joe Straus was re-elected to that powerful position.



Parker County’s representatives at the state capitol went to work before Tuesday’s opening session, filing early several bills they hope to push through and make law.

State Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford, filed ahead of the session bills to cap welfare and state spending, freeze state hiring and give school districts testing choices.

King’s HJR 52 is a constitutional amendment to limit the growth of state spending for welfare and entitlement programs to not exceed the corresponding rate of growth of total state spending. Under the increased federal health care mandates, Texas general revenue spending for Medicaid alone is likely to increase from $16.3 billion in 2012-13 to $38.3 billion by 2020-21, King said.

“Due to the ever-expanding mandates from the federal government, increased spending for welfare programs has caused the rest of the budget to suffer,” King explained, “Medicaid spending alone has more than doubled in the last decade and is on track to double costs every 10 years. Texas must limit the growth of welfare spending, or it will quickly overcome public education and transportation as the single largest item in the budget and become unsustainable.”

King: Texas needs to be cautious, but think big

January 7, 2013

Wise County Messenger

Bob Buckel

The 83rd Texas Legislature opens Tuesday, and the contrast between this session and the last one could not be more clear.

A contentious redistricting battle, spawned by the 2010 census, is history.

No one expects a repeat of the severe budget cuts that forced legislators to slash funding for education and other state agencies. With the state’s economy on the upswing, the outlook is much stronger than it was two years ago.

Veteran legislator Phil King, who represents Wise and Parker counties, acknowledges all that, but says the state still needs to be cautious because of what is going on – or not going on – in Washington, D.C.

“The greatest issue Texas has right now is the federal government,” King said this week. “They can’t continue to borrow $4 billion a day. If they do, they’re going to drive us into a recession. Then at some point they are going to reduce spending – they’ll have to – and that’s going to come back on the states. It’s very, very concerning.

“Texas needs to be very, very cautious, fiscally, to prepare for that.”
King, a Weatherford attorney who is beginning his seventh term in the Texas House, said he was disappointed in the stop-gap tax measure Congress approved as it faced the “fiscal cliff” on New Year’s Eve.
“The deal Congress passed had no spending cuts,” he said. “They just dealt with revenue, and it sounds like that’s the President’s focus – revenue.”

King’s take is that the federal government intends to continue to expand Medicaid.

“It’s 25 percent of our state budget now, and it could easily be 35 percent in a few years,” he said. “That’s money you can’t put in roads, lakes or things you really need to be doing. That rivals education.”
King’s office just announced this week that he has pre-filed a bill to create a constitutional amendment that would limit state spending for welfare and entitlement programs. Under House Joint Resolution 52, spending in those programs could not exceed the corresponding rate of growth in total state spending.

Without a cap, Texas’ general revenue spending for Medicaid alone is likely to increase from $16.3 billion in 2012-13 to $38.3 billion by 2020-21.
“Texas must limit the growth of welfare spending, or it will quickly overcome public education and transportation as the single largest item in the budget, and become unsustainable,” the news release said.
Indeed, the state already owes Medicaid $4.7 billion as soon as legislators walk in the door – spending deferred from last time in an accounting maneuver designed to balance that budget.

King said another $600 million will need to be appropriated right away to cover expenses from wildfires that devastated parts of Texas last year.
“Compared to the $27 billion shortfall we walked into last time, right now they’re projecting an $8 billion revenue surplus,” he said. “But that spends down pretty quickly. It’s not a huge surplus – not if you really understand how the budget works. It’s not anywhere near what people think it is.

“The good news is that the economic projections are very favorable,” he said. “Last time, it was doom and gloom. Things are much more favorable now, and we have an opportunity to do some things we need to do.”

EDUCATION ON HOLD

King said everyone is watching the court case in which more than 600 school districts have sued the state, claiming that budget cuts in the 82nd Legislative session may violate the constitution’s mandate that the state provide “adequate” funding for public schools.
The trial before District Judge John Dietz in Austin, picks up again Jan. 7 after a holiday recess, and will likely continue through the end of January.
Meanwhile, legislators will probably deal with other matters as they await a ruling.

“With the exception of one new element, it’s essentially the same lawsuits that have been brought in previous decades,” King said. “The big concern for us is we can’t really do much on education funding until we know what the ground rules are.”

But King has concerns about education that go beyond the funding system.

“The state’s effort to micromanage education at the local level has done nothing but add to school districts’ operating costs,” he said. “We’ve got to quit constantly adding to their cost of doing business.

“Everyone gets upset with them for adding all these administrative and non-teaching personnel, but it was government that put all those requirements on them that forced them to go hire somebody to do that,” he said. “We have got, got, got to return to local control in education.”

Asked about vouchers to allow students to attend private school and take some state funding with them, King said he’s “not a big fan.”

“In my district, which includes 18 school districts, people in those communities are by and large happy with their schools,” he said.

“Vouchers are to allow people an alternative, to pull their kids out of poor-performing schools, usually in inner cities. We have the kind of schools people are wanting to get their kids into, not out of.”

But he also noted that in other states, vouchers come with strings attached.

“There’s no way that money can come without bringing some level of state regulation over how private schools spend those dollars,” he said. “That’s a very great concern to me.”

HOUSE CHANGES

King does not expect any kind of battle over the re-election of Speaker Joe Straus.

“There’s not going to be a Speaker’s race,” he said. “The Speaker has had more than enough votes to continue in that office since early last year.”
One thing that will change is that the age and experience of House members will continue to drop.

“Right at half of the members of the House are freshmen and sophomores now,” Kind said. “That’s good and bad. We get a lot of new energy, new ideas and new approaches – but at the same time we’ve lost a lot of institutional knowledge on issues.”

He cited the lack of members in agriculture and oil and gas-related businesses – sectors which still make up a significant portion of the state’s economy.

“It takes a little while to replace those people,” he said. “Experience brings knowledge.”

The conservative Republican said he expects the House to be even more conservative than it was in the last session.

“The majority of the new members are Republicans, and they’re going to be very conservative, both fiscally and on social issues,” he predicted.

DOING BIG THINGS

King said with the budget crisis of last session in the rear-view mirror, he would like to see the state legislature start thinking long-term again – planning and dreaming for a future that still holds great promise.

“I really want Texas to get back to doing big things,” he said. “I think we’ve been coasting and not tackling the big issues.”

One of those big issues is water. King would like to see the state finally fund a water plan it approved several years ago. A key component of that is a trust fund that would underwrite notes for local entities to rebuild their water infrastructure and enable them to better withstand drought.

That trust fund would need to generate $400 to $500 million a year, King said, dedicated within the state budget to help local entities.

“It’s going to take $50 billion over the next 50 years to meet our needs,” he said. “The plan is in place – we just need to fund it.

“We need access for the small communities to leverage their dollars to build infrastructure, and also funding for the large water projects – and those are very, very expensive.”

King said the long-term nature of water projects makes it too easy for the legislature to put them on the back burner.

“It’s easy to kick this one down the road, because the money you spend today will benefit us 25 or 30 years down the road,” he said. “But we could still be at the front end of a long-term drought.

“The good news is that the Speaker has made this one of his priorities.”
Certainly all 150 members of the Texas House will walk in the doors next Tuesday with their own priorities, and the perception of a budget surplus means plenty of interest groups will be lining up to lobby for their piece of the pie.

One thing is certain: Even with the Longhorns’ football season over, things aren’t likely to be dull around Austin for the next several months.

King Files Bill to Freeze State Hiring, Save Money

January 7, 2013

Contact Information:
(817)381-8282

AUSTIN – State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford) recently filed H.B. 291, a bill that would freeze hiring by state agencies for the 2014-15 biennium. King’s bill would implement a freeze on non-essential state hiring for that biennium, and would also prevent diversions of dollars from those unfilled positions being used by that agency for other purposes.

“The economy has seen many ups and downs over the past few years,” King stated, “Businesses small and large across Texas are doing what it takes to balance their checkbooks in a fiscally responsible manner, and it is critical that the state government conduct business in the same way. By implementing a hiring freeze, we can save precious dollars during a time when every dollar counts. These funds can be directed to the critical services our state provides, such as educating our children and transportation.”

The State of Texas currently employs 295,882 full time equivalents [(FTEs) one FTE is any combination of employees whose hours total 40 hours a week]. H.B. 291 will be considered before the Texas Legislature when it convenes for the legislative session on January 8, 2013.

Op-Ed: King Discusses Texas Budget

January 5, 2013

Weatherford Telegram

State Representative Phil King

The Texas Legislature recently convened and there are many issues that need to be addressed. However, our first order of business, as required by the Texas Constitution, is to pass a balanced budget for the 2014-15 biennium.

Before we begin debating the budget for the upcoming biennium, we must close out the current budget year. Walking into this session, Texas faces $6.78 billion in unfunded obligations for 2013. Although an $8.8 billion cash surplus remains on hand, we will have to use these funds to cover those outstanding obligations, which include items such as a shortfall in Medicaid funds, wildfire costs and satisfying a school payment that was deferred to August 2013.

The Economic Stabilization Fund, commonly called the Rainy Day Fund, is a separate account that the state has the ability to access in certain situations. It will have a projected $11.8 billion by the end of 2014-15. This fund is an emergency reserve for one time uses and is not meant for recurring spending needs. Tapping into the Rainy Day Fund requires support of between three-fifths and two-thirds of the Legislature, depending on the purpose of the expenditures.

Although we are not facing a $27 billion shortfall as we were at the beginning of the last legislative session, we will still have to make some very hard financial decisions on issues such as water, transportation education and healthcare. This must all be done in a fiscally responsible manner that won’t break our budget. We must keep our spending under control to ensure Texas remains the number one place to do business and raise a family.

King Files Bill to Cap Welfare Spending

January 2, 2013

Contact Information:
(817) 381-8282

Austin – State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford) recently filed H.J.R. 52, a constitutional amendment that would limit the growth of state spending for welfare and entitlement programs to not exceed the corresponding rate of growth of total state spending. Under the increased mandates from Obamacare, Texas general revenue spending for Medicaid alone is likely to increase from $16.3 billion in 2012-13 to $38.3 billion by 2020-21.

“Due to the ever-expanding mandates from the federal government, increased spending for welfare programs has caused the rest of the budget to suffer,” King explained, “Medicaid spending alone has more than doubled in the last decade and is on track to double costs every 10 years. Texas must limit the growth of welfare spending, or it will quickly overcome public education and transportation as the single largest item in the budget and become unsustainable.”

H.J.R. 52 will be considered before the Texas Legislature when it convenes for the legislative session on January 8, 2013.

King Files Bill to Give School Districts Testing Choices

December 19, 2012

Contact Information:
(817) 381-8282

AUSTIN – This week, State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford) filed H.B. 290, a bill that would give Texas independent school districts local options and flexibility in testing their students. School districts would have the ability, with approval from the Texas Education Agency, to select an assessment test that best fits their community, taking the place of the current, one-size-fits-all, state-administered STAAR test.

“I continually hear complaints from teachers, administrators, school board members and parents that our standardized testing has become excessive and not a true measure of how our children are performing. I am concerned that our educators are having to shift resources and valuable time to keep up with testing requirements and other state and federal mandates while our teachers are unable to provide the quality education that they are qualified and trained to do,” King explained, “This bill simply allows districts the flexibility, if they so choose, to utilize other testing models and allows communities to have a role in student assessments.”

H.B 290 will be considered before the Texas Legislature when it convenes for the legislative session on January 8, 2013. King has pledged to continue to fight for public education and greater autonomy for schools at the local level.

In closing, King explained, “As we work to find the right balance of accountability, giving school districts more local control and flexibility without compromising standards is an important first step.”

King Files Bill to Cap State Spending

December 17, 2012

Contact Information:
(817) 381-8282

AUSTIN – Last week, State Representative Phil King (R-Weatherford) filed H.B. 237, a bill that would limit spending by the Texas Legislature to not exceed the population growth in Texas when indexed for inflation.

“Texas has done a good job of being fiscally responsible with its spending during the tough economic times we have faced over the past few years,” King explained, “However, it is very important that we implement a conservative spending cap to ensure that even in the good times, Texas does not become irresponsible with its taxpayers’ dollars.”

H.B. 237 will be considered before the Texas Legislature when it convenes for legislative session on January 8, 2013. King also plans on filing a constitutional amendment to go along with H.B. 237 to ensure that future legislatures continue Texas’ fiscally prudent tradition.