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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives

UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, featured left, and Rep. Terry Canales, D-Edinburg, center, field questions from a Capitol reporter relating to the Senate and House passage of legislation that would bring a UT medical school to the Valley. The legislation, approved by the House of Representatives on Tuesday, March 19, would also merge the University of Texas-Pan American and UT-Brownsville into what would become the second largest Hispanic-enrolled university in the nation. The measure would have a significant social and economic impact on deep South Texas, the two lawmakers said. “The possibilities are endless – more jobs, lower poverty levels, higher educational levels, more healthcare services, more doctors, more access to those doctors and more resources to serve the unique and critical needs of the people of the Valley,” said Hinojosa. Canales agreed. “The shackles that restrain the Valley from taking its place as the most dominant force in the Texas economy are the chains of educational disparity,” said Canales. “For generations, South Texas has not fallen behind, it has been left behind. The creation of this new university system and medical school will not only rectify the inequities of decades of not having access to the Permanent University Fund, but release us into a better world of economic and educational successes.” See lead story in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Mayor Pro Tem Augustín “Gus” García, Jr. and the rest of his colleagues on the Edinburg City Council on Tuesday, March 19, approved a city resolution supporting state legislation that would bring a University of Texas medical school to the Rio Grande Valley. The UT medical school would be part of a new South Texas university system that would be comprised of UT-Pan American and UT-Brownsville. Such legislation would, for the first time, provide the two universities and the planned medical school access to the multi-billion dollar Permanent University Fund, which pays for major construction projects at the state’s leading universities and medical schools. “The rapid population growth of the Valley is one of the reasons for concerted efforts to improve the region’s access to higher education and health care, according to a bill analysis of the measure,” he noted. See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Miriam Martínez of Edinburg, the first Mexican-American woman to run for Texas governor was in Washington, D.C. in mid-March to bolster support among the Republican Party for immigration reform and meet with members of Congress to address border security concerns in deep South Texas. “Next to Gov. Rick Perry’s refusal to expand Medicaid and accept federal funding for nearly all new medical expenses, immigration reform is the next major issue that will drive a wedge between the decisive Hispanic vote and the GOP for 2016,” said Martínez, a Republican candidate for Texas governor in 2014. She was in Washington, D.C. to speak with members of Congress about increased funding in Texas for federal road improvements to support an expected boom in produce imports from Mexico. She is also calling for a new strategy to assist in drug cartel violence along the Texas-Mexico border. See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Rep. Terry Canales, D-Edinburg, on Friday, March 8, filed legislation to require Texas to protect the integrity of SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly known as the food stamp program), which serves more than four million qualified Texans, especially children. The South Texas leader also condemned Fox Television Network political commentator Bill O’Reilly, who claimed during his February 27 episode of his national television broadcast, The O’Reilly Factor, that SNAP fraud “is all over the place down on the border.” Canales called O’Reilly’s depiction of the U.S. border with Mexico and SNAP recipients “insulting, incorrect, and ignorant. This is not so much a fraud issue as it is an internal accounting issue.” Canales noted that, according to a June 2012 Texas Tribune article (Hunger Study: One in Four Texas Children at Risk), SNAP in 2010 provided benefits to 3.6 million Texans, among them nearly two million children, or one in four Texas children. “Mr. O’Reilly is wrong about the people who live along the U.S.-Mexico border,” Canales said. “We work hard for a living, we are successful, we are law-abiding citizens, and we take care of those in need. Now that’s the truth about border Texans.” See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

The Texas House of Representatives on Thursday, February 21, took the financial steps needed to provide $5.1 billion in state funding for Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), nursing homes, and public education for the remainder of fiscal year 2013, according to Rep. Sergio Muñoz, Jr., D-Mission. The largest portion of the funding – $4.5 billion – goes for the vital health care services, with $630 million to be used to fund the Foundation School Program through August 31, 2013. The measure, House Bill 10, was drafted and passed by the House Appropriations Committee on Monday, February 11, then sent to the full House, which approved it 10 days later, said Muñoz, who serves on the powerful state-budget writing legislative panel. “Medicaid is a critical component of the health care delivery system in the Valley. Just as cuts made to the program last session were devastating to many of our friends and neighbors, this funding will help a multitude of people in need of services,” added Muñoz. The emergency appropriation was needed because the Texas Legislature in 2011 only set aside enough money for the state’s funding portion of Medicaid, CHIP, and nursing home services to last through the beginning of this spring. Featured with Muñoz in this portrait is Justice Dori Contreras Garza of the Thirteenth Court of Appeals. See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

A bill that would create a state commission to identify the causes of wrongful convictions and determine ways to reduce future miscarriages of justice has been jointly-authored by Rep. Terry Canales, D-Edinburg. The legislation, authored by Rep. Ruth Jones McClendon, D-San Antonio, was heard by Canales and his colleagues on the House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence at the Texas Capitol on Tuesday, March 5. The measure, as is standard procedure in the legislative process, is pending a final vote by committee members at a later date. “Unfortunately, people being incarcerated for crimes they did not commit is a worldwide reality. It is our obligation as legislators to do everything in our power to minimize the probability of wrongful convictions in Texas,” said Canales, an attorney. “Not only is there a heavy price tag that comes with incarcerating an individual, there is no monetary value in existence that can compensate someone who has been deprived of their liberty by wrongful incarceration.” The legislation would establish the Timothy Cole Exoneration Review Commission, creating a nine-member commission to review cases in which an innocent person was convicted and then exonerated. See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Hidalgo County would be the first in Texas to allow attorneys in all criminal cases to file pleadings and documents electronically – known as e-filing – under legislation considered on Monday, March 11 by the House Committee on the Judiciary and Civil Jurisprudence, said Rep. Terry Canales, D-Edinburg. Hidalgo County District Clerk Laura Hinojosa, featured earlier in Edinburg with Mayor Richard H. García, testified in support of Canales’ bill before the legislative panel. HB 349 is designed to improve the delivery of justice in Hidalgo County, reduce costs to county taxpayers, attorneys and litigants, and take advantage of the latest technological advances in the state’s legal system. “Courts have long been burdened with processing paper, a problem that continues to grow exponentially and largely unabated,” said Canales. “After more than 165 years of processing traditional filing, Texas Court Clerks are awash in the state’s judicial paper trail. Electronic filing offers a means to stem the paper tide.” If approved by the Legislature and signed into law by Gov. Rick Perry, Canales’ House Bill 349 would go into effect on September 1, 2015. See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Congressman Rubén Hinojosa, D-Mercedes, on Wednesday, February 27, stood on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court with members of the Congressional Black Caucus, the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus and the Progressive Caucus to speak in support of voter rights.  Earlier in the day, the U.S. Supreme Court Justices heard an oral argument in the case of Shelby County v. Holder concerning Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. This provision requires covered jurisdictions to submit any proposed changes in voting procedures and election rules to either the U.S. Justice Department or a federal court in Washington, D.C. before any changes can be put into effect. The Shelby County v. Holder lawsuit was filed in April 2010 by Shelby County, Alabama, a largely white suburb of Birmingham. The suit seeks to have Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act declared unconstitutional. See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

McAllen City Commissioner Jim Darling, featured with Marissa Castañeda, Chief Operations Officer for Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, will become mayor of McAllen a few days after the May 11 elections in that city since he was the only candidate by March 1 to file to succeed retiring Mayor Richard Cortéz. Darling, who attended the Wednesday, February 20, State of the City Address in Edinburg by Mayor Richard H. García, also serves as general counsel for DHR. García told a packed house at Edinburg’s City Auditorium that he and Darling, like Cortéz, support alliances between South Texas communities to benefit the entire region, such as current state legislative efforts to bring a University of Texas medical school to deep South Texas. “Speaking of mayors, Jim Darling is here with us today,” García noted during his presentation. “We talk about education. He is a perfect example of education, experience, and years of service as legal counsel for the City of McAllen, handling the legal affairs for Doctors Hospital at Renaissance, and serving as city commissioner for McAllen,” García reflected, addressing Darling. “All of these things I just mentioned make him the perfect person to assume the leadership of that position. Mayor Cortéz saw an excellent opportunity and a perfect replacement for him in Jim Darling, whose background mirrors his own. I look very much forward to working with you for the next four years.”

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

South Texas College leaders on Tuesday, February 26, announced their intention to seek a bond and maintenance tax election, valued at about $159 million, that will include new facilities at their campuses in McAllen, Weslaco and Rio Grande City. Rose Benavidez, Chair of the STC Board of Trustees, said the community college will engage in an extensive public outreach program between now and Election Day to inform voters in Hidalgo and Starr counties about the expansion plans. She did note that the election would not involve authorizing the construction of any new campuses outside of McAllen, Weslaco and Rio Grande City. She did say if approved by voters, the bond and maintenance tax election would – as an example – increase the annual STC property tax by about $30 on a home whose taxable value is $100,000. Homeowners who are 65 years of age and older, and homeowners who have a permanent disability at the time of the election would not pay any higher taxes if voters approve the measure. Featured following the announcement that evening accepting The Leah Meyer Austin Award, a national recognition for community colleges, are from left: Dr. Shirley A. Reed, President, South Texas College; Jesse Villarreal, Member, District 6, STC Board of Trustees; Graciela Farias, Secretary, District 2, STC Board of Trustees; Rose Benavidez, Chair, District 1, STC Board of Trustees; Paul R. Rodríguez, Member, District 3, STC Board of Trustees; and Roy De León, Vice Chair, District 7, STC Board of Trustees.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Organizing the annual State of the City Address by Edinburg Mayor Richard H. García, which was held on Wednesday, February 20, takes considerable coordination and expertise, as hundreds of residents attend the event at the City Auditorium. Among the city professionals who helped make the event a success this year were, front row, from left: Adelita G. Ozuna, Administrative Assistant to the City Manager; Mónica Pérez, Administrative Aide II, Utilities Department; Priscilla Bernal, Senior Secretary I, City Manager’s Office; Mari Cruz Tovar, Administrative Aide, Edinburg Fire Department; City Secretary Myra L. Ayala Garza; and Clarice Y. Balderas, Administrative Aide, City Secretary’s Office. Back row, from left: Mirelda Garza, Administrative Aide, Utilities Department; Karina Lozano, Fire Marshall Secretary II, Fire Department; Sarah Rodríguez, Senior Secretary I, Police Department; and Timoteo Sena, Senior Secretary II, City Secretary’s Office.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Residents and people from across the world will now have easier access to information about key business activities, job opportunities, local governmental actions, academic advances, major conferences, large social gatherings, and legislative affairs with the launching of a mobile app by the Edinburg Economic Development Corporation. The EEDC is the jobs-creation arm of the Edinburg City Council. “The Edinburg EDC has unveiled a new, free mobile app that highlights events, news, entertainment, and more,” said Letty Reyes, EEDC Project Manager. “The EEDC mobile app and blog are great examples of the work our office is doing to embrace technology and create a more effective and efficient reach into the community.” See story later in this posting.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Mayor Richard H. García on Wednesday, February 20, shared credit with his colleagues on the Edinburg City Council and the Edinburg Economic Development Corporation Board of Directors for what he termed “explosive growth” in the community. The progress has been influenced by successful business and quality-of-life policies implemented by the two governing boards, in conjunction with EEDC and city staff. As part of his “State of the City Address” before a full house at the Edinburg Auditorium, García provided details on many recent accomplishments, including hinting at a major new advancement underway at La Sienna, a master-planned community located in north Edinburg. “Very soon, La Sienna will have a retail development that this entire metroplex has only dreamed about in the past. Stay tuned,” the mayor publicly announced. Featured with him in this portrait are EEDC staff and two fellow EEDC Board of Directors members, from left: Laura Lee Vela, Administrative Assistant; Leticia Reyes, Project Manager; Cynthia Contreras Gutiérrez, Legal Counsel; Fred Palacios, Secretary-Treasurer, EEDC Board of Directors; Mayor Richard H. García, President, EEDC Board of Directors; Jaime Rodríguez, Member, EEDC Board of Directors; Nelda T. Ramírez, Executive Director; and Dalila Razo, Business Manager.

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UT medical school, UTPA/UTB merger bill passed by Senate, House of Representatives - Titans of the Texas Legislature

Edinburg Mayor Richard H. García, featured left during a recent meeting in Austin of the University of Texas System Board of Regents, has helped rally Valley wide support for legislation that would merge UT-Pan American and UT-Brownsville, and include a state-of-the-art UT medical school for the Valley. “As community leaders, we know that progress is never easy and seldom comes without some sacrifice or compromise. While UT-Pan American will be restructured, our community is prepared to make this compromise to gain access to a medical school, an enhanced healthcare infrastructure, and the Permanent University Fund,” García emphasized. “These fundamental changes will ensure that South Texas can meet and exceed its future needs.” Featured, from left: Mayor Richard H. García of Edinburg; Mayor San Juanita Sánchez of San Juan; and Mayor Chris Boswell of Harlingen. See lead story in this posting.

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Titans of the Texas Legislature