News from the South - Texas News Feed
Democrats denounce ban on clubs that support gay students
“Democrats lash out as Legislature bans school clubs that support gay teens” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.
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Democrats took to the floor of the Texas House on Saturday to label a ban on clubs that support gay teens the work of “monsters” and to say the ban endangers children and strips them of their dignity.
The Democratic representatives grew emotional in opposition to a bill that would ban K-12 student clubs focused on sexuality and gender identity.
Senate Bill 12, authored by Sen. Brandon Creighton, won final legislative passage Saturday after lawmakers in both chambers adopted the conference committee reports that specifically clarified that schools will be banned from authorizing or sponsoring student clubs based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
Backers proclaimed that the bill enshrines a parent’s rights and puts the parent not just at the table, but at the head of the table where the child’s best interests are decided. They also targeted diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies, claiming that they project ideologies on students and put too much focus on race, sexuality and gender identity instead of the quality of education.
Rep. Gene Wu, D-Houston, emphasized that these clubs exist because of a long history of oppression against the LGBTQ+ community. He warned against demonizing students and teachers for discussing gender and sexuality.
“The real monsters are not kids trying to figure out who they are,” Wu said during the House discussion. “The monsters are not the teachers who love them and encourage them and support them. They are not the books that provide them with some amount of comfort and information. The real monsters are here.”
Lawmakers shared personal stories about LGBTQ+ youth. Rep. Rafael Anchía said his daughter was a vice president of a pride club at her school. He stressed that these clubs “are no more about sex than 4-H or ROTC or the basketball team.”
“It wasn’t a sex club,” Anchía said. “They’d get together and they’d watch movies. They’d color. They’d go to musicals. It was about a kid who felt weird who found her people and everything about it was good. I don’t know why grown-ups in this body are so triggered with my daughter getting together with her classmates in a school-sponsored activity.”
Anchía also told the Texas Tribune he “didn’t sign up for five anti-LGBT bills this session.”
Rep. Jolanda Jones, D-Houston, shared her experience as a Black woman and a lesbian, saying she didn’t come out until the age of 50 because she knew “the world wasn’t safe.” She warned that banning LGBTQ+ clubs could worsen bullying.
“And we have the nerve to say that we care about mental health,” Jones said. “We’ve passed bill after bill about access to care, about youth suicide, about prevention and treatment. But this bill makes kids sicker, sadder, more alone. This bill doesn’t protect children. It endangers them. It doesn’t give parents more rights. It strips children of their dignity.”
SB 12 is often referred to as the “Parental Bill of Rights” because it claims to give parents more control over their children’s schools. But Rep. Erin Zwiener, D-Driftwood, addressed those who are “afraid that your kids or your grandkids might grow up queer,” warning that the bill could harm family relationships.
“Getting silence in schools from the LGBTQ community, which is what this bill is designed to do, will not stop your kids from being gay,” Zwiener said. “It will just make them afraid to come out. It will make them afraid to live their lives as their full selves. It will make them afraid to tell you when they figure out that they’re LGBTQ and it might damage your relationship with them forever.”
Rep. Nicole Collier, D-Fort Worth, argued that allowing religious organizations in schools but banning “clubs that allow students to be who they are, is a double standard that flies in the face of the principles you say you support.”
“An LGBTQ person can’t change who they are any more than the fact that I can’t change that I’m Black,” Collier said. “What you’re saying to students today is that you will be accepted as long as you are who we say you should be.”
If signed by the governor, the bill will become law on Sept. 1.
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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/05/31/texas-house-tempers-flare-gay-club-ban/.
The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.
The post Democrats denounce ban on clubs that support gay students appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
The article presents a perspective largely aligned with progressive and Democratic viewpoints, emphasizing opposition to a bill banning LGBTQ+ student clubs in Texas schools. It highlights emotional and personal testimonies from Democratic lawmakers defending LGBTQ+ rights, mental health concerns, and parental involvement that centers inclusivity and support for marginalized youth. While it reports on the Republican-backed bill and its stated intent to enhance parental control, the language and framing lean toward sympathy for LGBTQ+ communities and criticism of the bill’s potential harms. Overall, the content favors a progressive framing without presenting strong counterarguments from conservatives, positioning it as center-left in political bias.
News from the South - Texas News Feed
Carp release in Lake Austin raises concern among local fisherman
SUMMARY: Austin plans to release 350 sterile grass carp into Lake Austin to control hydrilla, an invasive plant that disrupts recreation and navigation. While grass carp eat hydrilla, local fishermen oppose the move, fearing harm to the lake’s bass fishery by removing vital underwater vegetation. A prior effort from 2011–2013 released 32,000 carp, which devastated native plants. Officials stress the new, smaller-scale approach focuses only on the lake’s eastern section. Critics like fishing guide Carson Conklin argue alternative methods, such as aquatic mowing, are better solutions. Authorities hope to avoid past mistakes while managing hydrilla’s spread responsibly.
The post Carp release in Lake Austin raises concern among local fisherman appeared first on www.kxan.com
News from the South - Texas News Feed
1.7 million Texans could lose health care under ACA changes
“1.7 million Texans could lose health coverage under expiring tax credits, ACA changes in GOP megabill” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.
Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.
WASHINGTON — Up to 1.7 million Texans are expected to lose their health insurance through coming changes to the Affordable Care Act marketplace under Republicans’ tax and spending megabill, according to an analysis by health policy experts — a serious blow to a state health care system already strained by the highest uninsured rate in the nation.
Nearly 4 million Texans signed up for ACA health plans this year, a high-water mark in the marketplace’s 12-year history. But between the looming expiration of Biden-era enhanced premium tax credits — which lower out-of-pocket costs for people with marketplace coverage — and changes in the recently passed GOP megabill, the state’s uninsured population is expected to spike.
The effects could reverberate across the health care landscape, with higher premiums, more financial strain on hospitals and destabilized insurance marketplaces, experts said.
Because Texas never expanded Medicaid to people earning above the federal poverty level — as 40 other states have done — the ACA marketplace has been an enormous driver of coverage, particularly among lower-income people. Texas’ uninsured rate fell from 23.7 percent in 2010 to 17.4 percent by 2023, with ACA enrollment contributing significantly.
Of the state’s nearly 4 million enrollees this year, close to 2.5 million earn between 100 and 150% of the federal poverty level, or $32,150 to $48,225 for a family of four. That means the ACA has helped fill the gap for people who would be eligible for Medicaid in expansion states, where adults who earn up to 138% of the federal poverty level are eligible.
The vast majority of Medicaid recipients in Texas are children. Low-income adults can only qualify if they or their child have a documented disability, are pregnant or over 65, or are a parent with a monthly income of less than $300 for a family of four.
The impending changes could represent the biggest source of coverage loss since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, said Cynthia Cox, director of the Program on the ACA at KFF, a nonprofit health policy organization that has projected the state-by-state effect of Trump’s megabill.
“I think back to the Great Recession, when a lot of people lost their jobs and thus lost their job-based health insurance coverage,” Cox said. “This is going to be more than that.”
Making it harder to enroll
Much of the attention around the Republican tax and spending bill has focused on cuts to Medicaid, especially the imposition of work requirements. But Texas is insulated from those changes owing to its status as a non-expansion state, and Medicaid coverage loss — while projected by KFF to be about 200,000 — is muted compared to other states.
The ACA is another story.
For one, the bill adds new layers of bureaucracy that make it harder to enroll in coverage through the marketplace, with an end to automatic renewal and more income documentation requirements. It also shortens the open enrollment period to just one month and ends year-round enrollment for people earning under 150 percent of the federal poverty level in 2026. And it prevents certain lawfully present immigrants — including DACA recipients, asylees, people with Temporary Protected Status and refugees — from acquiring insurance through the ACA marketplace.
The changes will affect most Texans who receive marketplace coverage, 95% of whom claimed a sliding-scale premium subsidy — a monthly tax credit designed to make premiums more affordable based on income — in 2025. Over 1.4 million enrollees — or 36 percent — automatically renewed their plans, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid.
Republicans say the changes will eliminate waste, fraud and abuse in the ACA marketplace and help reduce untenable federal spending levels. More frequent documentation and verification processes, they contend, will ensure that taxpayers are only funding health care costs for those who are truly eligible.
“Under the Trump Administration, we will no longer tolerate waste, fraud, and abuse at the expense of our most vulnerable citizens,” Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a statement about ending duplicative enrollment in multiple federal health insurance programs. “With the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill, we now have the tools to strengthen these vital programs for generations to come.”
But health care researchers argue the cumulative effect will worsen health outcomes.
“The whole bill is just designed to dismantle these health programs by getting people to disenroll in them, which then makes the entire system less functional,” said Lynn Cowles, the health and food justice director at Every Texan, a left-leaning think tank. “Because the risk level in each enrollment group is higher.”
KFF projects that ACA changes in the bill will lead to 560,000 Texans losing coverage.
End of enhanced premium tax credits
Most of the expected coverage loss will come not from a provision in the bill, but rather what was left out.
ACA enrollment in Texas has skyrocketed since 2021 because of a federal expansion of premium tax credits, a monthly subsidy to insurers that lowers the cost of premiums based on expected income. That year, Congress extended eligibility for tax credits to some middle-income people earning just over 400% of the federal poverty level — the standard cutoff to qualify for the subsidies — in a bid to eliminate the so-called subsidy cliff for those barely above the cutoff. Lawmakers also capped premiums based on income, driving down monthly costs for the lowest-income people who claim the tax credits. ACA enrollees earning less than 150% of the poverty threshold — between $15,650 and $23,475 for individuals in Texas — pay little to no monthly premium.
The policy was created by the American Rescue Plan Act in 2021 and renewed in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. Both bills passed with only Democratic votes.
For states like Texas that never expanded Medicaid, the enhanced premium tax credits have been a lifeline for lower-income people who do not qualify for Medicaid. Fifty-eight percent of Texas enrollees have a monthly cost of under $10.
“Since these enhanced premium tax credits have become available, the number of people nationally getting ACA marketplace coverage has more than doubled,” Cox said. “But a lot of that growth is concentrated in Texas and a handful of other states, and it’s really these low-income people that are driving that growth.”
But the enhanced premium tax credits are set to expire at the end of the 2025 — and premiums could skyrocket. This is especially true for lower-income enrollees. The Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan think tank, projects that someone earning $22,000 a year would see their monthly premium rise from $0 to $63 per month, for example.
KFF projects more than 1.1 million Texans could lose coverage if the tax credits expire. Congress could still strike a deal to extend them — which some GOP senators have expressed openness to — but doing so is unlikely in Republican-controlled Washington.
For those earning over 400% of the poverty level who have claimed tax credits for the past four years — many of them small-business owners, rural Texans or people approaching retirement age — premiums will increase by threefold in some cases, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Using 2024 data, KFF projected that the average premium in Texas will rise by 115%, or $456 per year, for people who use tax credits to get insurance through the ACA.
“There’s some people — in particular, those who make more than four times the poverty level — who are going to be hit by a double whammy where they’re not only losing their financial assistance, they’re also going to have to pay this potentially double-digit premium increase,” Cox said. “For those folks, we’re probably expecting a lot of them to be priced out.”
When premiums become prohibitively expensive, people — especially those who are healthy — tend to drop their coverage, heightening risk for insurance companies and further driving up premiums for enrollees who do not receive coverage through the ACA marketplace. And when the marketplace as a whole contracts, insurers face further cost pressure, which they pass on to enrollees.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas, the state’s largest insurer, has requested a rate increase of 21% next year for ACA-compliant individual plans, according to a copy of their rate filing shared with The Texas Tribune. A spokesperson for the company said it was a preliminary rate hike but confirmed rate increases are being driven by federal changes to the ACA market and tax credit expiration.
Disclosure: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas and Every Texan have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.
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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/07/18/texas-health-coverage-loss-trump-gop-megabill-affordable-care-act/.
The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.
The post 1.7 million Texans could lose health care under ACA changes appeared first on feeds.texastribune.org
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
The article presents a detailed analysis of the projected impacts of a Republican-led tax and spending bill on health insurance coverage in Texas, with a strong focus on potential negative consequences. While the piece includes quotes from Republican officials and outlines their stated goals of reducing fraud and federal spending, the overall framing and emphasis lean toward criticism of the bill’s effects on low-income populations, health equity, and insurance affordability. Sources cited include left-leaning think tanks and health policy advocates. The coverage is rooted in factual reporting but reflects a perspective more sympathetic to Democratic health care policies.
News from the South - Texas News Feed
Texas advocacy group on ICE accessing Medicaid data
SUMMARY: The Trump administration struck a deal allowing ICE access to Medicaid data to identify undocumented immigrants. The Department of Homeland Security says this aims to prevent unauthorized individuals from receiving Medicaid benefits. Critics, including Lynn Cowles of the Texas-based group Every Texan, argue it violates privacy and will deter immigrants from seeking medical care. The policy affects nearly 79 million enrollees and could have a chilling effect on public health. Governor Abbott’s prior order gathered similar data in Texas. California’s attorney general has filed a legal injunction, calling the federal move reckless and a misuse of private medical information.
The Trump administration has struck a deal to give immigration officials access to Medicaid enrollees’ personal data. It’s expected …
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