Wednesday Business at the Texas Capitol

HOUSE APPROVES REORGANIZING DFPS WITHOUT AMENDMENTS

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) _ The Texas House has passed a bill reorganizing a state family agency _ without divisive rules allowing private child welfare agencies to block gays and same-sex couples from adopting children on religious grounds.

The lower chamber voted 146-0 Wednesday to advance an overhaul of the Department of Family and Protective Services. The bill already cleared the Senate.

House social conservatives had planned to attach an amendment before a preliminary approval vote that came Tuesday. It would have protected child agencies that object to gay and same-sex adoptions for religious reasons from being sued.

Democrats opposed it and slowed debate down, however. With a key deadline looming at midnight Tuesday, the amendment was abandoned.

It could have resurfaced Wednesday during final approval, but didn’t. The final vote didn’t include any amendments.

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TEXAS HOUSE ALTERS ETHICS BILL

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) _ The House has altered a sweeping ethics bill, making it easier for lawmakers _ and everyone at the Texas Capitol _ to sue people who film them without permission.

Lawmakers voted 100 to 40 Wednesday to allow those being filmed to ask the person doing so what they’re up to. If the person lies, but later releases footage, the amendment would facilitate lawsuits.

The Legislature has been rocked by the American Phoenix Foundation, a conservative group with cameras that has descended on the Capitol, hoping to embarrass veteran lawmakers.

Both Republicans and Democrats have complained about the group. But, since banning filming would violate state law, they’ve looked for other protections.

The House version of the ethics bill must be reconciled with the Senate’s, meaning the amendment may not survive.

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TEXAS POLICE GROUPS OPPOSE PORTION OF OPEN CARRY BILL

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) _ Law enforcement groups from across Texas are demanding Governor Greg Abbott veto a handgun open carry bill if they can’t strip out a restriction on police powers to question people carrying weapons.

Abbott has pledged to sign an open carry bill into law.

Police groups were angered when the Senate added a provision barring officers from asking someone carrying a handgun if they are licensed to have it.

Lobbying groups from city police chiefs, sheriffs and representatives of police unions in Dallas and Houston on Wednesday demanded the restriction be removed, calling it dangerous for police and the public.

Conservatives say Texans should not be stopped for law-abiding activity. Minority lawmakers say the ban would prevent racial profiling.

Texas has allowed concealed carry of handguns since 1995.

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TEXAS HOUSE OK’S ENDING AUSTIN RESIDENCY RULE FOR STATEWIDE OFFICEHOLDERS

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) _ The Texas House has passed a proposed state constitutional amendment that would allow statewide officeholders to live somewhere other than Austin.

Drafted by tea party-backed Sen. Donna Campbell, the proposal would excuse the governor and other officials elected by voters statewide form living in the state capital. It already cleared the Senate.

As a proposed constitutional amendment, it needed two-thirds House support, or 100 minimum votes. It barely cleared that threshold Wednesday, passing 102 to 43.

The measure puts a referendum on this November’s general election ballot. It lets voters decide whether to change the Texas Constitution, scraping a statewide officeholder residency requirement dating back to 1876.

The ballot question is expected to cost the state nearly $120,000. But Campbell argues that modern technology has made the requirement obsolete.

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