Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Odds and ends for today's 2306

- Tim Cole Commission begins work, optimistic for recommendations.

Richard Miles was just 19 years old when his nightmare began. In 1994, Miles was accused of murder and attempted murder and, though he steadfastly proclaimed his innocence, he was later convicted and spent 15 years in a Dallas jail — until a court determined he was a victim of prosecutorial misconduct because his Dallas County prosecutor withheld evidence that would have cleared him.
Now 40, Miles recently told the story of his wrongful conviction to the 11 members of the newly created Timothy Cole Exoneration Review Commission, a panel named after the late Texas Tech student who, in 1986, was convicted of a rape he did not commit. Although Cole died in prison of an asthma attack in 1999 — without being able to prove his innocence — a few years later DNA evidence from the crime posthumously exonerated him.

- Group seeks to repeal ordinances regulating where registered sex offenders can live.

Forty-six small cities across Texas are facing a new legal challenge to their ordinances regulating where registered sex offenders can live, the latest development in a national trend to relax residency limitations that opponents say create more problems with ex-convicts than they solve. On Monday, Texas Voices for Reason and Justice, a statewide criminal justice advocacy group, announced that it has “initiated action to compel, through litigation if necessary,” the repeal of the ordinances in so-called “general law” cities, those with populations of 5,000 or less.
Two Bexar County cities — Balcones Heights and Hollywood Park — are among the 46 whose ordinances are being challenged. Similar ordinances exist in hundreds of larger “home rule” Texas cities, which officials say have the legal authority to enforce them. Nonetheless, several larger cities already face litigation on the issue on the grounds that residency restrictions violate the U.S. Constitution.

- Democratic Group Called iVote Pushes Automatic Voter Registration.

As Republicans across the country mount an aggressive effort to tighten voting laws, a group of former aides to President Obama and President Bill Clinton is pledging to counter by spending up to $10 million on a push to make voter registration automatic whenever someone gets a driver’s license.
The change would supercharge the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, known as the “motor voter” law, which requires states to offer people the option of registering to vote when they apply for driver’s licenses or other identification cards. The new laws would make registration automatic during those transactions unless a driver objected.

- Straus Forms Select Committee on Mental Health.

Texas House Speaker Joe Straus announced Monday he's formed a select committee on mental health to take an all-encompassing look at the state's behavioral health system. 
The committee will review and make recommendations on issues including substance abuse, care for veterans, identifying illnesses early and improving delivery of mental health care, the speaker said in a news release.
“We have taken some major steps to address the state’s mental health needs,” said Straus, R-San Antonio. “It’s important not to look at these issues in isolation, but rather to take a comprehensive view of how to improve the system. Many legislators asked that we take a closer look at various issues related to mental health, and it became clear that one committee should look at all of those issues together.”

- Lopsided election puts political target on property taxes.

When property tax relief was approved by 86 percent of voters in last week’s election, you can bet Texas politicians noticed.
Calling the lopsided result a mandate for additional action, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick vowed to make property tax reform a priority when the Legislature convenes in 14 months. Any reasonable idea will be on the table, Patrick said, although his initial concepts focus on reining in budget increases for local governments, particularly cities and counties.
“I have the opportunity to put my shoulder behind those issues and push, and I don’t intend to sit on the sidelines,” said Patrick, a Houston Republican. One important idea, Patrick said, is to require a rollback election if city or county property tax revenue grows by more than 4 to 6 percent, though the final trigger number will need to be refined. Currently, tax-rollback elections are possible with 8 percent increases, and only if 7 or 10 percent of registered voters sign a petition, depending on the size of the budget.