- See what Americans think about privacy. (Pew Research Internet Project, November 12, 2014)
- Read about drones and how they affect privacy. (LLRX.com, November 10, 2014)
- Track changes in college pricing and financial aid. (College Board, November 13, 2014)
- Examine factors that influence the development of mass-transit infrastructure. (U.S. Government Accountability Office, November 2014)
In this weekly post, we feature online articles and policy reports published recently, and other helpful research tools.
Happy Thanksgiving to all our readers! Week in Review will return December 4th.
Not unlike other communities, members of the Texas Legislature use their own set of specialized lingo in their dealings with each other. If you've never heard them before, these often colorful words and phrases can be confusing when encountered in a legislative context. With the 84th Regular Session right around the corner, we thought it would be a good time to define some of the legislative lingo frequently used in the Texas Capitol.
The following definitions are taken from the book Texas Politics and Government. For more serious glossaries of the legislative lexicon in Texas, see this helpful guide by the Senate Research Center, and the appendix in The Texas Legislative Council’s Guide to Texas Legislative Information.
Gutting:
Amending a bill in committee or on the floor in such a way that it severely weakens the bill or changes its original purpose.
Keying:
Watching another legislator to see which way he or she is voting before deciding how to vote. Floor leaders extend an arm with one finger held high to indicate that followers should vote "aye" or with two fingers held high to indicate that followers should vote "nay."
Logrolling:
Supporting and voting for another member's bill (especially a "local" bill affecting only the author's district) with the assumption that he or she will then support you when you have a bill coming up.
Pork barrel:
Appropriations of money to a project in a single legislative district.
Sine Die:
Legislators use this Latin phrase to describe the 140th day (the last day) of a regular legislative session. Means literally "without day."
That dog won't hunt:
A debating point suggesting that the legislator does not believe another member's argument.
![]() |
| From left to right: Representatives Menton Murray, Tom Uher and Dean Cobb demonstrating the act of "keying." |
In this weekly post, we feature online articles and policy reports published recently, and other helpful research tools.
- Read about how the way people browse Wikipedia could assist researchers in tracking the spread of flu in real time. (MIT Technology Review, November 3, 2014)
- Examine survey findings on Houston's Hispanic population. (Rice University Kinder Institute for Urban Research, October 23, 2014)
- See which state agencies are currently under Sunset review. (Sunset Advisory Commission, accessed November 12, 2014)
- Explore different reports about legislative information for the 84th Legislature. (Texas Legislature Online, accessed November 12, 2014)
Interim Hearings - Week of November 17th
Today's Committee Meetings on the LRL website is a calendar of interim committee hearings with links to agendas. Below are resources related to upcoming Interim Hearings.
November 17th
Senate Committee on Education
Charge: School choice
- The Chartered Course: Can Private School Choice Proponents Learn from the Charter School Sector?, Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, July 2014
- The Education Choice and Competition Index Background and Results 2013, Brown Center on Education Policy at Brookings Institution, January 2014
- School Choice Today: Voucher Laws Across the States, Center for Education Reform, 2014
- Private School Choice: Options for Texas Children, National Center for Policy Analysis, February 2013
Charge: Implementation of SB 2, 83rd Legislature, R.S., relating to certain charter schools
- "Charters Push Back Against Measure on School Closures," Texas Tribune, August 7, 2014
- "Chartering a New Course in Education," Fiscal Notes, July 17, 2014
Topic: Facility demand issues on school districts across the state
- Texas Public School Construction Costs and School Construction Lookup Tool, Texas Transparency, Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, July 2014
- Condition of America's Public School Facilities: 2012-13 First Look, National Center for Education Statistics, March 2014
- ECS State Policy Database, Finance--Facilities and School/District Structure/Operations--Facilities, Education Commission of the States
November 19th
House Committee on State Affairs
Topic: Audit Report on the HealthSelect Contract at the Employees Retirement System, SAO Report No. 15-007
- "How’s that New Health Care Contract for State Workers, Retirees Working Out? Some Lawmakers Raise Red Flags" (blog), Dallas Morning News, September 4, 2014
- An Audit Report on the HealthSelect Contract at the Employees Retirement System (Report No. 15-007), Texas State Auditor’s Office, November 2014
- Benefits Contracts Division, Employee Retirement System of Texas
- The State of Texas Procurement Manual, Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, 2012
- State of Texas Contract Management Guide (version 1.9), Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, December 16, 2011
In this weekly post, we feature online articles and policy reports published recently, and other helpful research tools.
- Check out election returns for the November 4, 2014 general election. (Texas Secretary of State, accessed November 5, 2014)
- See a state-by-state map of the states' business tax climates. (Tax Foundation, October 28, 2014)
- Read about how Common Core curricula are developed. (Curriculum Matters blog, Education Week, October 30, 2014)
- Explore the cost of broadband Internet access in 24 cities all over the world. (Open Technology Institute, October 30, 2014)
Today's Committee Meetings on the LRL website is a calendar of interim committee hearings with links to agendas. Below are resources related to upcoming Interim Hearings.
November 10th Top
House Select Committee on Economic Development Incentives
Topic: Findings and recommendations
November 12th Top
Senate Committee on Open Government
Charge: Texas Public Information Act
- Public Information Act Handbook 2014 (Confidentiality of Student Records), Office of Attorney General
- Open Government and Redacting Public Information Rules and Forms, Office of Attorney General
- Public Information Requests, Texas Education Agency
- Confidentiality of Student Records, Texas Classroom Teacher Association
- UTS139 Texas Public Information Act [UT System TPIA procedures] (Sec. 10 Requests for Personal Information), The University of Texas System
- INT183 Confidentiality and Security of Education Records Subject to the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), The University of Texas System
Staff presentation and agency response (invited testimony):
- Texas Council for Developmental Disabilities
- Governor's Committee on People with Disabilities
- Texas Council on Purchasing from People with Disabilities
- Texas Health Services Authority
- Health and Human Services Commission and System Issues (includes Interagency Task Force for Children With Special Needs)
- Office of Inspector General (Health and Human Services Commission)
- Department of Family and Protective Services — Presentation on the Child Protective Services Transformation Report to the Sunset Commission
- Texas Education Agency (includes State Board for Educator Certification)
- Entry Criteria for Self-Directed Semi-Independent Agencies
November 13th Top
Public testimony - Public input form for agencies under review
November 14th Top
House Committee on International Trade & Intergovernmental Affairs
Charge: International trade and investment in Texas
- "Texas Exports, Jobs, and Foreign Investment," International Trade Administration, August 2014
- Texas’ Stake in International Trade Through its Exports and Some Foreign Direct Investment, Real Estate Center, Texas A&M University, April 2013
- Border Trade Advisory Committee Report - 2012, Texas Department of Transportation, November 2012
- Foreign Direct Investment, Texas Economic Development Division, Office of the Governor
- Trade & Exports, Texas Economic Development Division, Office of the Governor
Charge: Physical infrastructure that facilitates international trade
- 2013 Report on Projects for Traffic from International Trade, Texas Department of Transportation, December 1, 2012
- Preparing Texas Land and Sea for the Panama Canal Expansion, Panama Canal Stakeholder Working Group, November 2012
- Synthesis of Port Related Freight Improvement Studies: Technical Report, Texas A&M Transportation Institute, October 2012
- Texas-Mexico Border Crossings Study, Texas Department of Transportation
Charge: Commercial ship traffic on smaller coastal waterways
- Gulf Intracoastal Waterway Legislative Report - 83nd Legislature, Texas Department of Transportation
- Gulf Intracoastal Waterway Legislative Report - 82nd Legislature, Texas Department of Transportation
- Guide to the Economic Value of Texas Ports, Center for Transportation research, The University of Texas at Austin, February 2008
- Short Sea Shipping Initiatives and the Impacts on the Texas Transportation System: Technical Report, Texas A&M Transportation Institute, October 2007
House Select Committee on Transportation Funding, Expenditures & Finance
Topic: Distribution of state proposition funding as it relates to the enabling legislation in HB 1, 83rd Legislature, 3rd C.S.
Bill Prefiling: FAQs
Nov 4
Prefiling is the filing of bills and resolutions before the regular legislative session convenes. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, prefiling increases the efficiency of the legislative process by allowing more time to draft legislation, and by allowing leadership more time to review bills prior to committee referral. Prefiling in Texas occurs the first Monday after the general election in even-numbered years. Below are answers to frequently asked questions about prefiling.
Who can prefile legislation?
Returning members and members-elect of the upcoming legislative session may prefile bills.
Can members of the public prefile legislation?
Not directly, but members of the public are free to contact their representative to discuss the possibility of the representative authoring a bill on a particular issue. For more information, please view the Citizen Handbook: How the Texas Legislature Works.
Is there a limit to how many bills a member can prefile?
There is no stated limit in the House or Senate rules.
How do you view prefiled bills?
- If you are looking for a specific bill number, you can look it up on the Texas Legislature Online (TLO).
- You can also view a list of bills filed each day by selecting "Today's Filed Bills" from the TLO General Reports section.
- If you are looking for prefiled bills on a specific subject, the TLO Bill Search page allows you to select from a range of subject codes.
- If you need assistance locating prefiled bills, please call the Texas Legislative Reference Library at (512) 463-1252.
What happens to prefiled bills?
Bills are filed with the Chief Clerk in the House and the Calendar Clerk in the Senate, and are made publicly available via the Texas Legislature Online.
What role does the library have during prefiling?
In addition to answering research requests, library staff creates the TLO/TLIS record for every legislative measure. In addition, library staff reviews each bill and enters its proposed statutory changes into Index to Sections Affected (ISAF), assigns subject codes to each bill to enable better searching, and checks to see if companion measures were filed in the opposite chamber. We continue this process for each bill as it moves through the legislative process.
Week in Review, October 30th
Oct 30
In this weekly post, we feature online articles and policy reports published recently, and other helpful research tools.
- Examine the health care costs for people under 65 with employer-sponsored health insurance. (Health Care Cost Institute, October 2014)
- Read about bicyclist safety. (Governors Highway Safety Association, October 2014)
- Consider hospitals' struggles with potentially fatal infections acquired during a patient's hospital stay. (Kaiser Health News, October 21, 2014)
- Compare unemployment rates during the recession to unemployment rates today, state by state. (Bloomberg Visual Data, September 30, 2014)
- Explore voter turnout forecasts for the upcoming election. (Pew Research Center, October 29, 2014)
Week in Review, October 23rd
Oct 23
In this weekly post, we feature online articles and policy reports published recently, and other helpful research tools.
- Read about racial inequality in the mortgage market. (Center for American Progress, October 20, 2014)
- Explore the Payday Lending in America series. (Pew Charitable Trusts, accessed October 22, 2014)
- Examine 2013 data from the American Housing Survey. (U.S. Census Bureau, October 16, 2014)
- Consider state and federal public health laws related to quarantine and isolation. (Congressional Research Service, October 9, 2014)
Week in Review, October 16th
Oct 23
In this weekly post, we feature online articles and policy reports published recently, and other helpful research tools.
- Consider a study on accessibility of jobs by transit. (Accessibility Observatory, University of Minnesota, October 9, 2014)
- Read about the offline population and how much of the United States is offline. (The Washington Post, October 1, 2014)
- Find out about how Ebola may affect pets. (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, October 13, 2014)
- Examine the energy and fuels outlook for the winter heating season. (U.S. Energy Information Administration, October 2014)
- Review information about Common Core state standards. (Congressional Research Service, September 15, 2014)


