Sunday, October 26, 2025

Council Sticks Retirees with 100% of Premium Increase


It took a year but San Angelo's City Council finally got to pass on health insurance costs to retirees.  The over 65 group was slated for greater out of pocket costs come Spring 2025 but Council's approved action hit legal road blocks and could not be implemented.  Thus retirees on a meager retirement income got a break.  


The City Council background packet for October 7 and October 21 referred to premium increases for retirees but never gave a number.  


Mayor Tom Thompson made the motion for the retirees to pick up 100% of the increase and for the city to not shoulder a penny of that premium rise.  Councilman Harry Thomas seconded the motion.


Citizens watching the meeting noted the presence of Chamber of Commerce executives who've spoken about the game changing nature of economic growth and its potential to change the tax burden.  

Council later heard how the city needs to expend funds to assist developers with the cost of installing infrastructure, streets, water and sewer.  

It raises the question as to what kind of people renege on prior city council promises to staff in favor of helping an investment firm achieve their project rate of return hurdle levels through massive tax abatement (as was the case last year with retiree health insurance & Project Zeppelin)?

What kind of people are happy to steer $62,624.64 to developers but turn their backs on loyal dedicated retired employees who relied on management's and prior council's promises?

It turns out there's four of them, at least in this case.  

Kudos to former Police Chief Russell Smith and retired Judge Allen Gilbert for serving as the city's conscience on behalf of retirees.  

Update 10-28-25:  A public information request for documents (relating to the Mayor Thompson's characterization of "doing away with the whole thing") produced the following reply:
"there are no responsive documents to your request"
Does that mean no one wrote anything down, the Mayor's memory is faulty or that's the subtle threat dusted off periodically to keep long underpaid, now retired employees in their place?  

Update 11-3-25:  The draft minutes state:
Mayor Thompson made a motion, seconded by Council Member Thomas, to increase the premium for the Post-65 Retiree by $13.52/mo. (total premium of $33.96), to cover the 4.18% increase of $62,624.64 annually as presented. The motion carried (4) ayes to (2) nays with Council Members Hesse Smith and Coffey casting the dissenting votes.

Update 11-4-25:  Jamal Schumpert gave public comment in today's Council meeting.  He closed with his concerns about the city passing on 100% of the health insurance increase to the Over 65 City Retirees.


Schumpert spoke against the Mayor's motion, that passed 4-2.


The Mayor chose not to clarify his prior words on this topic of "doing away with the whole thing and the retirees carry the entire burden."  I guess he wants those words to linger.....

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

HB 229 Went from "Records" to Reduced Speech on Angelo State University Campus


The most basic right is to declare who you are.  The next is to freely speak your mind.  A third is to access healthcare that recognizes your unique needs.  

The State of Texas tampered with the first two of these rights with Governor Abbott's directive and House Bill 229.   Texas took away healthcare for young patients with gender dysphoria, a legitimate medical diagnosis.   It did so in 2023 and the Texas Supreme Court upheld the ban.

The Texas Tribune described House Bill 229:

The Texas Legislature passed a bill that strictly defines man and woman based on reproductive organs. The bill has no civil or criminal penalties attached, but instead will take these new definitions and apply them across state records.

The Governor's directive instructs all state agencies to ensure that agency rules, internal policies, employment practices and other actions “comply with the law and the biological reality that there are only two sexes — male and female.”  

The directive quotes President Trump's executive order on the topic, which states:

"These sexes are not changeable and are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality.”

Political leaders imposed a structure that does not exist in reality, as some people are born with both male and female genitalia.   Others have a range of conditions that do not conform to the strict Male/Female divide.

approximately 1.7% of people who are intersex or born with chromosomal and physical differences to their reproductive organs

They've always been around.  Who do you think were the "She-males" in the carnival freak show?  Some Native American tribes called such persons "people with special insight."

HB 229 applies to 98.3% of the population but is wholly inadequate for the 1.7%.  That should be legislative malpractice.  

What if the law required people with no skin pigmentation to declare themselves the color of their parents and forbid state agencies and those with state funding from saying the word "albino"?

That's essentially what Texas is doing to the 1.7% who are told they must become the 98.3% in name/record only.  The state is saying, you do not exist.  

What happens to the 98.3% who cannot acknowledge the 1.7%, as is the case in Texas Tech University's various campuses, beginning with Angelo State University.   

Angelo State University announced a total ban on any speech by faculty or employees relative to gender identity.  This is problematic as actual students (paying customers) are in the banned category.  Faculty, staff and advisors deal with the 1.7% on a daily basis.  Students studying clinical health professions need to address the whole person in front of them in any practicum situation.  That includes nursing students learning the skill of Foley catheter insertion.

ASU instructed faculty that they could not address a student's concern about any issue related to gender identity and could only state the Governor's official position.  Should a student in the non-existent category have a grievance relative to the unwritten ban, faculty members would need to escalate that up the chain, where the next level would state the Governor's position and then to the next level where once again the student would hear the Governor's position, never able to have their concern heard much less acknowledged.  

So how did a law "focused on records" with no civil or criminal penalties flip the treatment of some college students into a bizarre, inhumane construct?  Ask one Texas legislator from Midlothian.  

Four people, including top leaders, at Texas A&M lost their positions after this legislator posted a video on X showing a student objecting to an English lesson which included gender identity.  

HB 229 went into effect on September 1, 2025.  The offending English lesson occurred the third week of Texas A&M's summer session, i.e. before that law went into effect.

Not only did the Texas legislature pass a bad bill, one of their own used social media to instigate a political firestorm.  He chose the inflammatory route vs. reasonably addressing a situation in which no state law was in effect.

I moved to Texas in the 80's oil bust.  The state was welcoming and I appreciated the freedom that seemed unique.  I learned Texas history as I lived near the early Stephen F. Austin communities and its first capital, Washington on the Brazos.  In my years here I've grown to appreciate the heat, both humid and dry, and the people who help each other survive in what can be a most inhospitable climate. 


State politics have grown more inhospitable than an 118 degree day in West Texas or the bitter cold "pioneer with texting" conditions of Snowmaggedon in February 2021.

The good Lord gave us a break from brutal summer heat the last few months.  I pray God gives us a respite from the ill treatment of our brothers, sisters and others in humanity, the kind that wearies my heart and soul.

Leadership deals with what is.  "Kind and gentle" discussion includes acknowledging with whom you are having a discussion and treating their concerns with respect.  

Politics is an insufficient way to explain our world, given its ever shifting sands, serial mistruths and mind numbing double standards.  

Texas Governor Greg Abbott ordered a rainbow painted crosswalk be removed or the City of Houston could lose state funding. 

“Today, I directed the Texas Department of Transportation to ensure Texas counties and cities remove any and all political ideologies from our streets. To keep Texans moving safely and free from distraction, we must maintain a safe and consistent transportation network across Texas. Any city that refuses to comply with the federal road standards will face consequences including the withholding or denial of state and federal road funding and suspension of agreements with TxDOT,” said Governor Greg Abbott. 
This follows Angelo State University and parent Texas Tech's forbidding discussion of "gender ideologies" by faculty on their campuses. Abbott banned that with his state directive which also mentioned "radical sexual orientation." 

In promoting the Governor's directive his office's press release begins with:

Governor Greg Abbott today sent a letter to Texas state agency heads directing them to follow state and federal law, including President Donald Trump’s executive order, in rejecting radical sexual orientation and gender identity ideologies.

Texas universities have tackled Abbot's "gender identify ideologies" but his "radical sexual orientation" charge lingers.  I looked up that term and found no definition.  

Mouth-taped college professors can sense where this is headed. Those with any "radical sexual orientation" may be resurfaced and painted over.

Gay faculty rightfully have their antennas up as Texas state government morphs into a highly judgmental version worthy of Old Testament religious tribalism.  Jesus taught us a far better way.

It's time to raise our view above politics.  Where have we been?  Where are we now?  What do we want to become?  As of now, Texas grows more inhospitable every day to the God created range of human existence.

Update 10-31-25:  KXAN reported:

Texas judges and justices of the peace, who are legally allowed to perform wedding ceremonies, now will not face punishment if they refuse to perform a ceremony on the basis of a “sincerely held religious belief.”

Judges can refuse to marry people who are of the same sex or interracial couples should that offend their religious beliefs.   For the people impacted the end result is a state imposed religious belief.   

Judges now can impose unequal protection under the law, just as ASU faculty are being forced to discount the very identity of students in the classes.  The Supremes may or may not take up the gay marriage issue.

Update 11-7-25:  The Supreme Court ruled that U.S. passports must show the sex declared at birth.  Did they add a box for "indeterminate" or "too soon to know" for the 1.7%?

People in same sex marriages have the same concerns as gay ASU professors as to what's next.

Update 11-10-25:  Due to Trump's executive order on only two sexes, the Veterans Administration removed male breast cancer as a diagnosis automatically covered for treatment.  Male veterans have to prove their breast cancer was caused by their military service.  

The Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal:

by Kim Davis, the former Kentucky county clerk who now faces hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages and legal fees for refusing to issue marriage licenses after the court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges allowed same-sex couples to marry.

Update 11-15-25:  Texas A & M University System upped the ante on prohibited teaching, adding race ideology to gender identity.  Austin American Statesmen reported:

(Race Ideology is) “a concept that attempts to shame a particular race or ethnicity, accuse them of being oppressors in a racial hierarchy or conspiracy, ascribe to them less value as contributors to society… assign them intrinsic guilt” or promotes activism “rather than instruction.” 
It defines gender ideology as “a concept of self-assessed gender identity replacing, and disconnected from, the biological category of sex.”

The biological actuation of sex should require a more nuanced stance than Texas law demands  

Race facts show at the 1787 Constitutional Convention U.S. leaders determined:

every white citizen, including indentured servants, would be counted as whole people, while Black citizens would be counted as three-fifths of a person.

Blacks had less value in determining state populations for legislative apportionment.  Slavery was an economic, political and Constitutional hierarchy.  Texas was the last bastion for chattel slavery.  It's why the state has Juneteenth.  Slaves at Galveston, a huge slave trading port, were the last in the United States to know about their freedom.  

Update 11-24-25:  ABC News reported:

A Texas A&M committee agreed the university was wrong to fire a professor earlier this year after a controversy over a classroom video that showed a student objecting to a children’s literature lesson about gender identity.

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Hearing for Questions State Should Already Know


CNN interviewed Rep. Drew Darby on the creation of two committees to further investigate Guadalupe River flash flooding on July 4th that killed so many.  

Camp Mystic's statement indicated their willingness to work with the committees and stressed the need for appropriate warning.  Two months ago Darby commented on youth camps "being wholly unprepared."  

Camp Mystic passed a state inspection two days prior to the deadly flash flood disaster.  A Camp Mystic founder who died in the July 4th flood had a long history of warning about river flood dangers and served on boards responsible for warning systems.

Earlier reports showed Kerr County's top three officials charged with disaster management to be asleep or out of town.

William “Dub” Thomas, Kerr County’s emergency management coordinator, told lawmakers that he was sick the day before the flooding occurred and missed two calls with Texas Emergency Management officials.

The Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) prepositioned swift water rescue teams in anticipation of significant rainfall.  A call that went through from TDEM Region 7's Shawn Baxter saved lives along rivers and creeks as County Judges and Sheriffs took preventive action.   

Was anyone from Kerr County on the line for those Region 6 calls?  If they were, what did they do with that information?  If other County Judges heeded the warnings that "this could be different", why didn't Kerr County officials?

It's a slow drip of official information which is odd given the State of Texas took over the disaster response on July 4th with support from FEMA.  Surely, they had people document their actions in the hours prior to the state assuming command and interviewed officials as part of their responsibility to evaluate their response, a standard in professional disaster management.

As for youth camps the State of Texas has had months to investigate Camp Mystic for its "failure to ensure the health, safety, or welfare of persons at the program" as it has authority to "conduct an investigation in response to an allegation" or actual incident.

The questions today are the same questions as shortly after the horrific disaster (when Governor Abbott characterized it as "loser football fan" talk) and the same questions that took nearly a month to get partially answered in public testimony.

Eventually, they may be answered or they may remain hidden.  It's the State's deck of cards and they seem hesitant to show their hand.  

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

More Committees for July 4th Flash Flood Disaster


NBC DFW
reported:

The leaders of the Texas House and Senate say they've created committees that will meet jointly and "get to the bottom of exactly what occurred" during the deadly July 4 flooding in Central Texas that killed at least 136 people, including 25 girls and two counselors at Camp Mystic. 

The Senate members are Sen. Pete Flores, R-Pleasanton, Chair; Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, Vice Chair; Sen. Bryan Hughes, R-Tyler; Sen. Lois Kolkhorst, R-Brenham; and Sen. José Menéndez, D-San Antonio. 

The House members are Rep. Morgan Meyer, R-University Park, Chair; Rep. Joe Moody, D-El Paso, Vice Chair; Rep. Drew Darby, R-San Angelo; Rep. Paul Dyson, R-Bryan and Rep. Erin Gamez, D-Brownsville.

The State of Texas should know exactly what happened as it took over the disaster response with support from FEMA.  The summer special legislative session passed numerous bills to address problems that contributed to the horrific disaster.   Did those bills lack an understanding of exactly what happened?

Districts for Senator Charles Perry and Representative Drew Darby include San Angelo, which also received record rainfall in portions of town on July 4th.  Swift water rescue boats from Fort Worth had been staged in San Angelo and responded promptly to the unfolding disaster.  

Counties in the region has been warned by Shawn Baxter, a former Texas State Trooper with regional responsibility for disaster preparedness.  Numerous County Judges between San Angelo and Kerrville heeded Baxter's warning, that this could be different and flash flooding a real concern for loss of life.  Menard County Judge and the Sheriff's Department contacted people up and down area waterways the day before with a warning to be prepared to evacuate to higher ground.

While other county leaders were prepared, Kerr County was not.  Their Emergency Management Coordinator was sick and missed the phone call from Sean Baxter's counterpart that this weather setup was different and far more concerning.  The County Judge was at Lake Travis, leaving only the County Sheriff who also could not be contacted as the threatening water rose.

Rep Darby sat on the House panel that held hearings in Kerrville.  My guess is he knows plenty about what happened, just as the state officials who took over the response do.  

Kerr County officials noted the need to do an after action report and recently held a town hall meeting to discuss a flood event summary, Camp Mystic, and rebuilding efforts.  However, there is no sign of that after action report.

The public might know more than state or local officials have been willing to share if Texas public information requirements had not been suspended.  It took twenty seven days for the public to learn the Disaster Management Coordinator had been sick and slept as flash flooding occurred.  

Thus, the slow dribble of information that should shock is now but old news.  At least Governor Abbott retired the football analogy.  

Update 10-16-25:  CNN interviewed Rep. Drew Darby on this development.  Camp Mystic's statement included information about a lack of warning.  In August Darby commented on youth camps being wholly unprepared.  Camp Mystic passed a state inspection two days prior to the deadly flash flood disaster.  A Camp Mystic founder who died in the July 4th flood had a long history of warning about river flood dangers and served on boards responsible for warning systems.

Earlier reports showed Kerr County's top three officials charged with disaster management to be asleep or out of town.

William “Dub” Thomas, Kerr County’s emergency management coordinator, told lawmakers that he was sick the day before the flooding occurred and missed two calls with Texas Emergency Management officials.

The call that went through from Region 7's Shawn Baxter saved lives.   Was anyone from Kerr County on the line for those Region 6 calls?  If they were, what did they do with that information?  If other County Judges heeded the warnings that "this could be different", why didn't Kerr County officials?    

Update 11-20-25:  FoxWestTexas reported
A resolution honoring victims and heroes of the July 4 flooding in Texas has cleared the U.S. House of Representatives, more than four months after the disaster that claimed 135 lives statewide.
The House mourns the profound loss of life, honors the courage and sacrifice of those who risked their lives to save others, encourages the rebuilding of infrastructure and facilities damaged, and stands united with those affected, pledging continued support as the process of healing and rebuilding continues.

The profound loss of life occurred in one area out of many areas that experienced horrific flooding.  The time for consequences is nigh.

Thursday, October 09, 2025

City of San Angelo Worsens Health Insurance Benefit for 2026


San Angelo City Council approved moving forward with new insurance benefits for fiscal year 2026.  The former middle and high health insurance options have been eliminated.  


The low coverage option will be the new "preferred plan" with an even worse base plan and an associated health savings account contribution.  


The background packet makes this clear:

The new dual option maintains the current low plan and introduces a high deductible health plan (HDHP) with a health reimbursement account (HRA) to fund first dollar coverage. The high and medium plans would be discontinued. The premiums for both of the proposed plans would be at a premium increase compared to the current premiums for employees.
Add an unfunded liability that needs to be made up and the city/employees will need to pay more.

Although there is no projected increase in expense for this proposal, funding to cover the unfunded liability will be needed. There is an expected increase in premiums for active/U65 group.

A small plum for city workers is the new Health Reimbursement Account contribution for those on the new base plan, $750 for an individual and $1,500 for a family.  Assuming no usage of this account until a major healthcare event, it would take 8.8 years to accumulate the $6,600 annual out of pocket for an individual and a similar 8.8 years to build the $13,200 annual out of pocket for a family.

City Council has heard that economic development has the potential to shift the burden of taxes from residential real estate to corporate property, land, buildings and equipment.  That is if City Council doesn't abate that revenue away.  

That appeared to be the case in 2024 with retiree healthcare and a monster tax abatement on a battery farm.  The company requested an 85% tax abatement.  At the time I wrote:

It's rather Grinch like to save private equity investors millions, while foisting new health insurance deductibles on retired city workers.

The city did not enacted Council's direction because it violated federal law.  So they picked up the tab for retirees.  

Nearly a year later the city plans to foist new higher deductibles on most city workers, at least the ones picking the new base plan.  Everyone covered gets to pay more in premium, as well.  That's not a good deal for underpaid city employees.  

Update 10-24-25:  City Council increased health insurance premiums for retirees by $13 per month.  The vote was four ayes and two nays.  Stay tuned for future tax abatements....