Lawmakers start $7 billion away from target
Lawmakers start $7 billion away from target
Observers welcome quiet opening to Legislature
As I write this, most families are readying themselves for the upcoming holiday and new year.
However, many of us in the Texas newspaper industry are readying ourselves for Jan. 12 — the beginning of the upcoming session of the Texas Legislature.
This session will be different from any session we have seen in the past—but how different?
Well, this remains an open question.
Initial information coming to us from lawmakers was that we’d have almost no access to the Capitol, and most lawmakers would have their offices closed to the public.
Editors: Note that the lead item, which is written in past tense, is pegged to the opening of the Legislature, which is scheduled to occur at noon Tuesday, Jan. 11. For that reason, this week’s column is embargoed for release until 12:30 p.m. that same day — Tuesday, Jan. 11. Thank you for your cooperation.
Texas Press Association
New House speaker lays out challenges
New year can’t yet shake focus from COVID-19
Texans urged to roll up their sleeves
Public access to Legislature up in the air
One of my reporters recently returned from a local government meeting, and while summing it up he mentioned that a speaker had implored the government body “all news is fake. You know that, right?”
My mouth dropped.
By Al Cross, Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues
When the only local newspaper also served as the only local job printer, many people would refer to them as "the printing office." Job printing went elsewhere long ago, and few papers do their own printing. Now many of them don't even have offices.
Publishers were already selling their real estate, their greatest hard asset, and moving to smaller quarters. Then the pandemic hit, forcing most news work to be done remotely, and that seems to have made more publishers question the basic idea of a newsroom.
Supreme Court rejects Texas AG’s lawsuit