Law 666 New Texas Laws Go Into Effect Sept. 1

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Link

In the odd years where the Texas Legislature is in session, a whole mess of new laws typically goes [sic] into effect on Sept. 1. This year is no exception, with the legislature passing 666 laws that go into effect on Wednesday.

While all of them are not listed here, you can see a few of the big ones below. A link to the full slate of new laws can be found at the bottom of the page.

TEXAS 2022-23 BUDGET: SB1: The House and Senate approve a two-year $250 billion budget that lawmakers said spends less than our current budget and better funds public schools. Our partners at The Dallas Morning News have more on the budget here.

STAR-SPANGLED BANNER ACT: SB4: Requires that the national anthem, the Star-Spangled Banner, be played before games played by professional sports teams that contract with the state.

TEXAS HEARTBEAT BILL: SB8: Texas' "Heartbeat Bill" bans abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected, which can occur about six weeks into a pregnancy and before many women know they are pregnant. The law allows private citizens to enforce the rule, not the state, through civil lawsuits against doctors and others. Similar laws in other states have been successfully challenged in federal court, though Texas lawmakers hope placing enforcement in the hands of citizens will help defeat challenges.

BLOCKING AN EMERGENCY VEHICLE: HB9: Provides for criminal punishment and the conditions of community supervision for someone who blocks the path of an emergency vehicle. Depending on the circumstance, the punishment could be a misdemeanor or felony.

POLICE CHOKEHOLDS: SB69: Police officers are no longer allowed to use a chokehold, carotid artery hold, or similar neck restraint unless it's necessary to prevent injury to the officer; police officers also have a duty to intervene to stop or prevent another police officer from using force against a person if that force exceeds what is reasonable or if the officer knows the use of such force is a violation of law or puts a person at risk of bodily injury.

ACTIVE SHOOTER ALERT SYSTEM: HB103: Also known as the Leilah Hernandez Act, this law creates the Texas Active Shooter Alert System which will be activated via the federal Wireless Emergency Alert System on the report of an active shooter. This is expected to work in the same way Amber Alerts, Blue Alerts, etc., are distributed on phones. The information could alert people to the situation, a suspected shooter's identity or last known location, or other relevant information. Leilah Hernandez, 15, was the youngest victim killed during a 2019 mass shooting in Midland-Odessa.

BO'S LAW: HB929: Known as the Botham Jean Act, or Bo's Law, this law ensures that cameras worn by law enforcement officers will remain on during an active investigation. The law came about after Jean was fatally shot in his apartment by off-duty Dallas police officer Amber Guyger who entered Jean's apartment and mistook it for her own. Testimony in Guyger’s murder trial revealed Dallas Police Association President Mike Mata asked another officer to turn off a camera inside a squad car at the scene of the shooting so Guyger and Mata could speak privately. Mata said Guyger was going to take a call from her attorney and had the right to attorney-client privilege. Bo's law establishes guidelines for when a recording can be discontinued considering the need for privacy in certain situations and locations.

MAIL-IN BALLOT TRACKING: HB1382: This bill amends Election Code to add electronic tracking for applications for mail-in ballots. The bill tasks the secretary of state with creating an online tool for people who submit applications for a ballot to track the location and status of the application and the ballot.

SUNDAY BEER/WINE SALES: HB1518: The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Code was amended to allow beer and wine to be sold after 10 a.m. on Sundays. Prior to Sept. 1, 2021, beer and wine could not be sold before noon on Sundays. Liquor is still not allowed to be sold on Sundays at any time.

"DEFUNDING POLICE" PROTECTIONS: HB1900: Municipalities with populations of more than 250,000 that adopt budgets that reduce year-over-year appropriations to police departments could be subject to financial penalties from the state if those reductions are out of line with other reductions to the budget. The bill also blocks future annexation and allows areas annexed within the last 30 years to appeal for de-annexation that is decided during an election.

CRIMINALIZING HOMELESS CAMPING: HB1925: This law prohibits camping in public places by homeless people and criminalizes the act by making it a Class C misdemeanor with a fine of $500. The law also says a political subdivision may not designate a property to be used by homeless individuals to camp without an approved plan.

CONSTITUTIONAL CARRY: HB1927: Anyone age 21 who can legally own a handgun can legally carry that handgun in public without a license or training. It is illegal however to carry that gun while intoxicated and the law includes stiffer penalties for felons caught illegally carrying guns. The law was not passed without controversy. Some law enforcement groups said the law would endanger the public and police while supporters said would allow Texans to better defend themselves in public while abolishing unnecessary impediments to the constitutional right to bear arms. Texas law also makes some places always off-limits to firearms and the new law does not change where guns cannot be carried, including: a polling place; a government meeting open to the public; a courthouse; a school or school-related activity; a racetrack; a jail; an airport; an amusement park; a bar; a restaurant selling alcohol.

PATRIOTIC EDUCATION: HB2497 and HB3979: As the debate over critical race theory continues during the second special session, Texas lawmakers approved two bills in the regular session aimed at how the history of America and Texas is taught in schools. HB2497 is related to the Texas 1836 Project, an effort to teach "Patriotic Education" since the state's war for independence from Mexico. The bill provides for an advisory committee "to promote patriotic education and increase awareness of the Texas values that continue to stimulate boundless prosperity across this state." Lawmakers also passed HB3979, which says "a teacher, administrator, or other employee of a state agency, school district, or open-enrollment charter school may not (C) require an understanding of The 1619 Project." The project is a longform journalism project from the New York Times that "aims to reframe the country's history by placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans at the very center of our national narrative."

ERCOT CHANGES: HB2586 and SB1281: Two laws related to the devastating winter storm from February 2021 and the power grid will go into effect Wednesday. HB2586 calls for an annual audit of each independent organization certified for the ERCOT power region. Auditors will look at board members, salaries, budgets and expenses of each organization. Under SB1281, a biennial assessment of the reliability of the ERCOT power grid under extreme weather scenarios will be performed by a certified independent organization.

While the laws mentioned above have all passed and go into effect Wednesday, the state legislature is currently busy in the second special session working on other items of importance outlined by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott including the GOP-backed bill on election integrity, bail, and property tax reform, limits on transgender kids competing on sports teams. A third special session is expected to be called this fall to address redistricting.

Not every bill passed by the legislature goes into effect on Sept. 1. Some went into effect immediately while others have effective dates in the future. Future effective dates vary, some will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2022, while others may not go into effect until 2026.

*******

Another funny number: I made this thread on the side of farm to market road 1488.
 
PATRIOTIC EDUCATION: HB2497 and HB3979: As the debate over critical race theory continues during the second special session, Texas lawmakers approved two bills in the regular session aimed at how the history of America and Texas is taught in schools. HB2497 is related to the Texas 1836 Project, an effort to teach "Patriotic Education" since the state's war for independence from Mexico. The bill provides for an advisory committee "to promote patriotic education and increase awareness of the Texas values that continue to stimulate boundless prosperity across this state." Lawmakers also passed HB3979, which says "a teacher, administrator, or other employee of a state agency, school district, or open-enrollment charter school may not (C) require an understanding of The 1619 Project." The project is a longform journalism project from the New York Times that "aims to reframe the country's history by placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans at the very center of our national narrative."

I guess sometimes you gotta fight cringe with cringe.
 
“STAR-SPANGLED BANNER ACT: SB4: Requires that the national anthem, the Star-Spangled Banner, be played before games played by professional sports teams that contract with the state.”

I love this one. People chimp the fuck out so hard over it. There’s always that one fat, pasty white dude with a BLM mask huffing and puffing with White Claw in hand any time the national anthem plays, and when he doesn’t receive any attention, he jumps slumps over into his seat like a slug and browses Reddit until the game is over.
 
Overall, these seem pretty good. The Patriotic Education Act seems goofy but I get it at this point. The hobo law seems to be directly aimed at Austin, if my experience there is anything to go off of. Good God those freaks pretend to love their drugged up hobos.
 
It is illegal however to carry that gun while intoxicated and the law includes stiffer penalties for felons caught illegally carrying guns.
I was surprised that Texas allowed felons to carry guns. But then I remembered it's Texas.
prohibits camping in public places by homeless people and criminalizes the act by making it a Class C misdemeanor with a fine of $500.
But where are they going to put the homeless people? Also, I'll rate them optimistic for charging people that obviously have 0 dollars in their wallet $500, but I guess this is moreso a straight-to-jail sort of scheme.
Liquor is still not allowed to be sold on Sundays at any time.
Blue laws are pretty stupid sometimes, especially when it's specific types of alcohol that are a-ok to be sold, but others aren't. I can't understand the logic of it myself.
 
Overall, these seem pretty good. The Patriotic Education Act seems goofy but I get it at this point. The hobo law seems to be directly aimed at Austin, if my experience there is anything to go off of. Good God those freaks pretend to love their drugged up hobos.
The 'DEFUNDING POLICE PROTECTIONS: HB1900' seems to be a jab at Austin as well, I love it.
 
Blue laws are pretty stupid sometimes, especially when it's specific types of alcohol that are a-ok to be sold, but others aren't. I can't understand the logic of it myself.
It's supposed to protect churchgoing business owners from their agnostic competition... But we all know that it's more or less an excuse to be a control freak.

But they've been falling out of style, in recent years; although there's usually reduced alcohol sales on Sunday.
 
Well, id did say that Doomguy was a Texan. Frankly they should make a law that makes it so Californians are publicly fired on upon entry. And I say that as a commiefornian refugee.
 
Well, id did say that Doomguy was a Texan. Frankly they should make a law that makes it so Californians are publicly fired on upon entry. And I say that as a commiefornian refugee.
I don't see any laws against demons killing bunnies.
 
It's supposed to protect churchgoing business owners from their agnostic competition... But we all know that it's more or less an excuse to be a control freak.

But they've been falling out of style, in recent years; although there's usually reduced alcohol sales on Sunday.
Not being able to buy liquor on Sunday only ever meant I was sober on Monday.

But it's easier to believe in universal brotherhood and a loving God when you're three sheets to the wind.
 
Can we pass the legalization of shooting known pedophiles? That outta make the commiefornians return to the cesspit from whence they came.
 
Yeah, but Texas is already invaded enough by idiots that vote for the same policies that fucked them over the first time. I don't think Texas deserves that.... Or rather, Californians don't deserve Texas.
You're not wrong, but it's currently illegal to hunt them for sport the way it is with other invasive species like feral hogs.
 
Back
Top Bottom