Posts Tagged ‘Mexia’

Ken Paxton To 130 “Cities”: No Tax Increases For You!

Saturday, May 16th, 2026

The Texas legislature passed new financial transparency requirements, but a whole lot of municipalities have been slow on the ball to comply, so Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is bringing the wood.

Attorney General Ken Paxton is moving to block more than 130 Texas cities from hiking property taxes this year, accusing them of breaking a new state transparency law.

The word “cities” is more than a stretch here, as a lot of the municipalities here are pretty tiny.

Senate Bill 1851, passed in 2025, prohibits cities that don’t meet financial audit and disclosure requirements from raising property taxes above the no‑new‑revenue rate. The no‑new‑revenue rate is designed to collect roughly the same amount of property tax revenue from existing properties as the previous year, preventing hidden tax hikes caused by rising appraisals.

According to Paxton’s office, the action follows an investigation launched last month when he demanded financial-statement and audit records from more than 1,000 municipalities to check whether they were complying with SB 1851.

Cities that failed to meet the law’s reporting standards for the new fiscal year were flagged as noncompliant.

Paxton has now sent formal letters to those cities, notifying them that they are barred from adopting property tax rates higher than the no‑new‑revenue rate and are subject to enforcement provisions and penalties under the statute.

Snip.

Paxton framed the move as a stand for taxpayers against local governments that want to raise taxes without following the rules.

“I will not allow cities to unlawfully raise taxes on hardworking Texans. That is why I took aggressive action against over 130 Texas cities to hold them accountable and ensure they comply with state law,” Paxton said in a statement. He added that cities “cannot fail to abide by state audit requirements without consequences,” and vowed his office will keep enforcing state law “to protect taxpayers across the state.”

The list of cities that received letters is long and spans every corner of Texas, from small rural towns to mid‑sized communities and coastal municipalities.

The list includes Alpine, Aspermont, Baird, Balch Springs, Balmorhea, Bedias, Berryville, Big Spring, Bishop, Blooming Grove, Blue Mound, Briarcliff, Brookside Village, Buffalo Gap, Calvert, Cameron, Campbell, Centerville, Chico, Chireno, Clarksville, Clear Lake Shores, Combine, Corrigan, Crane, Cross Timber, Crowell, Crystal City, Cuero, Dalhart, Danbury, De Leon, Eagle Lake, Elkhart, Eureka, Eustace, Fairfield, Farwell, Flatonia, Franklin, Fritch, Fulton, Gordon, Grandfalls, Gregory, Groesbeck, Groom, Hale Center, Hamilton, Hearne, Hempstead, Higgins, Hillcrest Village, Horizon City, Howardwick, Howe, Huntington, Industry, Ingleside On the Bay, Jewett, Jonestown, Keene, Kemah, Kenedy, Kerens, Kermit, Lamesa, Livingston, Lott, Lumberton, Manvel, Marquez, McCamey, Megargel, Menard, Mertzon, Mexia, Miami, Midway, Miles, Mount Enterprise, Natalia, New Home, New Waverly, Newcastle, Oyster Creek, Paducah, Panorama Village, Pelican Bay, Pleak Village, Plum Grove, Port Lavaca, Quanah, Red Lick, Redwater, Rockdale, Rocksprings, Roma, Rusk, San Elizario, San Felipe, San Perlita, Seabrook, Shepherd, Smiley, Snyder, Somerville, Southmayd, Spring Branch, Spur, Sterling City, Stinnett, Sunray, Surfside Beach, Taft, Tehuacana, Texas City, Texline, Three Rivers, Tiki Island, Tom Bean, Tool, Turkey, Valley Mills, Valley View, Victoria, Weslaco, Weston Lakes, Wharton, Wickett, Wimberley, Wolfe City, Woodloch, Yantis, and Yoakum.

Some of these are, in fact, cities. Victoria and Texas City both have over 50,000 people, and the finance departments there should have been on the ball. But some of these are barely towns. Megargel has a population of 174. Tiki Island (yes, a real place) is a village of some 1,100 people just off I-45 on the inland side of Galveston Bay.

Different Tiki Island

I’m in favor of limiting tax increases, and the municipalities here should get on the ball for the sake of transparency. But I suspect some of the smaller towns here just need to hire a part-time accountant to fill out the forms.

Also, this article provided a great stress test to see how many tags I can add to Word Press at one time…

Update: Cop Shooter Shoots Self

Sunday, March 28th, 2021

An update on yesterday’s Blue Alert story:

MEXIA, Texas (KWTX) – DeArthur Pinson Jr., 37, wanted in connection to the shooting of Texas DPS Trooper Chad Walker near Mexia, has killed himself, according to Limestone County Judge Richard Duncan.

Duncan was quoted in a social media post from the Mclennan County Sheriff’s Office on Saturday night.

The shooting happened on Highway 84 shortly before 8 p.m. Friday. On Saturday, the Texas Department of Public Safety Officers Association identified Walker as the trooper shot by the suspect.

The wounded state trooper was listed in critical condition Friday night, according to DPS Sergeant Ryan Howard.

Evidently the asshole who just killed himself shot Trooper Walker for stopping to try and help him:

The officer’s association said the trooper was called to a motorist assist on FM2848, where a vehicle was disabled on the side of the highway.

As Walker started to pull behind the stopped vehicle, the association said a man got out of the driver’s side and began to shoot multiple times into the patrol unit’s windshield. Walker was shot in the head and the abdomen.

The man grabbed a backpack from the vehicle and fled on foot, the association said.

Evidently Pinson never left Mexia:

Last reports still had Trooper Walker in critical condition.

Blue Alert in Mexia

Saturday, March 27th, 2021

A Blue Art has been issued for this guy:

Officials are searching for a man accused of shooting a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper Friday near Mexia.

Law enforcement officials are searching for 37-year-old DeArthur Pinson Jr., in the shooting, which happened near U.S. Highway 84 west of Mexia in Limestone County, about 81 miles southeast of Dallas, according to the DPS.

The Texas Department of Public Safety Officers Association identified that wounded trooper as Chad Walker, a husband and father of four.

Walker was taken in critical condition to Baylor Scott and White Medical Center Hillcrest in Waco.

The blue alert describes him as a 37 year old, 220 pound black male, 6 feet tall, facial hair, wearing a black hoodie and shorts with a stripe down the sides. “Considered armed and dangerous.”

Mexia is 54 miles west east of Waco on highway 84.

If you’re in Texas, keep a lookout…

Texas Charges Social Worker With 134 Felony Voter Fraud Counts

Saturday, November 7th, 2020

Voting fraud right here in River City Texas:

“Attorney General Ken Paxton today announced that his Election Fraud Unit assisted the Limestone County Sheriff and District Attorney in charging Kelly Reagan Brunner, a social worker in the Mexia State Supported Living Center (SSLC), with 134 felony counts of purportedly acting as an agent and of election fraud,” the state said in a statement. “State Supported Living Centers serve people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Brunner submitted voter registration applications for 67 residents without their signature or effective consent, while purporting to act as their agent.”

Mexia is east of Waco and south of Corsicana.

“Under Texas law, only a parent, spouse or child who is a qualified voter of the county may act as an agent in registering a person to vote, after being appointed to do so by that person,” the statement continued. “None of the SSLC patients gave effective consent to be registered, and a number of them have been declared totally mentally incapacitated by a court, thereby making them ineligible to vote in Texas.”

The statement added that if she is convicted, Brunner faces up to 10 years in prison for these offenses.

You have to be pretty low to take advantage of the retarded. There’s no word which party or candidate Brunner was (allegedly) trying to steal votes for.

(Hat tip: rbrt987.)