Posts Tagged ‘Port Lavaca’

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…

Texas Woman Pleads Guilty To 26 Counts Of That Voter Fraud Democrats Swear Doesn’t Exist

Sunday, June 26th, 2022

Don’t look now, but the Texas Attorney General’s office just announced a woman pleading guilty to 26 counts of that voter fraud Democrats swear doesn’t exist.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced his office’s latest election integrity prosecution in Victoria County. Monica Mendez of Port Lavaca pleaded guilty to 26 felony counts of voter fraud, including three counts of illegal voting, eight counts of election fraud, seven counts of assisting a voter to submit a ballot by mail, and eight counts of unlawful possession of a mail ballot. Mendez ran a vote-harvesting operation on behalf of a subsidized housing corporation in order to influence the outcome of a utility board election.

A utility board election. Stakes that low and here’s demonstrable proof that someone thought it was worth committing voter fraud. Imagine how much more temptation there must be to commit voting fraud in a presidential election?

Texas Scorecard has more details.

A Victoria County grand jury indicted Mendez on 31 felony election fraud counts:

  • 7 counts of illegal voting (second-degree felony—2 to 20 years in prison, fine up to $10,000)
  • 8 counts of unlawfully assisting a voter voting by mail (third-degree felony—2 to 10 years in prison, fine up to $10,000)
  • 8 counts of unlawful possession of a ballot (state jail felony—180 days to 2 years in jail, fine up to $10,000)
  • 8 counts of election fraud (state jail felony)
  • The charges relate to eight mail-in ballots in a May 2018 water district board election in Bloomington, a town of around 2,000 residents near Victoria.

    The Texas Secretary of State referred the case to the AG’s office for criminal investigation after receiving reports from residents of possible illegal voting activities ahead of the election, including about 275 new voters who registered using the same mailing address—a P.O. box associated with a local nonprofit housing provider ALMS.

    Tenants said ALMS threatened to raise their rent if they didn’t vote for their landlord’s preferred water board candidates. ALMS wanted to oust the incumbents because they said the water district overcharged for services at their rental properties.

    In 2016, Texas Rangers investigated similar allegations that ALMS coerced tenants to vote for certain candidates.

    Authorities haven’t said which candidate or candidates may have benefited from Mendez’ alleged ballot harvesting.

    A total of 563 ballots were cast in Bloomington’s 2018 water district election. Each voter chose up to three of the six candidates, and the top three were elected.

    Just 12 votes separated the third- and fourth-place finishers.

    I’ve seen various reports that Mendez is a Democrat (which the “subsidized housing corporation” part would suggest), but I am unable to find definitive proof of that. If you have any, feel free to share it in the comments below.