To TX Sen. Bettencourt on SB1567, Occupancy

16,961 Views | 104 Replies | Last: 2 mo ago by tgivaughn
PS3D
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Chrundle the Great said:

Only if you promise to tear down Johnny's bar first, but instead of parking I'm thinking nail salon.

Or redi-clinic.
113-115 College Main will be spared. I am altering the deal, pray I don't alter it any further.

In all seriousness, you do not want the "build whatever" free-for-all because your neighborhood will get ruined and/or you'll be priced out.
Chrundle the Great
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Yeah I was kidding, and I agree with you mostly. I don't want to abolish all zoning; I've lived in Houston. We can amend my first sentence to do "whatever within the ordinances/permits established originally"

What I don't like about the four unrelated rule is it goes after property owners the city was more than happy to approve plans, approve permits, and accept higher property taxes only to come back years later and say eh 5 seems like a lot of people, your house needs to be 80% occupancy from now on or else we'll fine you into submission.
Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Chrundle the Great said:

Yeah I was kidding, and I agree with you mostly. I don't want to abolish all zoning; I've lived in Houston. We can amend my first sentence to do "whatever within the ordinances/permits established originally"

What I don't like about the four unrelated rule is it goes after property owners the city was more than happy to approve plans, approve permits, and accept higher property taxes only to come back years later and say eh 5 seems like a lot of people, your house needs to be 80% occupancy from now on or else we'll fine you into submission.


That's the moral hazard of a "dead letter law" right there. There's no innocent parties in the whole matter, except folks that bought their forever home and watched the neighborhood transform around them in spite of the rules.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95
dubi
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

That's the moral hazard of a "dead letter law" right there. There's no innocent parties in the whole matter, except folks that bought their forever home and watched the neighborhood transform around them in spite of the rules.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
If this is signed into law, will COCS pass a "no more than 4" to protect our neighborhoods?
GoSummer
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I'm a rental property owner and a parent of college students and I support SB 1567. The current situation in College Station isn't workingstudents are being unfairly targeted and harassed. My tenants have had people taking pictures of their cars, which is completely inappropriate and unsettling.

Because of the city's ordinance, we have a bedroom empty (in an older home, not an "Ag Shack") It just doesn't make sense. College Station is singled out because other cities, like Austin, have already moved away from these kinds of discriminatory rules. If there are real issues like too many cars on the street or too much noise, then the city should create ordinances that directly address those thingsnot ones that unfairly limit who can live together.

Most college students do not even want to share a bedroom, so I think the concerns of 9-12 in a house are unfounded. The solution of building more high-rise apartments does not work for all college students. There will always be students who want to live in houses near campus. People who bought homes near campus shouldn't be surprised to have students as neighbors.

scd88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
GoSummer said:

I'm a rental property owner and a parent of college students and I support SB 1567. The current situation in College Station isn't workingstudents are being unfairly targeted and harassed. My tenants have had people taking pictures of their cars, which is completely inappropriate and unsettling.

Because of the city's ordinance, we have a bedroom empty (in an older home, not an "Ag Shack") It just doesn't make sense. College Station is singled out because other cities, like Austin, have already moved away from these kinds of discriminatory rules. If there are real issues like too many cars on the street or too much noise, then the city should create ordinances that directly address those thingsnot ones that unfairly limit who can live together.

Most college students do not even want to share a bedroom, so I think the concerns of 9-12 in a house are unfounded. The solution of building more high-rise apartments does not work for all college students. There will always be students who want to live in houses near campus. People who bought homes near campus shouldn't be surprised to have students as neighbors.




There's nothing discriminatory, but you're a landlord so your viewpoint is to be expected.

Do you live here?
Do you maintain your properties here or just let the weeds and lawn go?
If kids are held responsible for being decent neighbors, they probably would be.
I have no issue with the kids around me.

I've had more challenges with ****ty, out of town landlords who don't give a rats ass about the community. That's a bigger issue than the kids.

Why is the state voting on a bill that clearly targets College Station? That's ****ing moronic. The latest bill is so biased it's ridiculous.

Nobody challenges more than 4. We aren't the only community that does that. Go to Austin and see how crappy the near campus housing is. No parking as they allow ADU's. Crappy yard upkeep.

It's you landlords that are a bigger problem. Look in the damn mirror.

ETA - blaming the people who live in the neighborhoods is pretty rich. Yeah, we are the problem. Our houses are the one that look like dumps. Clearly.
EliteElectric
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Chrundle the Great said:

Let property owners do what they want with their property
So much this! ^^^^^^

I would add "within the zoning and building laws" as well, but, there should be no situation where government should be telling private property owners what they can and can not do with their own property so much as what they are doing is legal. It's so rich to see people who are 100% opposed to eminent domain 100% behind this draconian no more then x related stuff. 1st they came for the........

"I want you to do what I want you to do, I do not however want to do what you want me to do"

Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
dubi said:

Quote:

That's the moral hazard of a "dead letter law" right there. There's no innocent parties in the whole matter, except folks that bought their forever home and watched the neighborhood transform around them in spite of the rules.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
If this is signed into law, will COCS pass a "no more than 4" to protect our neighborhoods?


This, if passed, will take that authority away from us.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95
Stucco
How long do you want to ignore this user?
The current solution is not sustainable and will eventually fall either due to this bill or a lawsuit.

Any replacement solution is bad because it will frustrate a larger set of residents and the property rights folks. (no street parking, no more than 2 per bedroom, no more than 1 lease per property)

A repeal without replacement is also bad because it will accelerate the ag shacks and frustrate the neighborhood integrity folks.

This is a loser of an issue. The only real solution is to fix the housing crisis as fast as humanly possible. The best interim solution I see is an ordinance that you can only replace a structure with a similar structure.
Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Stucco said:

The current solution is not sustainable and will eventually fall either due to this bill or a lawsuit.

Any replacement solution is bad because it will frustrate a larger set of residents and the property rights folks. (no street parking, no more than 2 per bedroom, no more than 1 lease per property)

A repeal without replacement is also bad because it will accelerate the ag shacks and frustrate the neighborhood integrity folks.

This is a loser of an issue. The only real solution is to fix the housing crisis as fast as humanly possible. The best interim solution I see is an ordinance that you can only replace a structure with a similar structure.


Largely agree. It's a conundrum. Interrelated with all this is a constrained housing supply. We need to be building more housing, like yesterday. If supply remains constrained and this bill passes, it'll be really bad for existing neighborhoods.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95
hopeandrealchange
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Bob Yancy said:

Stucco said:

The current solution is not sustainable and will eventually fall either due to this bill or a lawsuit.

Any replacement solution is bad because it will frustrate a larger set of residents and the property rights folks. (no street parking, no more than 2 per bedroom, no more than 1 lease per property)

A repeal without replacement is also bad because it will accelerate the ag shacks and frustrate the neighborhood integrity folks.

This is a loser of an issue. The only real solution is to fix the housing crisis as fast as humanly possible. The best interim solution I see is an ordinance that you can only replace a structure with a similar structure.


Largely agree. It's a conundrum. Interrelated with all this is a constrained housing supply. We need to be building more housing, like yesterday. If supply remains constrained and this bill passes, it'll be really bad for existing neighborhoods.

Respectfully

Yancy '95

Do you believe it will be really bad for existing neighborhoods that have deed restrictions?
And why not let the free market do what it does best and get the city out of the way?
It is my opinion the student population should be as close to campus as possible and as dense as possible.
dubi
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

Do you believe it will be really bad for existing neighborhoods that have deed restrictions?
And why not let the free market do what it does best and get the city out of the way?
It is my opinion the student population should be as close to campus as possible and as dense as possible.
The older neighborhoods near campus do not have deed restrictions so that is, IMO, a big issue.

We have homes with 5-7 cars that live very close to me. I think that problem will multiply exponentially!
Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
hopeandrealchange said:

Bob Yancy said:

Stucco said:

The current solution is not sustainable and will eventually fall either due to this bill or a lawsuit.

Any replacement solution is bad because it will frustrate a larger set of residents and the property rights folks. (no street parking, no more than 2 per bedroom, no more than 1 lease per property)

A repeal without replacement is also bad because it will accelerate the ag shacks and frustrate the neighborhood integrity folks.

This is a loser of an issue. The only real solution is to fix the housing crisis as fast as humanly possible. The best interim solution I see is an ordinance that you can only replace a structure with a similar structure.


Largely agree. It's a conundrum. Interrelated with all this is a constrained housing supply. We need to be building more housing, like yesterday. If supply remains constrained and this bill passes, it'll be really bad for existing neighborhoods.

Respectfully

Yancy '95

Do you believe it will be really bad for existing neighborhoods that have deed restrictions?
And why not let the free market do what it does best and get the city out of the way?
It is my opinion the student population should be as close to campus as possible and as dense as possible.


Given the higher occupancy the new law will allow, I believe outside investors will snatch up homes and make de facto Agshacks out of them. We'll be forced to enact new parking ordinances and those ordinances will impact and inconvenience everyone, permanent residents and students alike.

We have to contain occupancy somehow, because the sheer number of cars will render the streets unnavigable by public safety vehicles and routine traffic.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95
GoSummer
How long do you want to ignore this user?
scd88 said:

GoSummer said:

I'm a rental property owner and a parent of college students and I support SB 1567. The current situation in College Station isn't workingstudents are being unfairly targeted and harassed. My tenants have had people taking pictures of their cars, which is completely inappropriate and unsettling.

Because of the city's ordinance, we have a bedroom empty (in an older home, not an "Ag Shack") It just doesn't make sense. College Station is singled out because other cities, like Austin, have already moved away from these kinds of discriminatory rules. If there are real issues like too many cars on the street or too much noise, then the city should create ordinances that directly address those thingsnot ones that unfairly limit who can live together.

Most college students do not even want to share a bedroom, so I think the concerns of 9-12 in a house are unfounded. The solution of building more high-rise apartments does not work for all college students. There will always be students who want to live in houses near campus. People who bought homes near campus shouldn't be surprised to have students as neighbors.




There's nothing discriminatory, but you're a landlord so your viewpoint is to be expected.

Do you live here?
Do you maintain your properties here or just let the weeds and lawn go?
If kids are held responsible for being decent neighbors, they probably would be.
I have no issue with the kids around me.

I've had more challenges with ****ty, out of town landlords who don't give a rats ass about the community. That's a bigger issue than the kids.

Why is the state voting on a bill that clearly targets College Station? That's ****ing moronic. The latest bill is so biased it's ridiculous.

Nobody challenges more than 4. We aren't the only community that does that. Go to Austin and see how crappy the near campus housing is. No parking as they allow ADU's. Crappy yard upkeep.

It's you landlords that are a bigger problem. Look in the damn mirror.

ETA - blaming the people who live in the neighborhoods is pretty rich. Yeah, we are the problem. Our houses are the one that look like dumps. Clearly.
I didn't come here to argue or be attacked, but felt it was important to share my viewpoint and experience. You are making assumptions about where I live, how I maintain my property, and my level of community involvement that are all false. I agree that the bill should be statewide and not just targeting College Station. I was stating the reason we are singled out is because other cities have already realized this doesn't work.

When my 19 year old female tenants are calling me concerned about the strange cars outside that seem to be monitoring them, that is a problem.

I would support other city regulations regarding what can be built, number of bedrooms, etc. But discriminatory (treating a person or group differently from and usually worse than other people) rules are not the way to go in my opinion. Create ordinances that address the specific problems.
foo00
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I only read the parts of the bill that were posted here and have no clue on zoning laws. But if stucco was right and it "only" restricts those 5 ways of limitation.. if the City is concerned with 12 people in a 4 bedroom house as you say why not fix the zoning to be 1.5 persons per bedroom so 4bed=6 (ex 2 parents and 4 kids)? Or 1.75x (2 parents+5 kids)? If you don't specifically call out anything with age, blood relation, marriage, etc then it would be OK right?

Or are zoning changes only forward acting such that it's back to the "unless you knock it down" you're grandfathered?
whoop1995
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I guess my previous statement was deleted but I will say it again - why is there no impact nor animosity on this board for residents that have 10-12 people in their home and have an overflowing driveway with unkept lawns etc?

There are plenty of those in town as well. If those are the same excuses as to wanting the students out don't these people "bring down" the property value as well? Why do they get a pass?
I collect ticket stubs! looking for Aggie vs tu stubs - 1926 and below, 1935-1937, 1939-1944, 1946-1948, 1950, 1953, 1956-1957, 1959, 1960, 1963-1966, 1969-1970, 1973, 1974, 1980, 1984, 1990, 2004, 2008 also looking for vs Villanova 1949
Stucco
How long do you want to ignore this user?
foo00 said:

I only read the parts of the bill that were posted here and have no clue on zoning laws. But if stucco was right and it "only" restricts those 5 ways of limitation.. if the City is concerned with 12 people in a 4 bedroom house as you say why not fix the zoning to be 1.5 persons per bedroom so 4bed=6 (ex 2 parents and 4 kids)? Or 1.75x (2 parents+5 kids)? If you don't specifically call out anything with age, blood relation, marriage, etc then it would be OK right?

Or are zoning changes only forward acting such that it's back to the "unless you knock it down" you're grandfathered?
They could - but this would impact established living situations, and that's rough on everyone involved.

The least impactful I can think of is "only replace like with like." Even if outside investment buys properties now, they won't become ag shacks or paved over. At least the original houses are still in place when the housing crisis is resolved.
Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
foo00 said:

I only read the parts of the bill that were posted here and have no clue on zoning laws. But if stucco was right and it "only" restricts those 5 ways of limitation.. if the City is concerned with 12 people in a 4 bedroom house as you say why not fix the zoning to be 1.5 persons per bedroom so 4bed=6 (ex 2 parents and 4 kids)? Or 1.75x (2 parents+5 kids)? If you don't specifically call out anything with age, blood relation, marriage, etc then it would be OK right?

Or are zoning changes only forward acting such that it's back to the "unless you knock it down" you're grandfathered?


You pose good questions. I'll pass along.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95
Chrundle the Great
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I didn't get around to responding to you last night, but check the IPMC ch 4. I think this is the code you're referencing and what the city has formally adopted with 13 amendments.

Draft a new amendment with blanket occupancies and that will conform with the new law. That will do what the poster in your reply is suggesting.

And as others have said before, even though I disagree with you here, I appreciate that you keep showing up and at least listening.
Chrundle the Great
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Every neighborhood in the city has them to my knowledge, some are just more enforceable than others.

Here's a link to college hills for example, you can see exactly how Mr. Culpepper set it up in the 30s and all the things that are against civil rights and fair housing acts still lingers because they are cumbersome to update.

https://opendoc.cstx.gov/WeblinkPublic/DocView.aspx?id=562777&dbid=0&repo=DOCUMENT-SERVER&cr=1
hopeandrealchange
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Bob Yancy said:

hopeandrealchange said:

Bob Yancy said:

Stucco said:

The current solution is not sustainable and will eventually fall either due to this bill or a lawsuit.

Any replacement solution is bad because it will frustrate a larger set of residents and the property rights folks. (no street parking, no more than 2 per bedroom, no more than 1 lease per property)

A repeal without replacement is also bad because it will accelerate the ag shacks and frustrate the neighborhood integrity folks.

This is a loser of an issue. The only real solution is to fix the housing crisis as fast as humanly possible. The best interim solution I see is an ordinance that you can only replace a structure with a similar structure.


Largely agree. It's a conundrum. Interrelated with all this is a constrained housing supply. We need to be building more housing, like yesterday. If supply remains constrained and this bill passes, it'll be really bad for existing neighborhoods.

Respectfully

Yancy '95

Do you believe it will be really bad for existing neighborhoods that have deed restrictions?
And why not let the free market do what it does best and get the city out of the way?
It is my opinion the student population should be as close to campus as possible and as dense as possible.


Given the higher occupancy the new law will allow, I believe outside investors will snatch up homes and make de facto Agshacks out of them. We'll be forced to enact new parking ordinances and those ordinances will impact and inconvenience everyone, permanent residents and students alike.

We have to contain occupancy somehow, because the sheer number of cars will render the streets unnavigable by public safety vehicles and routine traffic.

Respectfully

Yancy '95


If we are thinking about new ordinances that will inconvenience everyone, might I suggest we change our thinking and work toward ordnances that help more than they hurt. And I think it is a well known fact that our fine city already has more ordinances than can currently be enforced. I am one of the rental property owners that plays by the rules all the while I watch others being much more profitable while thumbing their nose at the city.
On another note many homes on the south side are to the point they need to be scraped. Property taxes have made these old homes to expensive to get enough rent to cover expenses. The land value is so high no one other than an investor can afford them. We have a catch 22 on our hands and the old school thoughts and actions of the city don't work.
Thank you for communicating with us here the way you do Mr. Yancey.
texagbeliever
How long do you want to ignore this user?
What is amazing to me is that this entire problem is a university caused problem. Texas A&M has both the money and the land to provide sufficent housing. They refuse to do so. Their power and influence likely sways most of the city decision makers far more than the residents. That is a problem.
Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
hopeandrealchange said:

Bob Yancy said:

hopeandrealchange said:

Bob Yancy said:

Stucco said:

The current solution is not sustainable and will eventually fall either due to this bill or a lawsuit.

Any replacement solution is bad because it will frustrate a larger set of residents and the property rights folks. (no street parking, no more than 2 per bedroom, no more than 1 lease per property)

A repeal without replacement is also bad because it will accelerate the ag shacks and frustrate the neighborhood integrity folks.

This is a loser of an issue. The only real solution is to fix the housing crisis as fast as humanly possible. The best interim solution I see is an ordinance that you can only replace a structure with a similar structure.


Largely agree. It's a conundrum. Interrelated with all this is a constrained housing supply. We need to be building more housing, like yesterday. If supply remains constrained and this bill passes, it'll be really bad for existing neighborhoods.

Respectfully

Yancy '95

Do you believe it will be really bad for existing neighborhoods that have deed restrictions?
And why not let the free market do what it does best and get the city out of the way?
It is my opinion the student population should be as close to campus as possible and as dense as possible.


Given the higher occupancy the new law will allow, I believe outside investors will snatch up homes and make de facto Agshacks out of them. We'll be forced to enact new parking ordinances and those ordinances will impact and inconvenience everyone, permanent residents and students alike.

We have to contain occupancy somehow, because the sheer number of cars will render the streets unnavigable by public safety vehicles and routine traffic.

Respectfully

Yancy '95


If we are thinking about new ordinances that will inconvenience everyone, might I suggest we change our thinking and work toward ordnances that help more than they hurt. And I think it is a well known fact that our fine city already has more ordinances than can currently be enforced. I am one of the rental property owners that plays by the rules all the while I watch others being much more profitable while thumbing their nose at the city.
On another note many homes on the south side are to the point they need to be scraped. Property taxes have made these old homes to expensive to get enough rent to cover expenses. The land value is so high no one other than an investor can afford them. We have a catch 22 on our hands and the old school thoughts and actions of the city don't work.
Thank you for communicating with us here the way you do Mr. Yancey.


Thanks for the feedback and the kind words.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
Tailgate88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Texas House passes Senate Bill 1567; restricting cities occupancy rules

https://www.kbtx.com/2025/05/29/texas-house-passes-senate-bill-1567-restricting-cities-occupancy-rules/
texagbeliever
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Tailgate88 said:

Texas House passes Senate Bill 1567; restricting cities occupancy rules

https://www.kbtx.com/2025/05/29/texas-house-passes-senate-bill-1567-restricting-cities-occupancy-rules/

I'm sure Abbott is just waiting for the kick back checks to clear before he signs this.
FlyRod
How long do you want to ignore this user?
GoSummer said:

I'm a rental property owner and a parent of college students and I support SB 1567. The current situation in College Station isn't workingstudents are being unfairly targeted and harassed. My tenants have had people taking pictures of their cars, which is completely inappropriate and unsettling.

Because of the city's ordinance, we have a bedroom empty (in an older home, not an "Ag Shack") It just doesn't make sense. College Station is singled out because other cities, like Austin, have already moved away from these kinds of discriminatory rules. If there are real issues like too many cars on the street or too much noise, then the city should create ordinances that directly address those thingsnot ones that unfairly limit who can live together.

Most college students do not even want to share a bedroom, so I think the concerns of 9-12 in a house are unfounded. The solution of building more high-rise apartments does not work for all college students. There will always be students who want to live in houses near campus. People who bought homes near campus shouldn't be surprised to have students as neighbors.


metroid_84
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Because that's not how university finances work, especially in this state.

State law limits the ability of public universities to building parking garages only with money from revenue collected from transportation, and limits the funding of student residences to revenue from student residences.

This is why almost every public university in Texas has too few dorms and too few parking garages. Not that there is an abundance of money to fund other buildings on campus anyway -- the regents regularly do not approve proposed buildings that they don't think are adequately funded.
texagbeliever
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Then dont grow if you cant support it with housing. Or sell some of the land for someone else to build the housing.
hopeandrealchange
How long do you want to ignore this user?
texagbeliever said:

Then dont grow if you cant support it with housing. Or sell some of the land for someone else to build the housing.

Or get the City out of the way and let the private sector do it and do it right.
techno-ag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
texagbeliever said:

Then dont grow if you cant support it with housing. Or sell some of the land for someone else to build the housing.

The Northgate high rises have gone a long way toward easing student housing. Can you just imagine the city without them right now.
The left cannot kill the Spirit of Charlie Kirk.
Chrundle the Great
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
texagbeliever said:

Then dont grow if you cant support it with housing. Or sell some of the land for someone else to build the housing.

They didn't sell the land, but this is exactly how park west and north point crossing exist with 100 year leases.
Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Honorable Governor Abbott,

Please veto SB 1567. This bill, if passed, would:

1. Facilitate Investor Buyout of Texas Homes. SB1567 incentivizes investors and accelerates the shift of homeownership away from families. This is in direct opposition to what you have said you want to promote: Texas residents owning their own homes.

2. Target specific municipalities. Why doesn't this bill apply to all municipalities, today and in the future? The bill's exclusion of most municipalities and its selective focus on a few (i.e. Bryan and College Station) highlights a strategic case of "bracketing" - and is designed to target specific areas and stakeholders. This raises concerns about its intent, fairness and constitutionality.

Thank you for your dedicated and continuous service to Texans and Texas, Governor.

Your attention to this matter and my previous communications to your office, is much appreciated, sir.

Respectfully

Bob Yancy '95
City Council, Place 5
College Station, Texas
Byancy@cstx.gov
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95
Chrundle the Great
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Why do you keep saying it unfairly applies to BCS and not others? I don't see that in the bill. Is it because the bill says it is only applicable to Home-rule municipalities? There's 393 home rule municipalities and I think they represent 95% or higher of all cities with 5,000+ people. I think it makes sense for this not to apply to smaller 2 horse towns, but I'd bet it applies to 90% of Texans.
hopeandrealchange
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Bob Yancy said:

Honorable Governor Abbott,

Please veto SB 1567. This bill, if passed, would:

1. Facilitate Investor Buyout of Texas Homes. SB1567 incentivizes investors and accelerates the shift of homeownership away from families. This is in direct opposition to what you have said you want to promote: Texas residents owning their own homes.

2. Target specific municipalities. Why doesn't this bill apply to all municipalities, today and in the future? The bill's exclusion of most municipalities and its selective focus on a few (i.e. Bryan and College Station) highlights a strategic case of "bracketing" - and is designed to target specific areas and stakeholders. This raises concerns about its intent, fairness and constitutionality.

Thank you for your dedicated and continuous service to Texans and Texas, Governor.

Your attention to this matter and my previous communications to your office, is much appreciated, sir.

Respectfully

Bob Yancy '95
City Council, Place 5
College Station, Texas
Byancy@cstx.gov


Mr.Yancy
I respectfully question your thinking on this matter.

It is my opinion that the state has gotten involved to reel in our out of control City government.
As I understand the current situation the bill has passed and is waiting for our Governors signature.
I hope our Governor has the God given sense to see your letter for what it is. More support for an out of control city council.
Bob Yancy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Chrundle the Great said:

Why do you keep saying it unfairly applies to BCS and not others? I don't see that in the bill. Is it because the bill says it is only applicable to Home-rule municipalities? There's 393 home rule municipalities and I think they represent 95% or higher of all cities with 5,000+ people. I think it makes sense for this not to apply to smaller 2 horse towns, but I'd bet it applies to 90% of Texans.


It applies to six cities, I think is the latest number. They keep amending it to apply to fewer cities.

Respectfully

Yancy '95
My opinions are mine and should not be construed as those of city council or staff. I welcome robust debate but will cease communication on any thread in which colleagues or staff are personally criticized. I must refrain from comment on posted agenda items until after meetings are concluded. Bob Yancy 95
Page 2 of 3
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.