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Legislator Contacts

Make Your Voice Heard

The Texas Legislature decides many issues that affect public education, including funding, curriculum, graduation requirements, standardized testing, accountability, and much, much more. Mesquite ISD hopes you will stay informed about proposed legislation that will affect your children as well as all children attending public school in Texas.

Our legislators must hear your opinions and concerns as they make these critical decisions. Please take time to contact them personally on any issues affecting public education or Mesquite ISD specifically. If you have questions about pending legislation, school funding, or any other topics, you are welcome to contact Mesquite ISD by email or by calling the main number at 972-288-6411. 

Find your senator or representative

 

Mesquite ISD's 2023 Legislative Priorities

Support increases to the teacher’s minimum salary schedule to recruit and retain teachers, and loosen restrictions on allowable hours to work in a school district for certain retirees.

  • Increases to the minimum salary schedule will signal that the state is more serious about how teachers are paid for their important work. 
  • We advocate loosening the restriction, so that more retirees can return to work. 

Support funding based on student enrollment. 

  • To facilitate efficient and effective budgeting, bond planning, and programmatic investment, the state must distribute funding based on a combination of attendance and enrollment, not just attendance.

Support efforts to reform the requirements in HB 4545 to better reflect the needs of students and the constraints of the school day.

  • Requiring 30 hours per subject with the potential to require upwards of 90 hours per student, is not always the best solution to help students in their academic growth. School districts, along with the student’s family, must have better discretion to develop an intervention path.

Oppose the transfer of public funds to private entities through vouchers or voucher schemes.

  • Vouchers would transfer public tax money to private for-profit and nonprofit religious entities with much less accountability than public schools.

Oppose restrictions to local taxing entities related to bond elections including the requirement of a supermajority to pass a bond and the requirement to inaccurately state “THIS IS A PROPERTY TAX INCREASE” on ballots. 

  • Efforts to curtail local bond issues have been introduced in several legislative sessions. Currently, ballots must indicate the words, “THIS IS A PROPERTY TAX INCREASE” in block letters. Since not all bond issues indicate a property tax increase, these words are often misleading.