If you were a legislator, how would you have voted on this bill?
Every August, Texas has a tax free weekend. School supplies and school clothes can be purchased for a few days without the addition of Texas 6 1/4 % sales tax which, around Houston, is really 8 1/4% because of the additional penny for the City of Houston and the additional penny for METRO.What about college textbooks? Have you priced them lately? Ours isnt too bad (free, right?), but some of my students pay nearly $300 for some science and engineering books.Representative Terry Canales (D-Edinburg) wants to cut college students in on the action before each regular semester.Go to the Texas Legislatures website, https://capitol.texas.gov/Home.aspx (Links to an external site.) and look up House Bill 21. Hint: Make sure you use the little pull-down menu to select the current legislative session (86R-2019 thats the 86th Regular session of the Texas Legislature) and type HB21 in the search window.What do you think? Write a 2 5 page essay explaining this bill and the problem its trying to solve. Explain the advantages and disadvantages with this approach. What happened to the bill? If you were a legislator, how would you have voted on this bill?Submit in Word. Cite your sources.ResourcesFor anything to do with the Texas Legislature, start with the Texas Legislatures website: http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/Heres Rep. Canales website: http://www.terrycanales.com/CBS News writes that textbook costs are rising faster then inflation: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/whats-behind-the-soaring-cost-of-college-textbooks/It probably doesnt help that 80% of the textbook industry is controlled by five companies: https://www.businessinsider.com/why-college-textbooks-expensive-textbook-publishing-2018-12 Heres something from the Daily Texan the student newspaper at UT Austin: https://thedailytexan.com/2019/02/05/college-students-spend-about-500-a-year-on-textbooks-one-texas-lawmaker-wants-to-throw
