Tuesday, April 23, 2024

TEXAS' CROOKED AG CALLS THIS HANDOUT AN 'ILLEGAL AND ILLEGITIMATE GOVERNMENT OVERREACH'

Texas Supreme Court blocks program that gives some families $500 monthly after Judge Hidalgo says it will move forward

An appeals court denied an emergency order filed by the state of Texas to block the county's Uplift Harris guaranteed income program from going into effect.
 
 
By Victor Jacobo, Chloe Alexander, Jaime E. Galvan and Lea Wilson
 
KHOU
Apr 23, 2024
 
 
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo 
 

HARRIS COUNTY, Texas — The Texas Supreme Court pressed pause Tuesday afternoon on Harris County's controversial guaranteed income plan shortly after Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said the program would move forward. The first checks were supposed to go out Wednesday.

The income program, Uplift Harris, is designed to give families living in poverty $500 a month for 18 months. 

All the changes come after an appeals court denied Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s attempt to halt the program Monday.

At Monday’s Commissioner's Court meeting, Hidalgo said the county will be "staying the course" with the program. She said the first payment is “out the door” and of the more than 1,900 people in the program, about 1,600 will receive the checks because they have been verified. About 300 people still need to send the county more documentation to receive their checks.

Paxton sued earlier this month, calling the county's plan to provide monthly payments with no restrictions to hundreds of families “unconstitutional" and an abuse of public funds. He said taxpayer money cannot be "redistributed with no accountability or reasonable expectation of a general benefit."

"Allowing $20 million in federal funds to be given away with minimal restrictions or proper auditing is bad policy," said Harris County Precinct 3 Commissioner Tom Ramsey. "There are better ways to help more people in Harris County than giving 2,000 people $500 a month for 18 months with no accountability for the expenditures."

Supporters argued that the program provides social and economic benefits to participating families and the broader community.

One of the recipients expecting the money is Robert Holley.

"It's going to help me tremendously with housing, groceries, bills," Holley said.

Holley sat in the courtroom Monday when the judge blocked the temporary injunction. He hoped everything would play out the way it was designed. 

The state had filed a notice of appeal for this ruling to the First or 14th Court of Appeals in Houston. That has county commissioners skeptical about starting the program. They said they are worried about sending out payments only for the state to ask for the money back if the Supreme Court blocks the program.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Free Money! Get your Free Money!

Thank goodness someone stopped this experiment in SOCIALISM! (USA)