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Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: AC-0001

TEXAGJuly 18, 2023No. AC-0001

Case Details

Status
Published
Procedural Posture
Attorney General Opinion (advisory, non-binding interpretation)

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

Texas Attorney General opinion regarding conflict of interest: a state employee serving on Hutto City Council must decline per-meeting salary payments to comply with Texas Constitution Article XVI, Section 40(b).

Excerpt

A state employee serving as a council member on the Hutto City Council must decline the per-meeting salary payment in subsection 3.04(b) of the city's charter in order to comply with article XVI, subsection 40(b) of the Texas Constitution.

Similar Rulings

Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: AC-0001
TEXAGJul 2023

A state employee serving as a council member on the Hutto City Council must decline the per-meeting salary payment in subsection 3.04(b) of the city's charter in order to comply with article XVI, subsection 40(b) of the Texas Constitution.

Unresolvable
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0505
TEXAGJan 2026

Our nation was founded on the radical notion that all are created equal. Though we have often failed to live up to that promise, it remains as a constitutional lodestar—both in the U.S. and Texas Constitutions. The race-and sex-based, public sector preferences discussed in this opinion cannot survive strict scrutiny and are therefore unconstitutional. Furthermore, a large body of DEI practices in the private sector triggers liability under Title VII, the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act, and Section 1981 in addition to state and federal securities law.

Mixed Result
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0451
TEXAGNov 2023
Dismissed
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: JS-0003
TEXAGJun 2023

A race-based student disciplinary decision by an educator or school district violates the Texas Equal Rights Amendment of the Texas Constitution unless it is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental interest. A court would likely conclude that avoiding a disparate impact cannot serve as a compelling governmental interest that justifies making a race-based student disciplinary decision.

Unresolvable
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: JS-0003
TEXAGJun 2023

A race-based student disciplinary decision by an educator or school district violates the Texas Equal Rights Amendment of the Texas Constitution unless it is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental interest. A court would likely conclude that avoiding a disparate impact cannot serve as a compelling governmental interest that justifies making a race-based student disciplinary decision.

Unresolvable

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