January 23, 2026
Happy holidays! The ATPE Governmental Relations team recaps this week’s education news, legislative updates, and regulatory developments. The ATPE state office will be closed from Dec. 20-31, 2021.
ELECTIONS: The deadline for candidates to file for a place on a primary election ballot in Texas was Monday, Dec. 13. It may still take some time to develop a full picture of who is running, as counties and state party chairs have until Dec. 21 to report their filing data. Here are some important dates for the
2022 primary election:
ATPE Executive Director Shannon Holmes said in a statement Wednesday the Commissioners Court should not withhold these emergency relief funds from districts over unrelated, ongoing discussions about school libraries. “Like the state-level elected officials who started this round of the culture wars, the Williamson County commissioners have succumbed to temptation, seizing an opportunity to make headlines in advance of the 2022 elections,” said Holmes, adding, “Their actions do not serve the students or voters of Williamson County.” Read more in this this reporting from the Austin American-Statesman.
SBEC: The State Board for Educator Certification (SBEC) met last Friday to close out the year with an extensive agenda, which included several rulemaking actions that would implement bills passed during the 2021 legislative sessions. ATPE Lobbyist Andrea Chevalier testified before SBEC to support changes to the board’s contract abandonment rules and share feedback on the EdTPA pilot. Read more about the Dec. 10 meeting and ATPE’s testimony in this blog post by Chevalier.
CONGRESS: ATPE’s federal contract lobbyist David Pore wrote a comprehensive update this week on important legislation in Congress and the partisanship that is getting in the way of progress. Though Congress was able to work together recently to pass a large infrastructure bill and avoid a government shutdown, Biden’s education-friendly but extremely partisan “Build Back Better” plan has passed the House but faces an uphill battle in the Senate. Partisanship has affected the prospects of passing legislation to repeal and replace the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) in Social Security law, as well. Read more in this blog post by Pore. ATPE members can also write to their lawmakers about pending legislation with our quick and easy tools on Advocacy Central (ATPE member login required).