Southwest Journalist, June 1, 2011

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INSIDE: How to stay smart with savory summer sweets, Page 6 Wednesday, June 1, 2011 SWJournalist.com

Southwest Journalist The University of Texas at Austin

Dow Jones News Fund Center for Editing Excellence

TEXAS LEGISLATURE

Education funding fuels Round 2 Medicaid, redistricting also on special agenda CHRIS TOMLINSON The Associated Press

The Texas Legislature convened for a special session Tuesday and has 30 days to pass bills that would make drastic cuts to public-school funding during the next two years. Legislators failed to agree on a bill before the regular session ended.

Gov. Rick Perry recalled the Legislature for a special session as soon as the regular session adjourned Monday night because a lawmaker used a filibuster to kill a bill that would have let the state pay public schools $4 billion less than under law. Without the bill, the state could not distribute about $37 billion to public schools. “This special session is going to be about putting the finishing touches on what we already see as a truly historic legislative session,” Perry said Tuesday at a joint press conference with Speak-

er of the House Joe Straus and Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst. The governor also wants lawmakers to pass proposed changes to Medicaid, the government’s health-insurance program for the poor. The bill would save money by expanding privatization of Medicaid services in Texas and creating incentives to improve the quality of care, Republicans said. On Tuesday night, Perry added congressional redistricting to the special

MORE COVERAGE, PAGE 5 ✔✔The Legislature ended its regular session with a variety of new environmental rules ✔✔Perry vetoed a bill requiring more Internet retailers to collect sale tax ✔✔Map proposed by Republican lawmakers would add districts in Austin and San Antonio areas

Please see FUNDS, Page 2

HOUSING MARKET

Texas bubble set to burst

Price declines moving to Dallas, other cities previously spared ALEX VEIGA Associated Press

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WASHINGTON — Even cities that weathered the housing market crash with relatively little damage are suffering. Severe price declines have spread to Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis and Cleveland, which had mostly withstood the bust in housing since2006, 2006. The damage has nowthan d gone well beyond cities hit The hardest by unemploymentmetro and foreclosures, such asperce updat Phoenix and Las Vegas. “We didn’t enjoy the highsdata i and the lows like other cities,” For said Kay Weeks, a real estateprices agent with Ebby Halliday insome Dallas, where prices fell near-hoods ly 1 percent in March and areincom expected to keep falling. “But Pric when we get bad news na-falling tionally, people take noticesures and cut back on spendingpanie force, and buying homes.” Home prices in big metrorules areas have sunk to their low-it ma est since 2002, the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller 20-city monthly index showed Tuesday. Since the bubble burst in

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Mavericks melt under Heat’s second-half attack

Please see HOUSES, Page 2

Home prices fall

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The Standard & Poor’s/CaseShiller home 20-city housing index fell 0.8 percent in March. Composite 20-city index

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Non-seasonally adjusted* Jan. 2000=100

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Lynne Sladky / Associated Press

Dallas Mavericks’ Dirk Nowitzki (41) takes a break during Game 1 of the NBA Finals basketball game against the Miami Heat on Tuesday night in Miami.

MORE ONLINE: For complete recap and analysis of the Mavericks’ Game 1 loss, visit SWJournalist.com

MISSOURI RIVER FLOOD

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M AM J J A S O N D J F M 2010 2011 *Standard & Poor’s is temporarily using non-seasonally adjusted figures because the surge in foreclosures appears to have magnified the seasonal factors in S&P’s computer model, making them less reliable.

SOURCE: Standard & Poor’s

U.S. CONGRESS

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* u b a s m AP

House Emergency levees built to protect threatened cities defeats Residents fortify WHERE IS THE MISSOURI RIVER? homes, evacuate debt-limit increase

Editor’s Note: It is mandatory to include all sources that accompany this graphic when repurposing or editing it for publication

CHET BROKAW Associated Press

Republican voted down own proposal in theatrical gambit Associated Press

WASHINGTON — House Republicans defeated their own proposal for a $2.4 trillion increase in the nation’s debt limit Tuesday, a political gambit designed to reinforce a demand for spending cuts to accompany any increase in government borrowing. The vote was lopsided, with just 97 in favor of the measure and 318 against. House Democrats accused the GOP of political demagoguery, while the Obama administration maneuvered to avoid taking sides — or giving offense to Republicans. The debate set a standard of sorts for public theater, particularly at a time when private negotiations contin-

Please see DEBT, Page 2 SWJP1-2_612011.indd 2

PIERRE, S.D. — Crews raced approaching floodwaters Tuesday to complete emergency levees aimed at protecting South Dakota’s capital city and two other towns as the swollen Missouri River rolled downstream from the Northern Plains. Meanwhile, the mayor of Minot, N.D., ordered a quarter of the city’s residents to evacuate areas along the flooding Souris River. Residents of the upscale community of Dakota Dunes in southeastern South Dakota, below the final dam on the river, have been told to move their possessions to higher ground and be ready to leave their homes by Thursday, a day before releases from the dams are set to increase again. Several thousand people in Pierre, the state capital, and neighboring Fort Pierre have been working day and night since late last week to lay sandbags around their homes and move to safety. Those forced to leave their homes may not be able to return for two months or more.

SOURCE: cia.gov

Tim Hynds / Sioux City Journal

No evacuation orders had been issued Tuesday in South Dakota, but many people in the three cities had already moved to safer places. “We’re going to fight this flood with every fiber of our beings, and we’ll do everything we can to minimize its effects,” Gov. Dennis Daugaard said. In Minot, N.D., Mayor Curt Zimbelman said the evacuation order affects about 10,000 residents who live along a 4-mile stretch of the Souris, which has risen with rain, snowmelt and discharges from Lake Darling. Zimbelman said residents are expected be out of their homes by tonight, in

SEE MORE ONLINE ✔✔Visit SWJournalist.com to view a photo gallery part to give construction crews room to raise and reinforce earthen dikes in the area. The Souris is part of a different river system than the Missouri. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is increasing releases from the six dams on the Missouri River to drain water from record rains of up to 8 inches that fell in eastern Montana and Wyoming and western North Dakota and South Dakota in the past two weeks.

Volunteer Bernie Ketelsen hands a sandbag to homeowner Julie Haindfield while working Tuesday to protect her home from rising Missouri River floodwaters. About 100 volunteers, including numerous high school students, worked to build a sandbag levee around the home, which is located along the Missouri River in rural Sloan, Iowa. Heavy runoff from melting snow in the northern Rocky Mountains is expected to add to the problem soon. Flooding in Montana has damaged at least 200 homes on the Crow Indian Reservation and many more homes and businesses in other areas. In the three South Dakota cities, streets were busy with National Guard trucks, pickups carrying sandbags and

large trucks carrying clay to build the levees. Many homes had already been surrounded with walls of sandbags that were up to 6 feet high. The governor said no deaths had been reported from flooding, and for now, the concern is about saving property. “In the end, we must remember these things are just things,” Daugaard said.

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