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4 dead as severe storms hit Houston, TX; Election Protection Program eases access to voting information; surge in solar installations eases energy costs for Missourians; IN makes a splash for Safe Boating Week.

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The Supreme Court rules funding for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is okay, election deniers hold key voting oversight positions in swing states, and North Carolina lawmakers vote to ban people from wearing masks in public.

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Texas Valero Decision a Sign of the Times, Say Community Organizers

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Thursday, December 22, 2011   

HOUSTON, Texas - Community groups and school advocates across Texas are declaring victory after a state decision to reject tax breaks for oil refineries. San Antonio-based Valero Energy had been arguing for years that equipment purchases qualified the company for pollution-reduction tax incentives.

If the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality had approved the rebates, already cash-starved school districts and local governments that rely on industry tax contributions would have had to pick up the tab - of about $135 million. Christopher Young, Harris County director of the Texas Organizing Project, believes there was one main reason the agency finally decided to turn Valero down.

"Public pressure. This was an issue that everybody understood what was happening: Big Oil was trying to just get more and more out of our children, and it just wasn't going to happen this time. Parents weren't going to let it happen."

He credits months of parent-organizing efforts, neighborhood meetings, online petitions, and hundreds who turned out to a November commission hearing. As a result, he says, thousands of Texas educators will now be able to keep their jobs.

Young thinks a changing public mood also might have played a role. Increasingly, he says, the perception is that big corporations are thriving at the expense of the poor and the middle-class.

"Decisions like this have been made for years without any public input, but people are waking up to how the economy is really working, and standing up and saying, 'No, we need a fairer economy; we need something that works for everybody.'"

The environmental agency is expected to deny ten similar requests for tax refunds from other oil companies. The commission explained that the equipment in question does not do enough to cut pollution in communities close to refineries. Also, companies had already been compelled by federal environmental rules to reduce pollution, so critics argued they would have installed the equipment with or without state tax incentives.



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