AUSTIN (Nexstar) -- Starting Monday, Texans can head to the polls to vote on 17 proposed amendments to the state constitution — decisions that could reshape tax policy, education funding, infrastructure investment, and more.
Since Texas adopted its current constitution in 1876, it has been amended 530 times. Historically, three-fourths of proposed amendments have been approved by voters.
Ten of the 17 amendments focus on tax policy. While Texas doesn’t currently have a capital gains tax, securities tax, or inheritance tax, several propositions aim to ban these taxes permanently, requiring future constitutional amendments to change course.
One far-reaching tax proposal is Proposition 13, which would raise the school district homestead exemption from $100,000 to $140,000, potentially lowe