Texas 2019 - 86th Regular

Texas House Bill HR787 Latest Draft

Bill / Enrolled Version Filed 03/22/2019

                            H.R. No. 787


 R E S O L U T I O N
 WHEREAS, The Lone Star State lost an admired lawmaker with
 the passing of James Arthur Turman, former speaker of the Texas
 House of Representatives, on February 13, 2019, at the age of 91;
 and
 WHEREAS, Jimmy Turman was born in Fannin County to James
 Wesley Turman and Clive Scarborough Turman on November 29, 1927,
 and later worked his way through East Texas State Teachers College,
 earning bachelor's and master's degrees; he began his career in
 education when he was only 19 and worked as a teacher and principal
 in Wolfe City before being hired as a junior high school principal
 in Paris; after serving with the U.S. Navy during the Korean War, he
 settled in Gober; and
 WHEREAS, This dedicated public servant won election to the
 first of four terms in the Texas House of Representatives in 1954;
 he drew on his experience as a teacher and school administrator
 while serving on the Education Committee, which he chaired during
 the 55th Legislature, and the School Districts Committee; he also
 chaired the Municipal and Private Corporations Committee and spent
 two sessions on the Banks and Banking Committee; during his time as
 a legislator, he completed his doctoral degree in educational
 administration and psychology at The University of Texas at Austin,
 and when he was elected as speaker of the 57th Texas Legislature in
 1961, he became the first holder of a doctorate to serve as the
 chamber's presiding officer; and
 WHEREAS, Under the leadership of Speaker Turman, the house
 chamber was air-conditioned, and he arranged for the allocation of
 private offices in the Capitol to many rank-and-file members for
 the first time; he served as chair of the Legislative Audit
 Committee, established the State Employees Classification System,
 and promoted passage of a bill supporting the University of
 Houston; committed to fair remuneration for educators, he secured a
 teacher pay raise, and he successfully advocated for better wages
 and more reasonable hours for firefighters as well; in addition,
 the state's first general sales tax was enacted during his
 speakership after he forged an agreement with Governor Price Daniel
 that enabled the bill to become law; his involvement in state
 politics also included an unsuccessful bid for the office of
 lieutenant governor in 1962; and
 WHEREAS, Speaker Turman began working as an assistant to the
 president and as an assistant professor at Texas Woman's University
 in 1957, and during his tenure, he established the TWU Foundation
 and served as its first director; he went on to join the U.S. Office
 of Education and rose to become associate commissioner, the highest
 civil service position in the agency; concurrently, he served on
 the Education Commission of the States, and President Lyndon
 B. Johnson appointed him to the J. William Fulbright Foreign
 Scholarship Board; he served in subsequent administrations as
 director of the President's National Advisory Council on Extension
 and Continuing Education and as a consultant to the President's
 Council on Physical Fitness; moreover, he shared his expertise as a
 member of presidential task forces on public school desegregation;
 and
 WHEREAS, During his time in the nation's capital, Speaker
 Turman founded two national educational management consulting
 corporations; he later worked as chief of staff for Texas congress
 member Jim Mattox and as a liaison to the House Budget Committee; in
 his next role, as regional director of refugee resettlement in
 Dallas for the Department of Health and Human Services, he helped
 immigrants from Vietnam and Cambodia make new homes in the
 U.S. following the fall of Saigon; in 1986, he retired from the
 civil service and joined the Office of the State Comptroller as a
 senior research analyst; he organized Chaparral Mining Corporation
 four years later and held the offices of board chair, president, and
 CEO with the company; and
 WHEREAS, During retirement, Speaker Turman traveled North
 America in an RV with his beloved wife and best friend, Joanie
 Turman, visiting all 49 state capitols across the continental U.S.;
 when not on the road, the couple enjoyed residing near their friend
 Willie Nelson in the Village of Briarcliff; Speaker Turman was the
 father of one son, James A. Turman Jr., who preceded him in death;
 and
 WHEREAS, In recognition of this admired Texan's many
 achievements, the Texas Legislature unanimously designated
 Farm-to-Market Road 68 in Fannin County as Speaker Jimmy Turman
 Road in 2005, and he was honored as a Distinguished Alumnus of Texas
 A&M University-Commerce in 2009; and
 WHEREAS, Through his tremendous dedication to the Lone Star
 State and to public education, Jimmy Turman made a positive
 difference in the lives of countless people, and his contributions
 will be remembered and admired for years to come; now, therefore, be
 it
 RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 86th Texas
 Legislature hereby pay tribute to the memory of the Honorable James
 Arthur Turman and extend sincere condolences to his loved ones: to
 his wife, Joanie Turman; to his sister, Mary Ann Reagan; to his
 former brother-in-law, Dr. Billy R. Reagan; and to all who mourn
 his passing; and, be it further
 RESOLVED, That an official copy of this resolution be
 prepared for his family and that when the Texas House of
 Representatives adjourns this day, it do so in memory of Speaker
 Turman.
 Howard
 ______________________________
 Speaker of the House
 I certify that H.R. No. 787 was unanimously adopted by a
 rising vote of the House on March 21, 2019.
 ______________________________
 Chief Clerk of the House