ustxtxb_obs_1979_06_22_50_00020-00000_000.pdf

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Luncheon Specials Monday through Friday till 5:00 p.m. Shrimp Creole $2.80 Seafood Gumbo $3.15 Soup and Sandwich $1.80 Gazpacho and Sandwich $2.05 Serving sandwiches to seafood, from 11:30 until 11:30 every day of the week; open till midnight in the Metro Center, San Antonio, Texas ,,, …………………………… Support Texas’ Last Little Brewery Shiner is the only beer owned by Texans & brewed by Texans in Texas for Texans. SHINER BEER DIST. CO. 341-8304 MARSHALL MC HOME, SAN ANTONIO SALES Sunset. . . from page 9 sense that we were hanging on by our fingertips,” says Lalor. The slow -down The help sunset advocates needed came from an unlikely quarterthe speaker 3s office. Early in the going, Billy Clayton created a special 11-member committe on government organization to hear all sunset bills, which meant that the advisory commission’s general approach would receive an extended hearing and that its specific proposals would not get short shrift from a regular committee pressing to take up other business, as in the Senate. Clayton appointed Rep. Charles Evans as the committee chairman, and Evans, though he had been a friend of the lobby in past sessions, soon allied himself with the reformers on the committeesunset commissioners Lalor, Lee Jackson, and Bill Ceverha, plus Rep. Mary Jane Bode. Evans devised an ever-so-slow committee procedure: hearings in full committee, hearings in subcommittee, meetings to develop a set of general reform principles to be applied to all licensing agenciesand, once the subcommittees acted on bills, a bit of foot-dragging before calling them up for a vote in full committee. Evans says his firm adherence to this procedure caught some colleagues carrying the lobby’s bills by surprise. “I was a little more dogmatic than what they thought I was going to be,” he recalls. With the chairman from Hurst taking what the Fort Worth Star-Telegram dubbed “the Common Cause cure,” activists on the government organization panel took on the task the Senate As a whole had shirked, actually trying to evaluate agency performance and critically examining agency practices. In some bills, they reinstated sunset provisions senators had lopped off. In others, they inserted reform provisions the Sunset Advisory Commission had not considered, such as a clause barring discrimination in gubernatorial appointments to licensing boards, which have been predominantly white and male. But the committee came under intense pressure from the trade lobbies and their legislative allies. Members of the Turf Irrigators Association \(the lawn sprinkler aide Jack Gullahorn, dogged the heels of committee members to make sure the bill to create their new board would be treated right. Barbers and beauticians made common cause for a change and flocked to committee hearings to fend off the threat of a merger of their two licensing agencies. They prevailed, even getting sunset advocate Bode to vote against this eminently reasonable proposal. The State Bar, besides staging its customary show of strength at commit 20 JUNE 22, 1979