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Texas Law Requires Voters to Approve Police Funding Changes
Texas passed a law requiring counties with over 3.3 million people to let voters decide on police and sheriff budget cuts.
By Texas Legislature -- Apr 12, 2026
Overview
HB 192 is a Texas state law passed in 2025 that changes how large counties handle law enforcement budgets. The law applies to counties with more than 3.3 million people, which includes Harris County. Before this law, county leaders could cut police budgets or move money around without asking voters first.
Now counties must hold a public election before making big budget changes to sheriffs and constables. If a county cuts law enforcement funding or moves money from one police agency to another, voters must approve the change at an election. The county must order the election at least 30 days before it happens, giving people time to learn about the vote.
The law also protects law enforcement funding in other ways. Counties cannot take money from sheriff or constable offices and put it in their general fund. If sheriff or constable offices earn money through contracts with other agencies, that money stays with those offices. Counties cannot reduce their regular budget for these offices just because they earned contract money.
If a county breaks these rules, there are consequences. A person can file a complaint with the Texas governor's office. The state comptroller can investigate and decide if the county violated the law. If the law was broken, the county faces tax rate limits until it fixes the problem or gets voter approval.
HB 192 became effective on December 4, 2025. Our community now has a stronger voice in decisions about police funding through the voting process.
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About the source
The Texas Legislature is the state legislature of Texas, consisting of the House of Representatives with 150 members and the Senate with 31 members. Meeting in regular session every two years, the legislature passes state laws, sets the budget, and shapes policies affecting all 30 million Texans.
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