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Ben Bumgarner
Texas House District 63
Status

Incumbent

Party

Republican

Occupation

Manufacturing

Address

5150 Kensington Court, Flower Mound, TX, 75022

Additional Information

First elected to the Texas House in 2022. Current term expires January 2025.

Endorsed in the 2024 Republican primary election by Gov. Greg Abbott. Abbott is endorsing incumbents who supported his voucher bill, HB 1, in the fourth special session of the 88th Legislature.

Endorsed in the 2024 Republican primary election by The Dallas Morning News editorial board.


  • House Vote #1 - 2023: PRIVATE SCHOOL VOUCHERS

    Voted against a budget amendment to prohibit state funds from being spent on private school vouchers. ATPE supported the amendment.

    House Floor Amendment 45 by Rep. Abel Herrero (D–Robstown) to House Bill 1 by Rep. Greg Bonnen (R–Friendswood), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. During its April 6, 2023, debate on the budget bill, the House passed this ATPE-supported amendment banning use of state funds for a private school voucher. (Record vote #111. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The amendment passed but was later stripped out of the final budget bill.

  • House Vote #2 - 2023: CURRICULUM

    Voted for a bill that incentivized school districts to require educators to teach from prepackaged statewide curriculum designed by the Texas Education Agency.

    House Bill 1605 by Rep. Brad Buckley (R–Salado), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The bill incentivizes school districts to require certain educators to teach from prepackaged statewide curriculum designed by the Texas Education Agency. Read more about the bill here. On May 3, 2023, the House voted to pass the bill on third reading. (Record vote #914. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The Legislature ultimately passed a Senate version of the bill.

  • House Vote #3 - 2023: PRIVATE SCHOOL VOUCHERS

    Voted for a motion to allow the House Public Education Committee to meet for the purpose of voting on a new version of a private school voucher bill that had not been publicly vetted. The House refused to grant permission for the meeting.

    This vote taken May 10, 2023, prevented the House Public Education Committee from holding a previously unscheduled meeting to rush through a last-minute vote on a controversial voucher bill that had not been publicly vetted. Committee Chairman Brad Buckley (R–Salado) requested permission for his committee to meet while the full House was still in a floor session. Rep. Ernest Bailes (R–Shepherd) objected to the motion and called for a record vote. The vote denying permission for the committee to meet was a pivotal point in stopping the push for vouchers during the regular session. Read more about the vote here. (House Record vote #1464. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.)

  • House Vote #4 - 2023: SCHOOL FUNDING

    Voted for a bill to change funding formulas for school districts and the minimum salary schedule.

    House Bill 100 by Rep. Ken King (R–Canadian), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The bill intended to make funding formulas enrollment-based rather than attendance-based. It also called for condensing the minimum salary schedule to a three-tiered schedule covering 10 years, which ATPE opposed. On April 27, 2023, the House voted to pass the bill on third reading. (Record vote #595. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The Senate later added a private school voucher provision to the bill, which resulted in HB 100’s failure to pass.

  • House Vote #5 - 2023: SCHOOL FUNDING

    Voted against an amendment to raise the Basic Allotment to $6,500. ATPE supported the amendment.

    House Floor Amendment 7 by Rep. Trey Martinez-Fischer (D–San Antonio) to House Bill 100 by Rep. Ken King (R–Canadian), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The amendment would have increased the Basic Allotment from $6,250 to $6,500. On April 26, 2023, the House voted to reject the Martinez-Fischer amendment. (Record vote #564. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.)

  • House Vote #6 - 2023: TEACHER PIPELINE

    Was absent for the vote on an omnibus bill that proposed several regulatory changes and a one-time stipend of $2,000 for teachers. After the vote was taken, the representative entered formal comments in the House Journal indicating that he would have voted for the bill. ATPE opposed the bill as insufficient in terms of providing a meaningful increase in educator compensation or enhancement of teachers' rights.

    Senate Bill 9 by Sen. Brandon Creighton (R–Conroe), sponsored in the House by Rep. Harold Dutton (D–Houston), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. Marketed as a “Teacher Bill of Rights,” SB 9 proposed a one-time stipend of $2,000 for teachers and several regulatory changes affecting the education profession. Read more about the bill and ATPE’s opposition to it here. On May 23, 2023, the House voted to pass the bill on second reading. (Record vote #2021. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The bill ultimately died in the House when it was withdrawn from consideration on third reading.

  • House Vote #7 - 2023: TEACHER RECRUITMENT/RETENTION

    Voted for a bill to address teacher recruitment and retention through increased funding for incentive pay and other initiatives.

    House Bill 11 by Rep. Harold Dutton (D–Houston), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. This bill aimed to improve teacher recruitment and retention through increased funding for incentive pay and other initiatives. Read more about the bill and ATPE’s position on it here. On April 26, 2023, the House voted to pass the bill on second reading. (Record vote #563. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The bill later died in the Senate.

  • House Vote #8 - 2023: SCHOOL SAFETY

    Voted for an omnibus school safety bill that provides funding to help schools comply with safety requirements. ATPE supported the bill.

    House Bill 3 by Rep. Dustin Burrows (R–Lubbock), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. This omnibus school safety bill provides $1.3 billion in school safety funding, calls for mental health training for school district employees, requires an armed officer at every campus, and allows the state to appoint a conservator to help school districts achieve compliance. The bill includes ATPE-recommended language limiting the scope of the conservator’s authority. On May 28, 2023, the House adopted the Conference Committee Report on HB 3, approving final passage of the bill. (Record vote #2229. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.)

  • House Vote #9 - 2023: SCHOOL COUNSELORS

    Voted for a bill that removed the requirement for school counselors to have prior experience as a classroom teacher. ATPE opposed the bill.

    Senate Bill 798 by Sen. Mayes Middleton (R–Galveston), sponsored in the House by Rep. Brad Buckley (R–Salado), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The bill removed the requirement for school counselors to have prior experience as a classroom teacher. On May 16, 2023, the House voted to pass the bill on second reading. (Record vote #1750. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The bill was finally passed the next day and ultimately became law.

  • House Vote #10 - 2023: SCHOOL CHAPLAINS

    Voted for a bill that allows school districts to employ paid or volunteer chaplains for student counseling and support and requires school boards to adopt a policy on whether to use chaplains. ATPE opposes allowing chaplains not certified as school counselors to provide counseling services to students.

    Senate Bill 763 by Mayes Middleton (R–Galveston), sponsored in the House by Rep. Cole Hefner (R–Mount Pleasant), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The bill allows school districts to employ paid or volunteer chaplains to support students without requiring them to be certified or trained as school counselors. SB 763 also requires each school board to vote on whether to adopt a policy authorizing the district’s use of chaplains. On May 8, 2023, the House voted to pass its version of the bill on second reading. (Record vote #1280. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The Legislature ultimately passed a compromise version of the bill.

  • House Vote #11 - 2023: RETIREMENT

    Voted for a bill that provided a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) and 13th check for retired educators. ATPE supported the bill.

    Senate Bill 10 by Sen. Joan Huffman (R–Houston), sponsored in the House by Rep. Greg Bonnen (R–Friendswood), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The bill provides a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) and 13th check for retired educators. On May 28, 2023, the House voted to adopt the conference committee report on SB 10, approving final passage of the bill. (Record vote #2210. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.)

  • House Vote #12 - 2023: ACCELERATED INSTRUCTION

    Voted for a bill that modified the requirements for accelerated instruction to make them less burdensome for teachers and schools. ATPE supported the bill.

    House Bill 1416 by Rep. Keith Bell (R–Forney), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The bill was a clean-up for 2021’s House Bill 4545 (87-R), which required accelerated instruction for students who failed a STAAR exam. Based on feedback from teachers and school districts, HB 1416 reduced the hours of accelerated instruction required per subject and raised the teacher-student ratio to make it more manageable. On May 19, 2023, the House voted to concur in the Senate amendments to HB 1416, approving final passage of the bill. (Record vote #1873. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.)

  • House Vote #13 - 2023: LIBRARY BOOKS

    Voted for a bill establishing a rating system for and restricting certain content in school library materials.

    House Bill 900 by Rep. Jared Patterson (R–Frisco), 88th Legislature, Regular Session. The bill requires book vendors to rate books based on sexual content and the development of additional state standards. The bill also prohibits certain materials from public school libraries and requires parental notification and consent for student access to certain other library materials. Read ATPE’s written testimony on the bill here. On April 19, 2023, the House voted to pass HB 900 on second reading. (Record Vote #334. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.) The bill was ultimately approved by both the House and Senate and became law.

  • House Vote #14 - 2023: PRIVATE SCHOOL VOUCHERS

    Voted against the Raney amendment that stripped voucher language from an omnibus education bill. ATPE supported the amendment, which stopped the last attempt to pass vouchers through the Texas Legislature in 2023.

    House Floor Amendment 2 by Rep. John Raney (R–Bryan) to House Bill 1 by Rep. Brad Buckley (R–Salado), 88th Legislature, fourth called Special Session. The amendment removed voucher provisions from an omnibus education bill, effectively stopping the last attempt to pass vouchers during the 2023 legislative sessions. Read more about the amendment here. On Nov. 17, 2023, the House voted to adopt the Raney amendment. (Record vote #56. View an official record of the vote in the House journal.)

Candidate Survey Responses


HAS NOT RESPONDED TO THE 2024 ATPE CANDIDATE SURVEY.

 

RESPONSES TO THE 2022 ATPE CANDIDATE SURVEY:

1. If elected, what will be your top priorities for public education?


Ending recapture. Finding a way to fund mandates that our districts were left holding the bag for in the past. Making sure our educators are properly taken care of.

2. What are your recommendations for funding public education, including securing the necessary revenue to sustain the improvements made by House Bill 3 in 2019? Do you believe additional funding is needed?

We have the 9th largest economy in the world. We should have no problem funding public education. The Texas constitution says that we will provide a free education to the masses. Additional funding is definitely going to be needed if we expect our educators to go to specialized training courses. We can spread the cost amongst several categories and not just leave it on the backs of our property owners.

3. How would you address the challenge of rising health care costs facing Texas educators and ensure that active and retired educators have access to affordable health care?

Rising healthcare costs are affecting everyone in all industry. The industry was fine until the federal government got involved. I believe that the market should be free and that it’ll regulate itself and lower costs will come from true competition in the market.

4. Do you believe the Teacher Retirement System (TRS) should be maintained as a traditional defined benefit pension plan for all future, current, and retired educators, or do you support converting TRS to a defined contribution plan that is more like a 401(k) plan, in which future benefits are not guaranteed?

I need to research more on this issue. I don’t want to do anything to harm our public educators as they spend their lives educating our future leaders and sacrifice much. Whatever we need to do to keep good educators in place then that’s what I am for.

5. What do you feel is the proper role of standardized testing in the Texas public education system? For instance, should student test scores be used for teacher pay, school accountability ratings, evaluating teachers, measuring student progress, etc.?

Student tests scores should Definitely be matrixed into an accountability rating. It’s the only way taxpayers can see how well their tax dollars are being spent and also see the ROI on public education. Evaluating teachers? Maybe, But not as the end all be all. Teachers pay? No. Measuring students progress: to an extent, again not the end all be All. The testing is getting too intense and we are losing sight of the entire reason we test to begin with. To Measure and gauge our children’s learning curve. Sure, there will be bad test takers, but there are also kids that won’t be going to college. That’s okay! It’s the schools jobs to make sure our children are getting a basic understanding of the material they are learning to get them through life.

6. Would you vote to create any type of voucher, tax credit, scholarship, education savings account, or other program aimed at paying for students, including any subpopulation of students, to attend non-public K-12 schools, such as private or home schools?

Probably not. The more I research the issue the more I realize that these are funds taken away from our public schools.

7. State law allows educators and other public employees to voluntarily choose to join professional associations such as ATPE and have membership dues deducted from their paychecks at no cost to taxpayers. Do you support or oppose letting all public employees continue to exercise this right?

If people are consenting to this and aren’t being told to do so then I don’t see a problem with it. However people want to spend or donate their money is for them to decide. Not me.

8. What role, if any, should charter schools have in the public education system, and do you feel the number of charter schools operating in Texas should be reduced or expanded?

Charter Schools should be classified in the same box as private schools. They don’t follow the same guidelines as public schools. They don’t have the same curriculum and do not get held to the same standard. They are not all inclusive. They are private.

9. How much freedom should school districts have to make decisions during disease outbreaks, such as requiring face coverings and immunizations or transitioning to remote instruction?

Every district is different. This is a very large state. What’s happening in Houston may not be happening in Dallas. Districts should make decisions for the mass safety of the children and schools. However- I am not in favor of requiring a flu shot to go to school. As a parent I was not a fan of remote learning. I believe our kids lost valuable social skills this last year.

10. What do you believe is the proper role of virtual education within the public education system? Do you believe full-time virtual education should be expanded, and if so, under what circumstances?

I might be in the minority, but I think virtual education should be saved for upperclassmen. Middle school and elementary school children need to interact. They need to learn social skills. Older children have more independence and can do these things on their own, but not your younger kids. Younger kids do not have the stamina or the independent motivation to stay focused on their own.

11. What do you feel should be the state’s role (versus the role of school districts or individual educators) in decisions about public school curriculum and instructional materials?

I believe our educators should have first and last say on the curriculum. I’m a firm believer that we should keep red and blue out of our schools. As a stakeholder and property tax payer I believe in testing to see that our kids are being taught to standard and are college ready. There are big fights about questionable materials in our schools libraries. They shouldn’t be there. I believe our constituents should be allowed to protest pornographic literature and lawmakers should be able to overrule these materials when appropriate.

12. The COVID-19 pandemic and additional instructional support needed to remediate students’ learning losses have placed additional strain on public schools’ staffing needs. How would you work to ensure classrooms are appropriately staffed, teachers’ workloads are manageable, and planning time is not sacrificed amid these challenges?

That’s a tough question. I believe that this question is going to have to be answered at the district level. Obviously, making sure unfunded mandates are taken care of is a start. Making sure teachers are given resources, tools and materials to do their best jobs helps as well.

Additional Comments from Candidate on Survey


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