Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts Contents History Duties List of Texas comptrollers References External links Navigation menuTexas Comptroller's websiteArticle III, Section 49a"Overview of Texas Taxes", comptroller's office"Texas Finances and Economic Reporting", Comptroller's officeTexas Comptroller of Public Accountseee

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Government of TexasComptrollers in the United StatesState treasurers of the United StatesComptrollers of Texas


Texas ConstitutionGlenn HegarRobert S. CalvertGeorge H. SheppardBob BullockTexas State TreasurerTexas LegislatureMartha WhiteheadConstitutionalsales taxincome taxunclaimed propertyArticle III, Section 49aTexas Legislature














Comptroller of Public Accounts of Texas

Hegar, Glenn - 09 5x7.jpg

Incumbent
Glenn Hegar

since January 2, 2015
StyleThe Honorable
Term lengthFour years, no term limits
Inaugural holderJames B. Shaw
1846
FormationTexas Constitution
WebsiteTexas Comptroller's website

The Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts is an executive branch position created by the Texas Constitution. As with nearly every other executive branch head in Texas, the Comptroller is popularly elected every four years concurrently with the governor and the other elected executive branch positions (elections take place in even number years not divisible by four; e.g., 2006, 2010, and so on). The current Comptroller is Glenn Hegar, who took office on January 2, 2015.




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Duties


  • 3 List of Texas comptrollers


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links




History


The predecessor to the current Comptroller's office started in 1846.


The longest-serving Comptrollers in Texas history were Robert S. Calvert, who held the post for 26 consecutive years for an unprecedented twelve terms; George H. Sheppard, who served for 18 years over nine two-year terms; and Bob Bullock, who served for 16 years for four four-year terms and later was notable as one of the most powerful Lieutenant Governors in Texas history (and the namesake for the state's official history museum).


Duties currently performed by the Comptroller's office were previously divided between it and the office of Texas State Treasurer; however, over time the Texas Legislature transferred most of the Treasurer's functions to the Comptroller's office. The last State Treasurer, Martha Whitehead, successfully campaigned for office in 1994 on the premise of abolishing the position and transferring its few remaining duties to the Comptroller's office; upon winning she successfully campaigned the Legislature for a Constitutional amendment in 1995 to formally abolish the Treasurer's office which was approved by voters in November of that year. By 1996, the Comptroller had taken over the Treasurer's few remaining duties.



Duties


The primary duty of the Comptroller's office is to collect substantially all tax revenue owed to the State of Texas. This involves more than 60 different types of taxes from the sales tax (the largest source of the state's tax revenue, since Texas does not have a personal income tax) to minor items such as the "battery sales fee" (a $2–$3 fee on sales of lead-acid batteries). As Texas uses a unified collection system for sales taxes assessed by both state and local governments, the Comptroller's office is responsible for collecting and remitting the local portion of this tax revenue to the various cities, counties, and special districts throughout the state.[1]


The Comptroller's office also operates the various prepaid college tuition funds operated by the state through its Prepaid Higher Education Tuition Board, provides reports on fiscal management and economic forecasts, and manages the unclaimed property fund.[2]


As part of its fiscal management responsibilities, Article III, Section 49a of the Texas Constitution requires the Comptroller to certify to the Texas Legislature the amount of available cash on hand and anticipated revenues for the next biennium (the two-year period beginning on September 1 of odd-numbered years). The Legislature is not permitted to appropriate any funds in excess of the Comptroller's certified amounts (except in cases of emergency and then only with a four-fifths vote of both chambers), and absent the latter the Comptroller is required to reject and return to the legislature any appropriation in violation of this requirement.



List of Texas comptrollers


  • James B. Shaw (D): 1846–1857

  • Clement R. Johns (D): 1859–1864

  • Willis L. Robards (D): 1865

  • Albert H. Latimer (R): 1866

  • Morgan Hamilton (R): 1867–1869

  • Albert A. Bledsoe (R): 1870–1873


  • Stephen Heard Darden (D): 1874–1879

  • William M. Brown (D): 1880–1882

  • William Jesse Swain (D): 1883–1886

  • John D. McCall (D): 1887–1894

  • Richard W. Finley (D): 1895–1900

  • Robert M. Love (D): 1901–1903

  • J. W. Stephen (D): 1903–1910

  • W. P. Lane (D): 1911–1914

  • Henry B. Terrell (D): 1915–1919

  • M. L. Wiginton (D): 1920

  • Lon A. Smith (D): 1921–1924


  • Sam Houston Terrell (D): 1925–1930


  • George H. Sheppard (D): 1930–1949


  • Robert S. Calvert (D): 1949–1975


  • Bob Bullock (D): 1975–1991


  • John Sharp (D): 1991–1999


  • Carole Keeton Strayhorn (R): 1999–2007


  • Susan Combs (R): 2007–2015


  • Glenn Hegar (R): 2015–present


References




  1. ^ "Overview of Texas Taxes", comptroller's office


  2. ^ "Texas Finances and Economic Reporting", Comptroller's office




External links


  • Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts









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