The Comptroller updates property tax relief program definitions and application requirements for disability veteran relief, incorporating new census data requirements for local governments.
Texas Department of Family and Protective Services establishes rules requiring SEMARC search engine screening for prospective employees, contractors, and volunteers before they access DFPS clients or systems to identify individuals with reportable m…
Texas Ethics Commission codifies contract management rules covering vendor protests, monitoring procedures, and veteran-owned business requirements to standardize contract administration and dispute resolution.
Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs proposes updated enforcement procedures for administrative penalties against property owners and developers, incorporating federal HUD requirements and establishing corrective action and debarment op…
Texas Department of Insurance updates the Commercial Lines Statistical Plan to require insurers reporting policy declinations, cancellations, and nonrenewals by ZIP code under House Bill 2067.
Texas Public Utility Commission established grant and loan procedures under Senate Bill 2627 for backup power systems at critical facilities, with no mandatory cost-sharing requirements for applicants.
Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs Rule 10 TAC §1.19 expands reallocation of financial assistance to include committed, obligated, or unexecuted awarded funds beyond previously allowed contracted funds.
Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs eliminates mandatory fax number updates for entities conducting business with the department, reducing administrative requirements.
I cannot generate a summary sentence because the input description contains no substantive regulatory or grant content—only section references without details on dollar amounts, deadlines, eligible businesses, or program scope.
Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs replaced its Historically Underutilized Businesses procurement rule to comply with state Comptroller requirements and align departmental practices with statewide standards.
Tell Bizmoon what your business does and we'll cut the Texas register down to what actually matters.
Every rule is broken into specific to-dos with calendar dates.
We tell you which parts of your business each rule actually touches.
Across the states, the biggest share of activity is deciding who is allowed to work: licenses, boards, and certifications. That is the layer that quietly governs whether your doors can stay open.
No legal jargon. Read the impact in two sentences.
Email + dashboard pings the moment something changes.