The Kerr County Commissioners Court convened a budget workshop Thursday, where the presiding judge told department heads and the public this session was for presenting budget requests rather than making decisions. "Today is the ask," the judge said, urging staff and elected officials to explain what they need to run county functions.
The judge outlined the schedule for the county's budget season: department submissions now, the judge's recommendations in the coming weeks, and a period in mid- to late July when commissioners will make the detailed, line-by-line decisions. He warned of the statutory consequence of failing to adopt a budget, saying, "If we don't get a budget agreed to and hammered out, we default to last year's budget. That's what the law says. That's what the state of Texas tells us."
The workshop format, the judge said, is intended to increase transparency by recording presentations and posting materials online so the public can see how county spending priorities are developed. The judge encouraged department heads to be candid about needs and reminded commissioners that the recommendation phase will give them time to prepare for the more contentious decisions later in July.
Presenters who gave preliminary overviews during the session included the tax assessor-collector, who discussed collection rates and preliminary appraisal values, and the AgriLife Extension office, which sought funding for vehicle repairs, rentals and modest operational subscriptions. The sheriff began a jail budget presentation that included a list of proposed reclassifications and position requests but did not complete it before a short recess.
The court recessed for 15 minutes near the end of the recorded session and planned to resume detailed budget discussions afterward. The judge said he will present his formal recommendation in mid-July and expected commissioners to use that recommendation as the start of the deliberation period.