Sunset Advisory Commission
The Sunset Advisory Commission is an agency of the Texas Legislature that evaluates state agencies and makes recommendations to the legislature on the need for, performance of, and improvements to agencies under review. The commission is headquartered in the Robert E. Johnson State Office Building in Austin.
As of the 88th Legislative session in 2023, the Commission has successfully recommended abolishing 95 state agencies, of which 42 agencies were completely abolished, while another 53 were abolished with certain functions consolidated or transferred to existing or newly created agencies.
History
The Commission was created in 1977 by enactment of the Texas Sunset Act.Composition
The Commission has 12 members: 10 legislators and two public members. The leader of each chamber each appoint four legislators from their respective chamber, and one public member each. The chair and vice-chair rotate annually between the two chambers. The Commission appoints a director who hires staff to carry out the agency's duties.Duties
Under the Sunset Act, every state agency has a specific date on which it will automatically be abolished unless the legislature passes a bill to continue the agency. Agencies typically are reviewed every 12 years. During the 2009 legislative session, the session adjourned without the legislature continuing several agencies, thus requiring the governor to call a special session.Sunset staff conducts an agency's review in the interim before the session when the agency's enabling act comes under legislative scrutiny. The agency prepares a self-evaluation report for the commission. Sunset staff meets with the agency's leadership and staff as well as interest groups, regulated entities, and members of the public who are affected by the agency. Staff also coordinates with other state oversight agencies, such as the State Auditor's Office and the Legislative Budget Board. After the staff publishes its report with recommendations to the commission, the commission holds a public hearing and takes public comments, then holds a second public meeting to make decisions about which recommendations to adopt, including any new proposals from other sources. The commission can recommend any of the following:
- Continue the agency as is.
- Continue the agency with modifications.
- Merge the agency with another agency.
- Disband the agency and either transfer its functions to other agencies, or abolish them altogether.
The commission also performs limited reviews on agencies not subject to the commission at the discretion of the legislature and can recommend that the agency be abolished. In those cases the legislature must pass a bill to abolish the agency without the incentive of an expiring Sunset date in the agency's enabling act.