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Texas House to review HB 2535 introduced by Jeff Leach on Monday, March 17

Politics

By Collin Times | Mar 18, 2025

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Jeffrey Curtis Leach, Texas State Representative of the 67th district (R) | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Leach_(politician)#:~:text=Jeffrey%20Curtis%20%22Jeff%22%20Leach%20(,a%20portion%20of%20Collin%20County.&text=Plano%2C%20Texas%2C%20U.S.

Rep. Jeff Leach introduced HB 2535, a bill on Education, to the Texas House on Monday, March 17 during the 89(R) legislative session, according to the Texas Legislature website.

More specifically, the official text was summarized by the state legislature as ’’Relating to the determination of resident status of students by public institutions of higher education’’.

The following is our breakdown, based on the actual bill text, and may include interpretation to clarify its provisions.

This bill amends the Texas Education Code to revise the criteria for determining resident status for students at public institutions of higher education. It stipulates that individuals must have established and maintained a domicile in Texas for one year before the semester's census date to be considered residents. Dependents can also qualify if their parents meet these criteria. Additionally, individuals not authorized under federal law to be in the U.S. cannot be considered Texas residents for tuition purposes. To establish residency status, applicants must submit specified documentation. The bill grants institutions the authority to reclassify students as nonresidents if they no longer meet the updated requirements and becomes effective Sept. 1, 2025.

Jeff Leach, chair of the House Committee on Judiciary & Civil Jurisprudence and member of the House Committee on Public Education, proposed another six bills during the 89(R) legislative session.

Leach graduated from Baylor University with a BS and again from SMU Dedman School of Law with a JD.

Jeff Leach is currently serving in the Texas State House, representing the state's 67th House district. He replaced previous state representative Jerry A. Madden in 2013.

Bills in Texas go through a multi-step legislative process, including committee review, debates, and votes in both chambers before reaching a final decision. Each session, there are typically thousands of bills introduced, but only a portion successfully navigate the process to become law.

You can read more about the bills and other measures here.

Other Recent Bills Introduced by Rep. Jeff Leach in Texas House During 89(R) Legislative Session

Bill NumberDate IntroducedShort Description
HB 253603/17/2025Relating to the purchase of or acquisition of title to real property by certain aliens or foreign entities; creating a criminal offense
HB 167103/12/2025Relating to the establishment of parentage and the duty to pay retroactive child support, including the duty to pay retroactive child support beginning on the date of the child's conception
HB 167003/12/2025Relating to a person submitting proof of citizenship to verify eligibility to vote in Texas
HB 79703/05/2025Relating to the discipline of judges by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct and notice to the legislature of certain reprimands
HB 73403/04/2025Relating to the failure to report child abuse or neglect; increasing a criminal penalty
HB 71703/04/2025Relating to the right of a public school employee to engage in religious speech or prayer while on duty

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Texas State House District 67

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