Missy Bender Debunks Recapture Myth in Texas School Finance Episode

July 18th, 2026 12:30 PM
By: Newsworthy Staff

An episode of The Building Texas Show explains that Texas' recapture program, often called Robin Hood, actually saves the state money rather than redistributing funds from wealthy to poor districts, with nearly $3 billion sent back in 2025.

Missy Bender Debunks Recapture Myth in Texas School Finance Episode

The latest episode of The Building Texas Show, titled "Texas School Finance's Biggest Misunderstanding: Recapture Isn't Robin Hood," hosted by Justin McKenzie, dismantles one of the state's most persistent policy myths. Published July 13, 2026, the conversation with Missy Bender, Executive Director of the Texas School Coalition, drills into where the nearly $3 billion Texas schools sent back to the state in 2025 through recapture actually ends up. With about 20% of all Texas districts now paying, and roll calls of urban and rural payers growing, the episode arrives as legislators head into election season.

Recorded in Plano, the discussion breaks down the mechanics and consequences of the post-House Bill 3 formula in plain language. Listeners can expect three specific threads: How property valuation divided by average daily attendance triggers the recapture threshold, and why declining enrollment plus rising valuations create a "double whammy" for districts like Plano ISD. The 2025 top payers include Austin ISD at $770 million and West Texas oil district Pecos-Barstow-Toyah at $198 million. Also discussed is why a student leaving for a doctor's appointment can cost a district a full day of state funding, even when the absence is excused.

Bender, a former Plano school board member turned statewide advocate, is blunt about the misconception baked into the program's nickname. "So what does recapture do? It generates state savings," she tells McKenzie. "That's why I don't call it Robin Hood anymore. It's not the property wealthy helping the property poor, like many think, but it's only helping the state." She adds that some boards have considered withholding payment as a form of protest, but warns, "you can actually go to jail for doing that." The exchange reframes a debate most Texans have only encountered as a tax-bill line item.

The deeper policy conversation traces the money's path into the Foundation School Program (FSP) and out again as reduced state contributions, funds Bender says can then be redirected to "water, transportation, it could be vouchers, it could be anything." She cites the funding adequacy study led by Dr. Lori Taylor at Texas A&M, notes that the Legislature went six years without increasing the basic allotment despite inflation, and argues that 96% attendance, once religious and medical absences are counted, should be treated as the practical ceiling. She also flags legislation she is working on to stop penalizing districts for excused partial-day absences.

The episode is available now wherever podcasts are heard, including on platforms like YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

Source Statement

This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by Newsworthy.ai. You can read the source press release here,

blockchain registration record for the source press release.
;