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Nearly half of Americans now identify as independents, yet Texas makes it extraordinarily difficult for independent cand...
06/02/2026

Nearly half of Americans now identify as independents, yet Texas makes it extraordinarily difficult for independent candidates to reach the ballot.

This week's editorial examines whether our election system serves voters—or protects political parties.

Do Texans deserve more choices at the ballot box? Read ' latest column and join the conversation.


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It’s time for Texas to break free of the two-party choke hold.After a recent meeting in Washington D.C., my wife and I took an extra day for a...

A Water Hose Against the Wind: What the Panhandle Knows About Living on the Marginsby Suzanne Bellsnyder, Editor of the ...
05/29/2026

A Water Hose Against the Wind: What the Panhandle Knows About Living on the Margins
by Suzanne Bellsnyder, Editor of the Texas Rural Reporter

My best friend’s father lost his home this week.

The entire house — gone in a few minutes. A spark, forty-mile-an-hour winds, drought-cured grass, and that was it. They tried to fight it with a garden hose. They escaped with the clothes on their backs. The barn survived, where their RV was parked.

I have been on the road for my Dirt Road Tour of Rural Texas, and when I called to check on them, she was out working cattle. The house was gone. Everything in it was gone. The cattle still had to be moved.

This was an isolated fire in Hansford County. One family, one ranch, one house. It did not make the statewide news.

The same week, a hundred miles south, the Hunggate Fire was tearing across Randall County outside Canyon. Winds near 40 mph made it difficult for crews to get ahead of the flames. What began as one fire grew into more than 34,000 acres after merging with another, damaging homes, outbuildings, infrastructure and the old railroad trestle outside Canyon.

Two fires, a hundred miles apart, the same week. Same drought. Same wind. Same prairie that turns into fuel the moment a spark finds it.

My father would call this “just country living,” and he is right that out here, the prairie does what the prairie does. But there is a difference between accepting the weather and accepting the political choices that decide who is equipped when the weather turns on us.

Those fires were fought, in large part, by volunteers dispatched from day jobs and dinner tables, working with equipment that is expensive to buy and impossible to replace on goodwill alone. The state’s Rural Firefighters Grant Program helps volunteer departments pay for trucks, gear, dry hydrants and training — the basic tools required to respond when the wind shifts and the smoke starts moving. In 2025, following the previous year’s catastrophic Panhandle wildfires, the legislature allocated a historic $192 million to clear a backlog of grant requests that had grown to nearly $200 million, and removed the $30 million annual cap on the rural VFD program. Progress has been made, but the underlying math has not changed. This is where the political fight that feels distant from a burning ranch house in Hansford County becomes inseparable from it.

The Texas Legislature has spent the last several sessions tightening the screws on local government revenue. Senate Bill 2 in 2019 lowered the amount many local governments can raise in property tax revenue without voter approval from 8 percent to 3.5 percent. The bill was sold as relief, and relief is a real concern — families, small businesses and landowners feel property taxes.

Rural budgets operate in the thousands, not the millions. So the question rural Texas has to ask is simple: what replaces the local property tax funding that pays for the fire truck that shows up at the ranch gate? So far, the answer from Austin has been silence, or vague references to revenue streams that do not work the same way in rural counties. Sales tax may help in some places, but in many rural communities the base is too thin to replace the property tax dollars that support emergency response.

In a community not far from the Hansford fire, residents recently filled a hospital board meeting to ask the board not to contract their EMS service out to another town. The board was looking at the contract because the math is getting harder every year. Longer EMS response times in country this spread out are not an inconvenience. They are the difference between a survivable cardiac event and a fatal one, between a controlled grass fire and a structure loss.

This is what serious rural policy has to grapple with. Not abstract debates about the size of government, but the specific question of whether the truck starts, whether a paramedic is on shift, whether the ambulance can reach a ranch road in the time that matters.

Rural Texans drive distances that would end a suburban commuter’s job. We work in weather that can kill us. We rely on systems — fire, EMS, schools, hospitals, pharmacies, roads — funded thinner each year and asked to stretch further. When the response to a wildfire is volunteers in worn-out gear, the right conclusion is not that rural Texans are admirably self-reliant. It is that self-reliance has become the excuse for leaving rural systems underfunded.

The cattleman in Hansford County who lost his house and went back to work the next morning is worth more than that. The volunteer firefighter driving a truck older than her oldest child is worth more than that.

The Hansford fire is out. The Hunggate Fire is mostly contained. The families who lost everything this week will do what Panhandle families do, which is begin again with what their neighbors bring them. But the next fire is already on its way. And if our local governments have to go hat in hand to Austin to fund EMS and fire departments, the basics will not get funded at all.

The drought has not broken. The wind has not stopped. And the question in front of the Legislature is not only whether to give Texans property tax relief. It is whether the state intends to fund the rural services its current revenue choices are quietly squeezing, or whether it intends to leave a garden hose where a fire truck used to be.

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The Texas Rural Reporter provides commentary, research and news content on the politics of healthcare, education, culture, and economic development and it's written by a rural Texan who is living, working, and thriving in rural Texas. Click to read TEXAS RURAL REPORTER, by Suzanne Bellsnyder, a Subs...

05/19/2026

Breaking: President Trump endorses over in the GOP Senate runoff

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05/19/2026

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05/15/2026

The Pharmacy on Main Street ~Why Drug Policy Is Rural Policy
By Suzanne Sanders Bellsnyder, Editor Texas Rural Reporter

If you live in rural Texas, you already know that your local pharmacist is part of the fabric that holds a town together.

They know who’s been sick, who’s recovering, who just got home from the hospital, and who is trying to make a prescription last a few extra days because money is tight. They answer questions after hours, track down medicine that should’ve already been delivered, and spend a good part of their day solving problems that have nothing to do with counting pills.

In small towns, it happens across a counter where people know your name, know your family, and notice when you haven’t been by in a while.

And just like the rural hospitals, volunteer fire departments, and public schools we talk about so often in these pages, many hometown pharmacies are carrying more weight than ever while operating with less room for error.

Now imagine that pharmacy gone. Not next year. Not someday down the road. Right now. Because across rural Texas, that’s exactly what’s happening.

More than 4 million Texans now live in what are called pharmacy deserts — places where access to medications and pharmacy care is limited or disappearing altogether. Some rural counties no longer have a pharmacy at all. Others are hanging on by a thread.
And the reason is pretty simple: many independent pharmacies are being paid less to fill prescriptions than what it actually costs to put the medicine in the bottle.

No business can survive losing money every time somebody walks through the door.

That’s the part of the healthcare debate that often gets missed. In Washington, the conversation turns into talking points about drug prices and government negotiations. But out here, the issue feels a lot more practical.

When the pharmacy closes, people don’t just lose convenience. They lose access.

For an elderly patient, that might mean driving an hour for medication. For a parent with a sick child, it might mean waiting another day to start treatment. For someone managing diabetes or heart disease, it can become the difference between staying healthy and ending up in the emergency room.

Two big policy fights are driving a lot of this conversation right now.

The first involves Pharmacy Benefit Managers, better known as PBMs. Most people have never heard of them, but they sit in the middle of nearly every prescription transaction in America. They help decide what drugs are covered, what pharmacies get paid, and how much patients pay at the counter.

Rural pharmacists will tell you the system has become badly out of balance. Many say reimbursement rates no longer cover the actual cost of dispensing medication, while large middlemen continue collecting rebates and fees behind the scenes.
That’s why there’s growing bipartisan support for PBM reform — more transparency, fairer reimbursement, and making sure savings actually reach patients instead of disappearing somewhere in the system.

The second debate is over what’s called “Most Favored Nation” pricing, or MFN. The idea is to tie U.S. drug prices to the prices paid in foreign countries.

On paper, that sounds appealing. Everybody wants lower prices.
But there’s concern about what happens long term when government starts setting prices based on systems in other countries that ration care and tightly control what treatments are covered. Critics argue that eventually it slows innovation and reduces investment in developing new drugs.

And whether people agree or disagree on that larger debate, one thing is clear: none of it solves the immediate problem facing rural Texas pharmacies.

A pharmacy can’t stay open if the math doesn’t work.
That’s why this conversation matters beyond healthcare policy circles. In rural communities, the local pharmacy is infrastructure just like the hospital, the school, or the volunteer fire department. Once it disappears, getting it back becomes incredibly difficult.
“Rural Texans don’t need more political slogans. They need policies that keep healthcare local, keep small-town pharmacies alive, and make sure families can still get the medicine they need without driving two counties over to find it.

Because when the pharmacy on Main Street closes in a rural town, the loss is bigger than a business.

It’s one less piece of local healthcare. One less place where people are known by name instead of account number. One more sign of how fragile rural infrastructure has become when decisions made far away collide with the realities of small-town life.

And like so many of the kitchen-table issues we talk about in rural Texas, most people don’t pay attention until it’s already gone.
The decisions being made in Austin and Washington have real consequences on Main Street in places like Spearman, Stratford, Gruver, and hundreds of towns just like them.

Rural Texas does not stay strong by accident. It stays strong when local people pay attention, show up, and fight for the things their communities cannot afford to lose.”

About the Author
Suzanne Bellsnyder is editor and publisher of the Hansford County Reporter-Statesman and Sherman County Gazette. A former Capitol staffer with decades of experience in Texas politics and policy, she now focuses on how state decisions shape rural life through her newspapers, including the Texas Rural Reporter. Subscribe at www.TexasRuralReporter.Substack.com.

05/15/2026

"No business can survive losing money every time somebody walks through the door." That includes a , as Suzanne Bellsnyder writes today at the Texas Rural Reporter. "Some rural counties no longer have a pharmacy at all. Others are hanging on by a thread. And the reason is pretty simple: many independent pharmacies are being paid less to fill prescriptions than what it actually costs to put the medicine in the bottle. ... When the pharmacy closes, people don’t just lose convenience. They lose access."

I've been saying for years that water was going to be the issue in Texas. We're there. This week I sat down with Perry F...
05/05/2026

I've been saying for years that water was going to be the issue in Texas. We're there. This week I sat down with Perry Fowler of the Texas Water Infrastructure Network, and he didn't sugarcoat it. There's a $174 billion gap between what Texas needs and what it's committed to. Read the full column at the link — and tune in Wednesday for the full conversation on the podcast.

By Suzanne Bellsnyder, The Texas Rural Reporter

05/04/2026

PBMs. Insurers. Drugmakers. They all affect what you pay at the pharmacy counter — and rural communities feel the pain first when the system is opaque and local pharmacies are being squeezed out. Time for transparency and real .

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