Texas Talks

Texas Talks

The Future of Economic Prosperity

54 min · 26 de may de 2026
portada del episodio The Future of Economic Prosperity

Descripción

As part of the Future of Texas series in partnership with Texas 2036, this episode explores how education, workforce development, and economic opportunity intersect to shape Texas’ future prosperity. Through the Future of Texas podcast series, Texas 2036 brings together diverse perspectives as we explore the opportunities and challenges facing our state over the next ten years. The views expressed in this program are those of the individual speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Texas 2036, its staff or its Board of Directors. Host Brad Swail is joined by Dr. Wynn Rosser, Commissioner of Higher Education and Chief Executive Officer of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, and John Hryhorchuk, Senior Vice President of Policy and Advocacy at Texas 2036, for a discussion on how Texas can prepare more students for meaningful careers while sustaining one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. The conversation examines the state's evolving approach to education and workforce development, including dual-credit programs, credentials of value, outcomes-based funding, affordability, and strategies for connecting students with high-demand careers. Major topics include: * Texas’ position as the world’s eighth-largest economy * The importance of credentials of value and workforce alignment * Expanding dual-credit opportunities in high school * Community college reform and House Bill 8 * Outcomes-based funding for higher education * Career and technical education pathways * Workforce shortages in healthcare, construction, and skilled trades * College affordability and manageable student debt * My Texas Future and career planning resources * Data-driven policymaking and economic development * Preparing Texas’ workforce for the industries of the future * The path toward Texas’ 2036 goals The discussion highlights how decades of education reforms have expanded access to postsecondary opportunities and why policymakers are increasingly focused not only on college completion, but on ensuring students earn credentials that lead to strong labor market outcomes. Rosser and Hryhorchuk also discuss the role of economic development, community colleges, universities, workforce training programs, and career education in preparing Texans for emerging industries ranging from advanced manufacturing and healthcare to semiconductors, aerospace, and energy. Looking toward 2036, both guests argue that Texas’ continued success will depend on aligning education systems, workforce needs, and economic opportunities so that every Texan has a pathway to prosperity. 00:00 — Intro + The Future of Economic Prosperity 01:17 — Meet Wynn Rosser and John Hryhorchuk 03:53 — Why Texas’ future is still being written 05:01 — The opportunity gap and workforce challenges 06:43 — Why the education pipeline starts earlier 09:09 — Dual-credit success stories in Texas 12:02 — Can every student graduate with college credit? 15:45 — Credentials of value and workforce readiness 17:21 — Innovative education partnerships across Texas 19:10 — Beyond the traditional four-year degree 23:01 — Changing perceptions about career pathways 24:49 — Lifelong learning and workforce adaptability 26:22 — High-demand careers and earning potential 29:16 — Community college reform and House Bill 8 34:04 — College affordability and manageable debt 38:51 — My Texas Future and student planning tools 40:07 — Expanding higher education opportunities 42:53 — What Texas could look like in 2036 46:35 — Measuring progress toward Texas’ goals 48:11 — Legislative priorities and future reforms 52:02 — Final advice for students and families 53:46 — Closing thoughts on Texas opportunity Watch Full-Length Interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@TexasTalks

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130 episodios

episode The Future of Economic Prosperity artwork

The Future of Economic Prosperity

As part of the Future of Texas series in partnership with Texas 2036, this episode explores how education, workforce development, and economic opportunity intersect to shape Texas’ future prosperity. Through the Future of Texas podcast series, Texas 2036 brings together diverse perspectives as we explore the opportunities and challenges facing our state over the next ten years. The views expressed in this program are those of the individual speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Texas 2036, its staff or its Board of Directors. Host Brad Swail is joined by Dr. Wynn Rosser, Commissioner of Higher Education and Chief Executive Officer of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, and John Hryhorchuk, Senior Vice President of Policy and Advocacy at Texas 2036, for a discussion on how Texas can prepare more students for meaningful careers while sustaining one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. The conversation examines the state's evolving approach to education and workforce development, including dual-credit programs, credentials of value, outcomes-based funding, affordability, and strategies for connecting students with high-demand careers. Major topics include: * Texas’ position as the world’s eighth-largest economy * The importance of credentials of value and workforce alignment * Expanding dual-credit opportunities in high school * Community college reform and House Bill 8 * Outcomes-based funding for higher education * Career and technical education pathways * Workforce shortages in healthcare, construction, and skilled trades * College affordability and manageable student debt * My Texas Future and career planning resources * Data-driven policymaking and economic development * Preparing Texas’ workforce for the industries of the future * The path toward Texas’ 2036 goals The discussion highlights how decades of education reforms have expanded access to postsecondary opportunities and why policymakers are increasingly focused not only on college completion, but on ensuring students earn credentials that lead to strong labor market outcomes. Rosser and Hryhorchuk also discuss the role of economic development, community colleges, universities, workforce training programs, and career education in preparing Texans for emerging industries ranging from advanced manufacturing and healthcare to semiconductors, aerospace, and energy. Looking toward 2036, both guests argue that Texas’ continued success will depend on aligning education systems, workforce needs, and economic opportunities so that every Texan has a pathway to prosperity. 00:00 — Intro + The Future of Economic Prosperity 01:17 — Meet Wynn Rosser and John Hryhorchuk 03:53 — Why Texas’ future is still being written 05:01 — The opportunity gap and workforce challenges 06:43 — Why the education pipeline starts earlier 09:09 — Dual-credit success stories in Texas 12:02 — Can every student graduate with college credit? 15:45 — Credentials of value and workforce readiness 17:21 — Innovative education partnerships across Texas 19:10 — Beyond the traditional four-year degree 23:01 — Changing perceptions about career pathways 24:49 — Lifelong learning and workforce adaptability 26:22 — High-demand careers and earning potential 29:16 — Community college reform and House Bill 8 34:04 — College affordability and manageable debt 38:51 — My Texas Future and student planning tools 40:07 — Expanding higher education opportunities 42:53 — What Texas could look like in 2036 46:35 — Measuring progress toward Texas’ goals 48:11 — Legislative priorities and future reforms 52:02 — Final advice for students and families 53:46 — Closing thoughts on Texas opportunity Watch Full-Length Interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@TexasTalks

26 de may de 202654 min
episode Texas Policy Update: Summer Camps, AI Deregulation & Prosecutor Power w/Brad Swail artwork

Texas Policy Update: Summer Camps, AI Deregulation & Prosecutor Power w/Brad Swail

No guest this time — just host Brad Swail breaking down three major Texas public policy issues affecting families, businesses, and local governments across the state. In this episode of Texas Talks, Brad examines the fallout from Texas’ new summer camp safety rules, the state’s new AI-powered regulatory efficiency platform, and Governor Greg Abbott’s proposal to create a statewide prosecutor’s office. The episode covers: • Texas’ summer camp licensing crisis after the Heaven’s 27 Camp Safety Act • Why fiber optic internet requirements became a major point of controversy • Texas’ new AI tool “Sam” and the push to cut red tape • How AI could reshape regulatory review and permitting • Abbott’s proposed statewide prosecutor and the debate over local control • The balance between public safety, accountability, and county-level authority Together, these stories highlight a broader question: how can Texas respond to real problems without creating new ones through overregulation, bureaucracy, or excessive centralization? 00:00 — Intro + three major Texas policy issues 00:27 — Texas summer camp safety crisis 01:24 — Heaven’s 27 Camp Safety Act explained 02:16 — New camp licensing and safety requirements 03:42 — Fiber optic mandate and camp lawsuit 05:04 — Camp Mystic and broader compliance challenges 06:26 — Impact on kids, families, and Texas camps 08:17 — Texas launches AI-powered regulatory review 10:05 — Texas Regulatory Efficiency Office and “Sam” 11:28 — Vulcan Technologies and agent AI 13:16 — Balancing deregulation with safety protections 15:35 — Abbott’s statewide prosecutor proposal 17:25 — Travis County prosecution deadline controversy 18:45 — Constitutional and local-control concerns 20:33 — Reactions from supporters and critics 22:05 — What this could mean for Texas criminal justice 22:52 — Closing thoughts Watch Full-Length Interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@TexasTalks

21 de may de 202623 min
episode Policies that Deliver artwork

Policies that Deliver

As part of the Future of Texas series in partnership with Texas 2036, this episode explores what separates effective public policy from policies that simply sound good. Through the Future of Texas podcast series, Texas 2036 brings together diverse perspectives as we explore the opportunities and challenges facing our state over the next ten years. The views expressed in this program are those of the individual speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Texas 2036, its staff or its Board of Directors. Host Brad Swail is joined by Laura Arnold, co-founder of Arnold Ventures, and David Leebron, President and CEO of Texas 2036, for a wide-ranging discussion about evidence-based policymaking, education reform, workforce development, philanthropy, and the long-term future of Texas. The conversation focuses on a central question: how can policymakers create systems that produce measurable, long-term results instead of temporary political wins? Arnold and Leebron explain why data, accountability, and long-term thinking are critical to solving some of Texas’ biggest challenges — from higher education and workforce readiness to housing affordability, infrastructure, criminal justice, and childcare. Major topics include: • What makes a policy actually “work” • Why data and accountability matter in government • Community college reform and “credentials of value” • Connecting education pathways to workforce needs • The role of philanthropy in shaping public policy • Why Texas lawmakers need trusted nonpartisan data • Housing affordability and infrastructure challenges • Permitting reform and economic growth • Criminal justice reform and public safety • Childcare data gaps and workforce participation • The importance of long-term thinking before problems emerge • Building opportunity and economic mobility in Texas The episode also highlights several major initiatives supported by Arnold Ventures and Texas 2036, including reforms to Texas community college funding and investments in student support systems designed to improve graduation and career outcomes. A major theme throughout the discussion is the belief that good policy making should be judged not by ideology or political messaging, but by measurable outcomes that improve people’s lives. Looking toward 2036, both guests argue that Texas’ future success will depend on whether leaders can stay focused on evidence, opportunity, and practical solutions that operate at scale. 00:00 — Intro + Future of Texas overview 01:44 — Laura Arnold and David Leebron introductions 04:02 — Focus, scale, and long-term policy impact 05:21 — Why Arnold Ventures tackles systemic problems 07:26 — What makes a policy actually work 08:41 — Community colleges and “credentials of value” 11:01 — Workforce readiness and education reform 14:23 — Why government needs better data 17:34 — Helping lawmakers make better decisions 20:31 — The role of philanthropy in public policy 27:12 — San Jacinto College partnership explained 31:18 — Housing, infrastructure, and permitting reform 33:27 — Criminal justice reform and public safety 34:35 — Raising families and the future of Texas 37:10 — Opportunity, long-term planning, and 2036 vision 39:35 — Final thoughts on evidence-based policymaking Watch Full-Length Interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@TexasTalks

19 de may de 202640 min
episode Texas Schools, AI & the Future of Public Education w/Chairman Brad Buckley artwork

Texas Schools, AI & the Future of Public Education w/Chairman Brad Buckley

What’s really driving declining enrollment in Texas public schools — and how will AI reshape classrooms in the years ahead? On this episode of Texas Talks, host Brad Swail sits down with Chairman Brad Buckley, Chair of the Texas House Public Education Committee, for a wide-ranging conversation about the future of public education in Texas. Buckley discusses the major challenges facing schools across the state, from demographic shifts and declining birth rates to school funding pressures, learning loss, and the growing role of artificial intelligence in education. A major focus of the conversation is the surprising decline in enrollment across traditional Texas public school districts. According to testimony discussed during a recent House Public Education Committee hearing, Texas public schools have seen approximately 76,000 fewer students enrolled for the 2025–2026 school year. The discussion covers: • Why Texas public schools are seeing declining enrollment • Birth rates, housing affordability, and demographic changes • The growth of homeschooling, virtual education, and charter schools • Why some districts continue growing while others shrink • Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) and their potential future impact • How school funding formulas struggle with declining enrollment • The long-term implications of lower birth rates nationwide • AI in classrooms and concerns about age appropriateness • Why Buckley believes teachers — not AI — should drive learning • The risks of AI replacing “productive struggle” in education • Data privacy, ethics, and accuracy concerns surrounding AI • Pandemic learning loss and ongoing struggles in mathematics The episode also explores major testing reforms coming to Texas schools, including the planned replacement of the STAAR test beginning in the 2027–2028 school year. Additional topics include: • Replacing one large test with shorter progress-monitoring assessments • Reducing testing anxiety for students and teachers • Providing real-time instructional feedback to educators • Why middle school outcomes are becoming a growing concern • Workforce readiness and the push toward higher-value technical credentials • Career training in engineering, cybersecurity, and STEM fields • Reducing administrative burdens and compliance mandates on schools Buckley argues that Texas must continue modernizing public education while remaining focused on core fundamentals like literacy, mathematics, and strong classroom instruction. The takeaway: the future of Texas education will depend on balancing innovation, accountability, and flexibility while ensuring students still receive deep, meaningful learning experiences. 00:00 — Intro + Chairman Brad Buckley joins 02:45 — Declining enrollment in Texas schools 05:37 — Housing costs, homeschooling, and demographic shifts 09:09 — ESAs and school funding impacts 13:25 — Long-term effects of declining birth rates 19:32 — AI in classrooms and education policy 21:51 — Why teachers should still drive learning 23:52 — Age-appropriate use of AI in schools 26:16 — Replacing the STAAR test 27:06 — Pandemic learning loss and math struggles 31:19 — Middle school outcomes and workforce readiness 34:05 — New testing models and real-time assessments 38:03 — Reducing school compliance burdens + closing Watch Full-Length Interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@TexasTalks

14 de may de 202639 min
episode Future of Energy artwork

Future of Energy

As part of the Future of Texas series in partnership with Texas 2036, this episode explores the region powering not just Texas — but increasingly the global economy: the Permian Basin. Through the Future of Texas podcast series, Texas 2036 brings together diverse perspectives as we explore the opportunities and challenges facing our state over the next ten years. The views expressed in this program are those of the individual speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Texas 2036, its staff or its Board of Directors. Host Brad Swail is joined by Tracee Bentley, President and CEO of the Permian Strategic Partnership, and Jordan Wat, Director of Government Affairs at Texas 2036, for a wide-ranging conversation about the future of energy, workforce growth, infrastructure, and community development in West Texas. The discussion begins with a striking reality: if the Permian Basin were its own country, it would rank as the fourth-largest energy producer in the world — behind only Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. But this conversation goes far beyond oil production alone. Bentley and Wat explain how the Permian Basin has become one of the most strategically important economic regions in the United States, supporting everything from electricity reliability and manufacturing to public education funding and technological innovation. The discussion covers: • Why the Permian Basin produces more than 50% of U.S. oil and gas • How drilling technology and AI transformed energy production • Why Texas energy production continues hitting record levels • The growing electricity demand driven by AI and data centers • Pipeline, transmission, and grid infrastructure bottlenecks • Natural gas, LNG, and Texas grid reliability after Winter Storm Uri • The role of the Permian in stabilizing global energy markets • Workforce shortages and the need for 176,000 additional workers by 2040 • Housing affordability challenges in Midland and Odessa • Health care access and specialty care shortages in West Texas • Water scarcity, produced water, and future recycling technologies • Career and technical education investments tied to workforce needs • Why literacy and workforce readiness remain major long-term concerns The episode also highlights how public-private partnerships are reshaping the region. Bentley explains how the Permian Strategic Partnership has invested more than $200 million into infrastructure, education, workforce development, and health care — leveraging those investments into billions more through state and federal collaboration. A major takeaway is that the future of the Permian Basin is no longer just an “energy story.” It is increasingly a story about building sustainable communities capable of supporting long-term economic growth. Looking toward 2036, both guests argue that Texas’ continued success depends on whether the state can match energy growth with investments in roads, schools, workforce training, housing, water infrastructure, and grid reliability. The message is clear: the future of Texas is deeply tied to the future of the Permian Basin. 00:00 — Intro + Future of Energy overview 01:35 — Why the Permian Basin matters globally 03:22 — Record energy production and drilling technology 05:04 — Jobs, workforce growth, and the Texas economy 07:18 — Education funding and workforce pipelines 09:09 — Innovation, AI, and modern energy production 13:26 — Electricity demand, LNG, and grid reliability 16:24 — Infrastructure bottlenecks and pipeline capacity 22:04 — Global energy markets and the Permian’s role 25:15 — Community life in Midland and Odessa 26:57 — Roads, schools, healthcare, and housing challenges 32:32 — Career training and workforce development 35:33 — Public-private partnerships and long-term planning 37:42 — Literacy, workforce readiness, and recruitment 45:06 — Water challenges and produced water innovation 47:22 — Looking toward 2036 + closing thoughts Watch Full-Length Interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@TexasTalks

12 de may de 202649 min