|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Warning Signs of Alcohol Abuse |
|
Texas Population, Income, Education, Employment, and Federal Funds
Texas Population |
|
Total |
Year |
1980 |
14,225,513 |
1990 |
16,986,510 |
2000 |
20,851,820 |
2009 (latest estimates) |
24,782,302 |
Texas Income |
|
Total |
Texas Per-capita income (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
36,838 |
2008 |
37,809 |
Percent change |
-1.2 |
|
Texas Earnings per job (2008 dollars) |
2007 |
51,951 |
2008 |
50,737 |
Percent change |
-2.3 |
|
Texas Poverty rate (percent) |
1979 |
14.7 |
1989 |
18.1 |
1999 |
15.4 |
2008 (latest model-based estimates) |
15.8 |
Texas Education (Persons 25 and older) |
|
Total |
Texas Percent not completing high school |
1980 |
37.4 |
1990 |
27.9 |
2000 |
24.3 |
|
Texas Percent completing high school only |
1980 |
28.8 |
1990 |
25.6 |
2000 |
24.8 |
|
Texas Percent completing some college |
1980 |
17.0 |
1990 |
26.2 |
2000 |
27.6 |
|
Texas Percent completing college |
1980 |
16.9 |
1990 |
20.3 |
2000 |
23.2 |
Texas Employment |
|
Total |
Texas Total number of jobs |
2007 |
14,018,853 |
2008 |
14,469,900 |
|
Texas Percent employment change |
2006-2007 |
1.5 |
2007-2008 |
1.3 |
2008-2009 |
-0.4 |
|
Texas Unemployment rate (percent) |
2008 |
4.9 |
2009 |
7.6 |
Texas Federal Funds, FY 2008 |
|
Total |
Texas Federal funding, dollars per person |
Texas All Federal funds |
8,510 |
|
Texas Federal funding by purpose |
Texas Agriculture and natural resources |
154 |
Texas Community resources |
900 |
Texas Defense and space |
2,173 |
Texas Human resources |
147 |
Texas Income security |
4,121 |
Texas National functions |
1,016 |
|
Texas Federal funding by type of payments |
Texas Grants |
1,281 |
Texas Direct loans |
96 |
Texas Guaranteed/insured loans |
724 |
Texas Retirement/disability payments |
2,160 |
Texas Other direct payments to
individuals |
1,170 |
Texas Direct payments, not to
individuals |
97 |
Texas Procurement contracts |
2,498 |
Texas Salaries and wages |
484 |
Texas Organic Agriculture
|
|
2008 |
Texas Number of certified operations |
279 |
Texas Crops (acres) |
155,957 |
Texas Pasture & rangeland (acres) |
294,749 |
Texas Total acres |
450,706 |
Farm Characteristics
Texas 2007 Census of Agriculture |
|
|
2007 |
Texas Approximate total land area (acres) |
167,145,209 |
Texas Total farmland (acres) |
130,398,753 |
Percent of total land area |
78.0 |
|
Texas Cropland (acres) |
33,667,177 |
Percent of total farmland |
25.8 |
Percent in pasture |
23.3 |
Percent irrigated |
13.7 |
|
Texas Harvested Cropland (acres) |
19,174,301 |
|
Texas Woodland (acres) |
7,099,790 |
Percent of total farmland |
5.4 |
Percent in pasture |
74.4 |
|
Texas Pastureland (acres) |
87,217,416 |
Percent of total farmland |
66.9 |
|
Texas Land in house lots, ponds,
roads, wasteland, etc. (acres) |
2,414,370 |
Percent of total farmland |
1.9 |
|
Texas Conservation practices |
Texas Farmland in conservation or
wetlands reserve programs
(acres) |
4,170,044 |
|
Texas Average farm size (acres) |
527 |
|
Texas Farms by size (percent) |
1 to 99 acres |
52.5 |
100 to 499 acres |
31.2 |
500 to 999 acres |
7.2 |
1000 to 1,999 acres |
4.6 |
2,000 or more acres |
4.5 |
|
Texas Farms by sales (percent) |
Less than $9,999 |
71.0 |
$10,000 to $49,999 |
18.3 |
$50,000 to $99,999 |
3.5 |
$100,000 to $499,999 |
4.7 |
More than $500,000 |
2.4 |
|
Texas Tenure of farmers |
Texas Full owner (farms) |
177,147 |
Percent of total |
71.6 |
|
Texas Part owner (farms) |
54,773 |
Percent of total |
22.1 |
|
Texas Tenant owner (farms) |
15,517 |
Percent of total |
6.3 |
|
Texas Farm organization |
Texas Individuals/family, sole
proprietorship (farms) |
218,126 |
Percent of total |
88.2 |
|
Texas Family-held corporations
(farms) |
4,956 |
Percent of total |
2.0 |
|
Texas Partnerships (farms) |
20,657 |
Percent of total |
8.3 |
|
Texas Non-family corporations (farms) |
750 |
Percent of total |
0.3 |
|
Texas Others - cooperative, estate or
trust, institutional, etc. (farms) |
2,948 |
Percent of total |
1.2 |
|
Texas Characteristics of principal farm operators |
Average operator age (years) |
58.9 |
Percent with farming as their
primary occupation |
39.9 |
Men |
212,426 |
Women |
35,011 |
|
Texas Farm Financial Indicators
Texas Farm income and value added data |
|
2008 |
|
Texas Number of farms |
247,500 |
|
|
Thousands $ |
Final crop output |
7,061,726 |
+ Final animal output |
11,032,630 |
+ Services and forestry |
3,985,894 |
= Final agricultural sector output |
22,080,250 |
|
- Intermediate consumption outlays |
14,324,074 |
+ Net government transactions |
273,698 |
= Gross value added |
8,029,875 |
|
- Capital consumption |
2,232,644 |
|
= Net value added |
5,797,231 |
|
- Factor payments |
2,579,941 |
Employee compensation (total hired labor) |
1,407,685 |
Net rent received by nonoperator landlords |
205,442 |
Real estate and nonreal estate interest |
966,814 |
|
= Net farm income |
3,217,290 |
|
Texas Top Commodities, Exports, and Counties
TX. Top 5 agriculture commodities, 2009 |
|
Value of receipts
thousand $ |
1. Cattle and calves |
6,938,721 |
2. Broilers |
1,650,227 |
3. Greenhouse/nursery |
1,284,269 |
4. Cotton |
1,188,629 |
5. Dairy products |
1,172,129 |
|
All commodities |
16,573,054 |
|
TX. Top 5 agriculture exports, estimates, FY 2009 |
|
Value
million $ |
1. Cotton and linters |
1,389.8 |
2. Live animals and meat |
709.5 |
3. Other |
441.2 |
4. Feed grains and products |
378.8 |
5. Poultry and products |
289.4 |
|
Overall rank |
4,541.6 |
|
TX. Top 5 counties in agricultural sales 2007 |
|
Thousands $ |
1. Deaf Smith County |
1,148,359 |
2. Castro County |
973,352 |
3. Parmer County |
937,664 |
4. Hartley County |
724,508 |
5. Hansford County |
589,799 |
|
State total |
21,001,074 |
|
State Offices
Texas Drug Policy, Enforcement and Government Agencies
Governor's Office
Office of the Governor
Capitol Station
P.O. Box 12428
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-2000
State Legislative Contact
Legislative Council
State Capitol, Room 155
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-1151
State Drug Program Coordinator
General Counsel
State of Texas
P.O. Box 12428
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-1988
Attorney General's Office
Office of the Attorney General
Research and Legal Support
Capitol Station
P.O. Box 12548
Austin, TX 78711-2548
(512) 463-2100
Law Enforcement Planning
Criminal Justice Division
Office of the Governor
Sam Houston State Office Building, Room 300
201 East 14th Street
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-1919
Crime Prevention Office
Office of Court Administration of the Texas
Judicial System
Texas Law Center, Room 602
1414 Colorado Street
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-1625
Statistical Analysis Center
Criminal Justice Policy Council
P.O. Box 13332
Capitol Station
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-1810
Uniform Crime Reports Contact
Uniform Crime Reporting
Crime Records Division
Texas Department of Public Safety
P.O. Box 4143
Austin, TX 78765
(512) 465-2091
BJA Strategy Preparation Agency
Texas Narcotics Control Program
Criminal Justice Division
Office of the Governor
P.O. Box 12428
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-1957
Judicial Agency
Office of Court Administration of the Texas
Judicial System
Texas Law Center, Room 602
1414 Colorado Street
Austin, TX 78711
(512) 463-1625
Corrections Agency
Department of Correction
P.O. Box 99
Huntsville, TX 77340
(409) 295-6371
RADAR Network Agency
Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse Resource
Center
720 Brazos Street, Suite 307
Austin, TX 78729
(512) 867-8700
HIV-Prevention Program
Information Specialist
Texas Department of Health
HIV Division
1100 West 49th Street
Austin, TX 78756
(512) 458-7304
Drug and Alcohol Agency
Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse
710 Brazos Street, Suite 403
Austin, TX 78701-2576
(512) 867-8700
State Coordinator for Drug-Free Schools
Drug-Free Schools Coordinator
Texas Education Agency
Division of Accelerated Instruction
Drug Abuse Prevention Program
1701 North Congress Avenue
Austin, TX 78701-1494
(512) 463-9006
|
|
|
|
|
Texas
Texas, just like other States has many people who have alcohol abuse problems. Sometimes the differences between social use, alcohol abuse, and addiction are obvious. Sometimes they're subtle. If you look closely they're always there.
Social Drinking in Texas: Most people who drink alcohol are social drinkers.
- ...drink or use simply to enhance the pleasure of normally pleasurable experiences, and that's what happens.
- ...don't experience problems of any kind associated with drinking or using.
- ...never feel out of control or that they've had too much to drink or use.
- ...don't think about how much or how often they drink or use; it's just not an issue.
- ...never get complaints about how much or how often they drink or use because there's nothing to complain about.
Alcohol Abuse in Texas: Some people who drink alcohol become alcohol abusers.
- ... use alcohol or drugs to help them change the way they feel about themselves and/or some aspect(s) of their lives.
- ... experience some problems associated with their alcohol or drug use but use those experiences to set appropriate limits on how much and how often they drink or use.
- ... seldom, if ever, repeat the alcohol related behaviors that have caused them problems in the past.
- ... know what their limits are and drink or use within those limits - unless they have a good reason not to.
- ... get complaints about their drinking or using and accept those complaints as expressions of concern for their well-being.
Alcoholism in Texas: A few people who drink alcohol become alcoholics.
- ...experience negative consequences associated with drinking or using but continue to drink or use despite those consequences.
- ...set limits on how much or how often they will drink or use but unexpectedly exceed those limits.
- ...promise themselves and/ or other people that they will drink or use in moderation but break those promises.
- ...feel guilty or remorseful about their drinking or using but still fail to permanently alter the way they drink or use.
- ...get complaints about their drinking or using and resent, discount, and/or disregard those comments and complaints.
Alcohol abuse treatment in Texas is a multi-part process. Before alcohol abuse treatment can begin, however, the problem drinker must first recognize and accept that they have a problem with alcohol. In some cases, the person with the alcohol abuse problem may have insight into their addiction, but they are too proud or too scared to ask for help. In other cases, they genuinely believe that they do not have a problem. In both of these situations, concerned family and friends end up shouldering a taxing mental and emotional burden.
Alcohol detox is an essential first step in the alcohol abuse treatment process. Alcohol detox services ensure that that initial plunge into sobriety is no more trying than it has to be. If you suffer with alcohol abuse, you don't need to be told how devastating it can be. Those with alcohol abuse problems are stripped of their dignity, and their capacity for hope. They lose the ability to care about anyone or anything other than their next drink. The good news is that attending a Texas alcohol abuse treatment program can change all that. And it has to start with alcohol detox. Successful alcohol rehab centers in Texas pay special attention to the role of alcohol detox in the rehabilitation process in order to help you get sober for good.
From a physical perspective, alcohol rehab is concerned first and foremost with breaking the physiological dependencies associated with alcohol abuse. Most alcohol rehab centers incorporate special alcohol detox facilities, in which doctors and caregivers help patients manage the physical symptoms of alcohol withdrawal with a range of advanced medical therapies. The goal, of course, is to allow patients to weather the first stage of sobriety as smoothly as possible, and to prepare them to embark on the rest of their alcohol rehab journeys with sound minds and stable spirits.
But such physical recovery is only the beginning of the alcohol rehab process, not the end. To be effective, a Texas alcohol rehab program must incorporate intensive addiction counseling services, with an eye towards effecting the sort of personal growth and individual development upon which all lasting sobriety must be ultimately be predicated. That alcohol rehab plan which fails to promote emotional healing, you might say, isn't much of an alcohol rehab plan at all; if you're going to get better, you can't do it halfheartedly.
Year |
Total vs. Alcohol Related Fatalities in Texas |
Tot |
Alc-Rel |
% |
0.08+ |
% |
1982 |
4,213 |
2,801 |
66 |
2,570 |
61 |
1983 |
3,823 |
2,503 |
65 |
2,311 |
60 |
1984 |
3,912 |
2,457 |
63 |
2,232 |
57 |
1985 |
3,678 |
2,271 |
62 |
2,021 |
55 |
1986 |
3,567 |
2,206 |
62 |
1,932 |
54 |
1987 |
3,260 |
1,951 |
60 |
1,688 |
52 |
1988 |
3,392 |
2,011 |
59 |
1,775 |
52 |
1989 |
3,370 |
1,927 |
57 |
1,729 |
51 |
1990 |
3,250 |
1,989 |
61 |
1,769 |
54 |
1991 |
3,078 |
1,814 |
59 |
1,604 |
52 |
1992 |
3,059 |
1,818 |
59 |
1,624 |
53 |
1993 |
3,043 |
1,748 |
57 |
1,567 |
52 |
1994 |
3,187 |
1,725 |
54 |
1,546 |
49 |
1995 |
3,183 |
1,739 |
55 |
1,534 |
48 |
1996 |
3,742 |
1,967 |
53 |
1,745 |
47 |
1997 |
3,513 |
1,710 |
49 |
1,521 |
43 |
1998 |
3,586 |
1,745 |
49 |
1,550 |
43 |
1999 |
3,522 |
1,700 |
48 |
1,479 |
42 |
2000 |
3,779 |
1,841 |
49 |
1,642 |
43 |
2001 |
3,736 |
1,807 |
48 |
1,587 |
42 |
2002 |
3,823 |
1,810 |
47 |
1,610 |
42 |
2003 |
3,675 |
1,709 |
47 |
1,500 |
41 |
2004 |
3,583 |
1,642 |
46 |
1,417 |
40 |
2005 |
3,504 |
1,569 |
45 |
1,371 |
39 |
2006 |
3,466 |
1,544 |
45 |
1,354 |
39 |
2007 |
3,363 |
1,485 |
44 |
1,292 |
38 |
2008 |
3,382 |
1,463 |
43 |
1,269 |
38 |
Texas DUI Penalties
First DWI conviction in Texas:
- Mandatory jail sentence of at least 72 hours up to 180 days
- Up to 12 month suspended license
- Up to $2,000 in fines
- Annual fees of up to $2,000 for 3 years to keep driver's license
Second DWI conviction in Texas within 10 years:
- 30 days-1 year in jail
- Up to $4,000 in fines
- 180 days-2 years suspended license
- Annual fees of up to $2,000 for 3 years to keep license
- Installation of ignition interlock device, if 2 or more DWI convictions within 5 years
Third DWI conviction:
- Prison sentence of 2-10 years
- Up to $10,000 in fines
- Up to 2 years suspended license
- Annual fees of up to $2,000 for 3 years to keep license
Refusal to Take Breathalyzer Test:
- Suspended license for 180 days
Texas Alcohol Statistics Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatality Data 2008 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 1,269 | Youth Under 21 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities: | 187 | Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 population | | Total All Ages: | 5.2 | Youth Under 21: | 2.4 | 1998-2008 Percent Change in Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100,000 Population | | Total All Ages: | -26.6 | Youth Under 21: | -44.2 | Hardcore Drunk Drivers Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities Involving High BAC Drivers (.15+): | 65% | Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities Involving Repeat Offenders by BAC level | | BAC .08 - .14: | 26% | BAC .15+: | 74% | Youth Alcohol Consumption Data 2006-2007 (12-20 Year Olds) Consumed Alcohol in the Past Month: | 25.0% | Binge Drinking in the Past Month: | 16.3% | Arrest Data 2008 Driving Under the Influence | | Under 18: | 1,082 | Total All Ages: | 90,066 | Liquor Laws | | Under 18: | 5,601 | Total All Ages: | 29,859 | Drunkenness | | Under 18: | 236 | Total All Ages: | 4,426 |
|
|
|
|
|
Texas Tackling Game Day Alcohol Drinking and Driving
TEXAS - Football game days are among the heaviest days for alcohol consumption. (University of Texas Study, Alcohol Use and Collegiate Sports, November, 2007). Starting this football season, TxDOT is
More | | Texas Jenna Bushs underage alcohol charges
TEXAS - Jenna Bush and her twin sister, Barbara, both 19-year-old college freshmen, were approached by police Tuesday night at a restaurant in Austin, Texas, after Jenna tried to buy alcohol with some
More | |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alcohol Treatment Centers by City in Texas Listed Alphabetically: | | Quick Drug Facts |
Alcohol abuse costs 100 billion dollars annually; it costs about five times more to address the abuse of alcohol than the money generated by retail sales of alcoholic beverages. Business, industry and government spend large amounts of money annually combating the abuse of alcohol in the work place.
|
Alcoholics Anonymous found that 36 percent of its members had been sober for more than 10 years in a 2004 member survey.
|
Gin was invented in Holland in 1650 about the same time European settlers in the West Indies began distilling sugar cane into Rum.
|
One of George Washington's own handwritten recipes for making beer can be seen at the New York Public Library.
|
|
|