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Amend HB 925 by adding the following appropriately numbered 
SECTION to the bill and renumbering subsequent SECTIONS of the bill 
accordingly:
	SECTION ____.  (a)  Section 772.010, Government Code, as 
added by Chapters 429 and 1339, Acts of the 76th Legislature, 
Regular Session, 1999, is reenacted and amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 772.010.  BORDER COMMERCE COORDINATOR.  (a)  The 
governor shall designate a border commerce coordinator in the 
governor's office or the office of the secretary of state as 
determined by the governor.  The coordinator shall:
		(1)  examine trade issues between the United States, 
Mexico, and Canada;    
		(2)  act as an ombudsman for government agencies within 
the Texas and Mexico border region to help reduce regulations by 
improving communication and cooperation between federal, state, 
and local governments;
		(3)  study the flow of commerce at ports of entry 
between this state and Mexico, including the movement of commercial 
vehicles across the border,[;] and establish a plan to aid that 
commerce and improve the movement of those vehicles;
		(4) [(3)]  work with federal officials to resolve 
transportation issues involving infrastructure, including roads 
and bridges, to allow for the efficient movement of goods and people 
across the border between Texas and Mexico;
		(5) [(4)]  work with federal officials to create a 
unified federal agency process to streamline border crossing needs;
		(6) [(5)]  work to increase funding for the North 
American Development Bank to assist in the financing of water and 
wastewater facilities; and
		(7) [(6)]  explore the sale of excess electric power 
from Texas to Mexico.
	(b)  The governor shall appoint a border commerce 
coordinator to serve at the will of the governor in the governor's 
office or in the office of the secretary of state and may select the 
secretary of state as the coordinator.
	(c)  The coordinator shall work with the interagency work 
group established under Section 772.011, and with local 
governments, metropolitan planning organizations, and other 
appropriate community organizations adjacent to the border of this 
state with the United Mexican States, and with comparable entities 
in Mexican states adjacent to that border, to address the unique 
planning and capacity needs of those areas.  The coordinator shall 
assist those governments, organizations, and entities to identify 
and develop initiatives to address those needs.  Before January 1 
of each year, the coordinator shall submit to the presiding officer 
of each house of the legislature a report of the coordinator's 
activities under this subsection during the preceding year.
	(d)  The coordinator shall:                                             
		(1)  work with private industry and appropriate 
entities of Texas and the United States to require that low-sulfur 
fuel be sold along highways in Texas carrying increased traffic 
related to activities under the North American Free Trade 
Agreement; and
		(2)  work with representatives of the government of 
Mexico and the governments of those Mexican states bordering Texas 
to increase the use of low-sulfur fuel.
	(b)  Chapter 772, Government Code, is amended by adding 
Sections 772.0101 and 772.0102 to read as follows:
	Sec. 772.0101.  BORDER INSPECTION, TRADE, AND 
TRANSPORTATION ADVISORY COMMITTEE.  (a)  The border commerce 
coordinator shall establish and appoint the members of the Border 
Inspection, Trade, and Transportation Advisory Committee.  The 
members must include representatives of the Texas Department of 
Transportation, the Department of Public Safety of the State of 
Texas, the Office of State-Federal Relations, the United States 
Department of Transportation, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
Administration, and other representatives of state and federal 
agencies involved in border crossing issues.  Chapter 2110 does not 
apply to the size, composition, or duration of the Border 
Inspection, Trade, and Transportation Advisory Committee.
	(b)  The coordinator shall work with the advisory committee 
and the interagency work group established under Section 772.011 
to:
		(1)  identify problems involved with border truck 
inspections and related trade and transportation infrastructure; 
and
		(2)  develop recommendations for addressing those 
problems.          
	(c)  The coordinator shall work with the advisory committee 
and appropriate agencies of Texas, the United States, and Mexico to 
develop initiatives to mitigate congestion at ports of entry at the 
Mexican border by conducting in Mexico inspections of trucks 
entering Texas.  In developing the initiatives, the coordinator 
shall give consideration to similar initiatives proposed or 
implemented at the border of the United States and Canada.
	(d)  The coordinator shall report quarterly to the presiding 
officer of each house of the legislature on the findings and 
recommendations of the advisory committee.
	Sec. 772.0102.  TRADE AND COMMERCE PLAN.  (a)  The border 
commerce coordinator shall develop, in conjunction with 
representatives of chambers of commerce, metropolitan planning 
organizations adjacent to the United Mexican States, and private 
industry groups, and with the advice of the interagency work group 
established under Section 772.011, a comprehensive trade and 
commerce plan for the region designed to:
		(1)  increase trade by attracting new business 
ventures;             
		(2)  support expansion of existing industries; and                     
		(3)  address workforce training needs.                                 
	(b)  The plan must cover five-year, 10-year, and 15-year 
periods.     
	(c)  The coordinator shall work with industries and 
communities on both sides of the border to develop international 
industry cluster initiatives to capitalize on resources available 
in communities located adjacent to each other across the border.
	(d)  The coordinator shall conduct annual conferences of 
interested persons, working with chambers of commerce and 
universities of this state along the Texas and Mexico border 
region, and shall host those conferences at no cost to the 
coordinator.  The purposes of the conferences are to:
		(1)  make the trade and commerce plan public;                          
		(2)  report on updated findings and progress of 
implementation of the plan; and
		(3)  develop new international industry cluster 
initiatives.         
	(c)  This section takes effect only if a specific 
appropriation for the implementation of this section is provided in 
S.B. No. 1 (General Appropriations Act), Acts of the 79th 
Legislature, Regular Session, 2005.  If no specific appropriation 
is provided in the General Appropriations Act, this section has no 
effect.