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                    November 6, 2013
		Texas Black Caucus defends junket to South Africa
From big-spending liberals in Washington to their counterparts  in the Democratic bastions of urban America – all share a singular talent for  spending other people's money. Consider the case of Sheryl Cole, the first  African-American elected to the City Council in Austin, Texas. Recently, Cole  has been in the public spotlight because of her 10-day trip to South Africa  (unwittingly paid for by Austin taxpayers) as part of a junket organized by the  Texas Legislative Black Caucus.
Local news outlets, led by feisty government watchdog Internet  site "The Austin Bulldog," have recently been calling  attention to Cole's trip two years ago. She stayed at luxury hotels and enjoyed  complimentary beverages and extra legroom on an upgraded airline  flight.
Taxpayers, of course, are generally concerned with mundane  things such as good schools, well-maintained roads, and other public services:  police and fire departments, trash collection, etc. But in justifying her  trip to South Africa, Cole told the Austin-American Statesman that  "Austin is a  global city" and that well, South Africa is dealing with climate change in  unique ways that Austin could learn from in it's effort to contend with global  warming.
                            
Citing The Bulldog, the Statesman's article on Tuesday  noted that "Cole spent $10,508 on travel in 2011, more than each of the six  other council members.” As for her trip to South Africa, the paper said it was  organized by the Texas Legislative Black Caucus. Cole's flight cost just  over $2,400, her hotel rooms $2,827. “I did not set the itinerary,” Cole  pointed out.
Interestingly, Cole isn't even a member of the Texas  Legislative Black Caucus. But the Black Caucus member who arranged the trip, Rep. Helen Giddings, said Cole was invited to  come along because of the valuable perspective she would provide when meeting  with officials in South Africa, according to the Statesman.
“All of the work I do in South Africa has four goals,”  Giddings, a Democrat, explained. “First is to develop trade between South  Africa and Texas. The second is to promote cultural and educational exchanges.  Third is people-to-people dialogue, and fourth is to get involved in some kind  of good-will humanitarian-type initiative that enhances the reputation of  Texas.”
                        
So how have taxpayers benefited from Gidding's 2011 trip and  other trips there? She told the Statesman that the country's ambassador visited  Texas to meet with Texas Agricultural Commissioner Todd Staples. “I cannot say  that anything has happened just yet,” she admitted.
                        
                        
According to the Statesman, “Giddings said caucus members’  expenses were paid for partially by state taxpayers and partially by donations  to the nonprofit organization. She said she did not remember the delegation’s  accommodations “as luxurious, but I do remember them as nice.” She said the  group selected the top hotels as appropriate to the high-level meetings it was  holding.”
Cole, for her part, told the Statesman that she used public  funds that she'd been allotted for personal and travel expenses. “It’s not as  though taxpayers had to pay more because I went to Africa,” she said. 
Interestingly, Cole's use of taxpayer money to visit  South Africa was (as the Statesman noted) detailed more than a year and a  half ago by The Bulldog; but then the local Fox station, on Monday, belatedly  reported some of the embarrassing details of the trip by repeating  information first reported by The Bulldog, and on Tuesday the Statesman  freshened up the story with its own piece. 
Cole, a lawyer and account, has been on the City Council since  2006. She has served as acting mayor and is seen as a likely candidate to run  for Austin's mayor next year. Years ago, as The Bulldog reported, Cole let her  professional licenses lapse. Why make a comfortable living as a lawyer and  accountant when -- as a well-connected member of Austin's liberal political  class -- she can do so much better by feeding  at the public  trough?




