Tag Archive for: Toth

Toth Continues Assaults on First Amendment, Human Rights, Common Sense

3/2/26 – In one of the most hotly contested primaries in recent memory, State Rep. Steve Toth is running against Congressman Dan Crenshaw in the newly redrawn Congressional District 2. I urge you to vote for Crenshaw who has consistently delivered flood-mitigation dollars for the Lake Houston Area. But that’s not the only reason.

Speech Suppression, Refusal to Debate, Lies, Black Money

Toth’s supporters have:

  • Relentlessly destroyed Crenshaw signs
  • Rudely interfered with Crenshaw campaign workers at polling places
  • Loudly disrupted Crenshaw meetings
One of many Crenshaw signs destroyed in the middle of the night the day before the primary.
Toth supporters defacing Crenshaw sign
Another destroyed earlier

Toth himself has:

  • Deployed an army of bots, trolls and “engagement farms” to flood social media with unsubstantiated, negative comments about Crenshaw
  • Boycotted two scheduled debates with Crenshaw in the Woodlands and with the Chronicle
  • Repeatedly and knowingly lied about Crenshaw’s assets while concealing his own
  • Used a half million dollars from a Colony Ridge banker to attack Crenshaw, who demanded an investigation into Colony Ridge and its financing practices.

Negative Voting Record, Negative Campaigning

Mr. Toth tears down his opponent because he has virtually nothing positive to say about himself. Toth has one of the most negative voting records in the Texas Legislature.

Understanding what Toth voted NO on gives you deeper insight into the man and his values.

In 2025, Toth voted against flood mitigation, flood-warning systems, free speech, food banks, cybersecurity, conservation, grid reliability, open meetings, transparency, ethics, border security, fraud protections, and disclosure of campaign finance information. 

Toth also voted against groups, such as law enforcement, first responders, consumers, patients, motorists, veterans, educators, CPAs, dentists, dental hygienists, farmers, restauranteurs, insurers, aviators, heath-care providers, seniors, schoolchildren, whistleblowers, correctional officers, manufacturers, attorneys, college students, utility employees, people who work from home, flood victims, crime victims, and rural Texans.

In the previous two legislatures, Toth voted AGAINST:

  • Handicapped parking at polling places
  • Allowing people to affiliate with the political party of their choice
  • The Texas Ethics Commission
  • Sexual harassment prevention
  • Gulf Coast hurricane protection
  • Online consumer protections
  • Property tax relief
  • Combatting human trafficking
  • Workplace violence prevention policies
  • Whistleblower protection
  • Training programs for child-abuse investigators
  • Prohibiting construction of assisted-living facilities in Harris County 100-year floodplains
  • Reporting cybersecurity breaches

Toth voted against a majority of Republicans on every single one of these measures and hundreds more. On many of them, more than 90% of Republicans voted FOR the bills.

How Extremists Like Toth Can Hijack an Election

Voting NO so often helps Toth boost his conservative rating among some far right-leaning groups. But it also means, he has accomplished virtually nothing. He has nothing positive he can say about himself. He has NO record to run on. So, he tears down his opponent. That’s all he can do. And all he has done.

As of the end of two weeks of early voting, 8.1% of registered voters had voted. If half of those are Democrats, that means 4% of voters will determine the Republican candidate in CD-2 – unless YOU vote Tuesday, March 3rd.

Extremists like Toth represent a huge percentage of that 4%. The nut cases ALL vote.

Don’t let them determine your choices in November.

Please vote for Crenshaw if you want to continue seeing flood-mitigation improvements. He has brought hundreds of millions of flood-mitigation dollars to the Lake Houston Area.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 3/2/26

3107 Days since Hurricane Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

How to Recognize Political Deception from Trolls, Bots and Engagement Farms

2/17/26 – Early voting starts today. I hope everyone votes. Electing people who address the problems of their constituents is essential. But sometimes, it’s hard to recognize who those people are because of political deception using trolls, bots and “engagement farms.” These invisible influencers can:

  • Undermine our understanding of issues
  • Alter our perception of reality, much like a drug would
  • Rob us of the power to make informed decisions
  • Trick us into voting against our own self-interest.

How? By flooding social media with false information disguised as comments from legitimate users, they make it appear as though there is a groundswell of opposition to a particular candidate.

My First Clue

Several weeks ago, I posted what I thought was an innocent story about Congressman Dan Crenshaw. It detailed how a Federal grant he secured for improvements to the Kingwood Diversion Ditch kept the project from being killed by Democrats in Harris County Commissioners Court.

Out of nowhere, the post was flooded with off-topic comments criticizing Crenshaw and promoting Steve Toth. Toth is running against Crenshaw in the new Texas Congressional District 2.

My post never mentioned Toth. But comments on the post ripped apart Crenshaw, a war hero who has dedicated his life to public service and improving public safety.

Toth’s trolls were as relentless as a pack of rabid jackals. I spent hours trying to respond to their inane comments before I gave up … exhausted. Since then, I’ve been investigating what happened. It goes way beyond the childish defacing of an opponents election signs … which Toth also does.

Photo taken today outside polling location. In Texas, this is criminal, with fines up to $2,000 and up to 30 days in jail.

Online, bots and trolls can be programmed to bomb posts and pages with scripted comments that wear down humans and crowd out legitimate discussion. They often work together to create the impression of widespread discontent about political opponents. This can influence people who may not follow politics closely. They sense the majority has concerns about a candidate. So, they vote for his/her opponent.

Engagement Farms

I also learned about “engagement farms.” Engagement farms coordinate employees who control multiple accounts and are directed to:

  • Comment
  • Dislike
  • Share
  • Gang up on others
  • Attack opponents
  • Artificially inflate visibility.

They are often paid by the volume of interactions. ChatGPT cites publicly advertised engagement-farm service rates ranging from $50 to $300 per 1000 comments. Now you know why trolls often use one word comments such as “Hogwash”!

Unlike bots, engagement farms generate authentic human interaction. That makes detecting them harder. But they all use similar techniques to slime an opponent’s reputation.

How to Recognize When You’re Arguing with a Troll, Bot or Engagement Farm

Below, I use the word “troll” to apply to all three categories. Their tactics and goals are similar. Their hallmarks include:

  • Intentional provocation (not just disagreement):
    • They post inflammatory, extreme or deliberately offensive claims to trigger outrage
    • When others try to respond constructively, they steer toward conflict
    • They seek antagonism
    • Comments amplify conflict rather than resolve it
    • Trolls label someone as corrupt, inept, or bad without evidence.
  • Bad-faith argumentation:
    • Ignoring responses
    • Misrepresenting others’ positions to make them easier to attack
    • Moving the goal posts once counter-evidence appears
    • Trying to muddy the analysis
    • Nitpicking technicalities to derail substantive discussion
    • No amount of evidence ever convinces a troll.
  • Circular discussions
  • Anonymity and disposable identities:
    • Trolls often operate from new accounts with no or little history in them
    • The accounts have no or minimal personal information
    • These allow lying without jeopardizing the reputation of the troll
    • If blocked, new fake accounts quickly replace old fake accounts.
  • Derailing topic threads into unrelated controversies
  • Hijacking legitimate discussion with ideological provocation
  • Repeating previously debunked claims to restart conflict
  • Rapid “pile on” behavior indicates coordinated activity
  • Minimal debate among those piling on
  • Unlike someone who simply vents, trolls typically:
    • Re-engage repeatedly after pushback
    • Continue, even when ignored, to escalate intensity and reignite arguments
    • Seek visibility, not persuasion
    • Take extreme, minority positions to provoke conflict
    • Cast doubt without proving allegations
    • Spew misinformation
    • Cite obscure blogs or misleading statistics
    • Present partial truths without context
    • Mix legitimate data with distortions.
  • Claiming false affiliations (I’m a lifelong Republican, but that guy…)
  • Pretending to be local when they may be overseas
  • Selective skepticism:
    • They apply high evidentiary standards to opponents, but…
    • Accept vague, anecdotal evidence that supports their side
    • Ignore contradictory facts.
  • Coordinated behavior:
    • Multiple accounts repeat similar phrases
    • Synchronized messaging
    • Identical sentence structures
    • Specific rhetorical constructions, such as:
      • Unusual word choices
      • Semantic duplication, even when wording changes slightly
      • Copy-pasted paragraphs with minor edits
      • The same metaphors, accusations and claims without citations or context (He’s a RINO!)
      • Reused rhetoric
      • Name-calling
  • High outward aggression, low inward disagreement.

Why It Matters

Trolls use intentional, bad-faith provocation to disrupt legitimate discourse or elicit emotional reactions. Trolls want to mislead. Their disruption denies people the information they need to make voting decisions based on facts.

Political trolling also increases polarization and creates public distrust of government. People begin to think, “All politicians are corrupt.”

Taking Trolling to Next Level

“Engagement Farms” pay people to perform online tasks that influence your behavior. They began a decade or so ago by paying people to submit fake product reviews. In politics today, they are used to:

  • Damage and harass opponents
  • Simulate grassroots outrage
  • Influence undecideds.

Engagement farm attacks:

  • Feel personal
  • Appear socially validated
  • Create a strong perception of widespread consensus.

They seek to make you doubt. In the end, unless you really know the contestants first hand, you may follow an imaginary crowd. They make it hard to discern fact from fiction. And that is happening in the Crenshaw/Toth race.

Exploiting a Regulatory Gap

Social media comment-based attacks often avoid regulations on traditional advertising. For instance, they don’t require disclosure of the sponsor. This regulatory gap is significant.

Super PACs can often legally spend unlimited, untraceable amounts on engagement farm services.

While hiding behind the First Amendment, they wear down and exhaust humans trying to interact legitimately.

Bob Rehak

In the digital age, they amplify digital discontent like hecklers at a political rally. Enforcement actions against them are rare, difficult to prove and occur long after the election is over…if ever.

I personally believe nothing coming from the Toth camp. I’ve caught them in too many lies. I have endorsed Crenshaw, a man I have known for eight years and who has delivered hundreds of millions of flood-mitigation dollars for the Lake Houston Area.

Caution: Disclaimer

Campaign supporters acting individually may use some of the tactics outlined above. Some may even support Steve Toth without pay.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 2/17/26

3094 Days since Hurricane Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

Vote for Crenshaw in Congressional District 2 Republican Primary

2/14/26 – The Republican primary in the newly redrawn Congressional District 2 (CD2) pits U.S. Congressman Dan Crenshaw against State Rep. Steve Toth.

Crenshaw is running for his fifth term in Washington. Toth is running for his first, although Toth has served five terms in the Texas House representing a portion of southern Montgomery County.

I endorse Crenshaw for several reasons, not the least of which is his experience and seniority in Washington. That has enabled him to bring home hundreds of millions of dollars in flood-mitigation funds for CD-2.

From a flood-mitigation perspective, Crenshaw equals “proven results.”

Bob Rehak
Dan Crenshaw (center) reviewing flood damage along Harris/MoCo line.

Crenshaw (black shirt) saw first hand why Elm Grove flooded. Then he got mitigation dollars to help the victims.

Crenshaw Delivers Results, Not Spin

Crenshaw isn’t just saying flood-mitigation is important to get your vote. He has repeatedly delivered dollars to reduce flood risk. He has authored and passed legislation that has funded upstream detention, dredging and additional gates for the Lake Houston Dam – exactly what he promised in 2018.

  • Upstream detention reduces stormwater coming into the Lake Houston Area during floods
  • Dredging increases the conveyance of rivers and streams so they don’t overflow into your living room
  • More floodgates will allow faster lowering of lake levels before storms to create more storage capacity in the lake. They will also lower lake levels faster during storms to help keep floodwaters at manageable levels.

Flood mitigation requires doing the hard work of crafting support for such measures among colleagues in the legislature..

Saying you’re FOR something is simple. Delivering results is much harder.

And Crenshaw has delivered consistently. Seniority and relationships count for something in Congress. Crenshaw’s opponent has neither.

Crenshaw’s Opponent Consistently Voted Against Flood Mitigation

Even worse, Crenshaw’s opponent consistently voted AGAINST measures that would have helped protect the Lake Houston Area.

Mr. Toth voted AGAINST:

Toth Doesn’t Study Issues

Mr. Toth has tried to justify his vote on the dredging district by spreading misinformation. He claims that flood control is the sole reason the Legislature established the San Jacinto River Authority (SJRA) and that SJRA should be responsible for dredging.

@SteveTothTX, X, 10/11/25

Actually, the SJRA’s enabling legislation listed 19 reasons for its creation. Most have to do with water supply. In fact, flood control is mentioned only within the context of building dams for water supply. The enabling legislation never mentions dredging.

Toth’s Voting Record and Tactics

If you really want to see what Toth stands FOR, see what he voted AGAINST. Toth voted against free speech, food banks, cybersecurity, conservation, grid reliability, open meetings, transparency, ethics, border security, fraud protections, and disclosure of campaign finance information. He even voted AGAINST bills to protect victims of family abuse and sex trafficking. His voting records in 2021 and 2023 were shocking. And in 2025, he reached new lows.

He even called me dishonest for simply reporting his official voting record from the Texas Legislature Online website. Watch out. Disagree with him and he’ll sic his rabid pack of paid trolls on you, too!

Reasonable Republicans Must Vote in Primary

Toth leads a group of Montgomery County extremists who are so far right they border on anarchists. But they all vote in primaries. And that’s precisely why it’s important for reasonable Republicans who care about public safety to vote in this primary.

Given the composition of the new CD2, the real election starts this week. I’m voting for Crenshaw and I hope you do, too, with your friends, neighbors and relatives. Before it’s too late.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 2/15/26

3092 Days since Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

Steve Toth’s Shocking Voting Record on Flooding and Other Issues

2/1/26 – State Representative Steve Toth is running against U.S. Representative Dan Crenshaw in the Republican primary for the second congressional district of Texas.

To date, Toth has run a largely negative campaign, smearing Crenshaw with half-truths and lies. When I posted a positive story about Crenshaw’s work in Congress to reduce flood risk, dozens of hired Toth trolls flooded Facebook with false negative comments about Crenshaw – all unsubstantiated.

Usually, when candidates have nothing positive to say about themselves, they tear down opponents. That made me curious. So, I investigated Toth’s voting record in Austin. Toth voted NO on every bill below. And…

On every vote, Toth went against a majority of Republicans voting YES.

Because bill descriptions can get quite long, I summarized them. However, using the bill numbers and their years in the table below, you can easily look up everything about them in the Texas Legislature Online website. (So far, I’ve only gotten through the 2021 and 2023 sessions.)

Steve Toth Voted NO on…

Steve Toth voted NO on all of these bills. What would you have voted?

Steve Toth:Bill #% Other Republicans Voting FOR
Voted against a hotline to report workplace violence HB 915 in 202383%
Voted against allowing people to affiliate with the political party of their choice.HB 1635 in 202394%
Voted against handicapped parking at polling placesHB 386 in 202392%
Voted against simplifying disclosure of election informationHB 4053 in 2023
53%
Voted against the Texas Ethics Commission educating people about its work, which includes campaign finance disclosureSB 62 in 202157%
Voted against sexual harassment preventionSB 2233 in 202181%
Voted against expanding water infrastructureHJR 169 in 202391%
Voted against oil well cleanupHB 3973 in 202153%
Voted against hurricane protection for the Gulf CoastSB 1160 in 202176%
Voted against military law enforcementHB 3452 in 202180%
Voted against economic growthHB 1392 in 202390%
Voted against highway improvementsHB 1392 in 202390%
Voted against cybersecurity protectionHB 4018 in 202170%
Voted against disaster response loansHB 2812 in 202177%
Voted against training for drug overdose treatmentSB 998 in 202389%
Voted against “Made-in-Texas” labeling standardsHB 2194 in 202383%
Voted against basic standards of care for dogs and cats bred in captivitySB 876 in 202372%
Voted against child-labor penaltiesHB 2459 in 202375%
Voted against penalties for importing invasive snake species HB 2326 in 202163%
Voted against tax relief for farm familiesHB 3241 in 202398%
Voted against online consumer protectionHB 3745 in 202180%
Voted against preventing sexual-harassment in the workplaceSB 45 in 202167%
Voted against uniform election dates HB 2133 in 202388%
Voted against higher qualifications for sheriffsSB 1124 in 202377%
Voted against making it easier for people with disabilities to voteSB 477 in 202369%
Voted against financing water projectsSJR 75 in 202394%
Voted against improving electric reliabilityHB 1607 in 202168%
Voted against consumer protections for electricity customersHB 16 in 202168%
Voted against making it easier to buy solar productsSB 398 in 202175%
Voted against making it easier for energy companies to repay repair expenses from Winter Storm UriHB 4492 in 202178%
Voted against property tax reliefHJR 102 in 202356%
Voted against reporting cybersecurity breaches SB 271 in 202398%
Voted against pay parity for Texas police officersHB 2297 in 202398%
Voted against the economic stabilization fundHJR 82 in 202183%
Voted against disclosure of occupational licensesHB 2404 in 202195%
Voted against improving state information technologyHB 4018 in 202170%
Voted against mental health fundingHB 15 in 202363%
Voted against the Texas University FundHJR 3 in 202388%
Voted against providing opioid intervention on college campusesHB 3338 in 202380%
Voted against bonds for a Brain Institute of TexasHJR 5 in 202156%
Voted against a Texas Epidemic Public Health Institute SB 1780 in 202171%
Voted against combatting human traffickingHB 3772 in 202359%
Voted against closing massage parlors involved in human traffickingHB 3579 in 202380%
Voted against training hotel/motel employees to recognize human traffickingHB 390 in 202178%
Voted against improving preparedness for wind/hail stormsHB 4354 in 202385%
Voted against requiring insurers to disclose prescription drug coverageSB 622 in 202373%
Voted against access to fertility preservation services for cancer patientsHB 1649 in 202363%
Voted against requiring health plans to cover ovarian cancer screening in annual examsHB 428 in 202179%
Voted against allowing clinicians to dispense cancer drugsHB 1586 in 202173%
Voted against updating voyeurism laws to account for hidden camerasHB 2306 in 202398%
Voted against making criminal sentencing data available to publicHB 3937 in 202377%
Voted against classifying highway obstruction by street gangs as a criminal offenseHB 1442 in 202381%
Voted against a task force to prevent organized retail theftHB 1826 in 202393%
Voted against minimum salaries for county sheriffsHB 626 in 202394%
Voted against requiring perpetrators of certain felonies to provide DNAHB 3956 in 202388%
Voted against requiring correctional officers to wear body camsHB 1524 in 202363%
Voted against increasing fines on those engaged in anti-trust activitiesHB 5232 in 202399%
Voted against cracking down on the use of AI to generate false sexualized images of peopleHB1896 in 202398%
Voted against speeding up DNA analysisHB 3957 in 202393%
Voted against dismissing controlled-substance cases even when tests proved no controlled substance was involvedHB 3686 in 202392%
Voted against creating a centralized portal for DPS lab recordsSB 991 in 202392%
Voted against expanding the definition of stalking to include previous family violenceSB 1717 in 202367%
Voted against handgun proficiency instruction for security officialsHB 3424 in 202388%
Voted against limiting physician liability for medically necessary procedures when patients give informed consentHB 3058 in 202387%
Voted against reimbursing counties for GPS monitoring in family violence casesHB 1906 in 202165%
Voted against preventing financial abuse of nursing home residentsSB 270 in 202195%
Voted against increasing punishments for criminal offenses against public servantsHB 624 in 202184%
Voted against creating a new offense for boating with a child while drunkHB 2505 in 202184%
Voted against ensuring accuracy of DPS databases of street-gang membersHB 1838 in 202172%
Voted against increasing the penalties for assault against a process serverHB 1306 in 202191%
Voted against installing climate control systems in prisonsHB 1971 in 202177%
Voted against making retaliation against a public servant a second-degree felonyHB 285 in 202194%
Voted against creating an offense for providing false or misleading information to the National Instant Criminal Background Check SystemSB 162 in 202183%
Voted against restricting the use of choke holds by policeSB 69 in 202191%
Voted against prohibiting entity names that falsely imply governmental affiliationHB 1493 in 202183%
Voted against making ballot language consistent with election ordersHB 4704 in 202376%
Voted against giving surviving spouses and children of those who died while serving in the US Armed Forced free access to state parksHB 1740 in 202397%
Voted against increasing homestead exemptions for surviving spouses of members of US Armed ForcesHB 4181 in 202392%
Voted against mental health services for vets and their familiesHB 1457 in 202378%
Voted against 100% property tax exemptions for totally disabled vetsHB 1613 in 202393%
Voted against employment training for vets HB 739 in 202168%
Voted against limited property-tax exemptions for homeowners with intellectual or developmental disabilitiesHB 3640 in 202393%
Voted against allowing local tax exemptions for day care facilitiesSJR 64 in 202359%
Voted against protecting landlords that evict illegal massage operatorsHB 3536 in 202374%
Voted against economic development programs that allowed ISD tax abatement agreementsHB 5 in 202385%
Voted against tax abatement for physicians who offered free services to the indigentHJR 25 in 202189%
Voted against pre-kindergarten HB 1615 in 202374%
Voted against sharing existing school-training courses with employees of child-care facilitiesHB 1905 in 202360%
Voted against CPR instruction for grades 7-12HB 4375 in 202393%
Voted against “career-investigation days” for high school juniors and seniorsSB68 in 202398%
Voted against school-crossing-zone protections for high schoolsHB 1263 in 202395%
Voted against allowing accredited armed-forces instructors to teach in K-12 public schools while they complete civilian educator-prep programsSB 544 in 202396%
Voted against prohibiting parents who injured officials at sporting events from attending future eventsHB 2484 in 202389%
Voted against “digital citizenship” instructionHB 129 in 2021 58%
Voted against child-abuse, family-violence, dating-violence and sex-trafficking educationSB 9 in 202165%
Voted against workplace-violence-prevention policiesSB 240 in 202369%
Voted against requiring health plans to apply third-party payments that would reduce prescription costsHB 999 in 202392%
Voted against extending Medicaid coverage for pregnant womenHB 12 in 202390%
Voted against allowing Physician Assistants from certain other pre-approved states to practice in Texas without a new licenseHB 2544 in 202387%
Voted against reporting maternal mortality data to Dept. of State Health ServicesHB 663 in 202387%
Voted against requiring assisted-living facilities to provide Alzheimer’s training to staffHB 1673 in 202382%
Voted against prohibiting nursing home facilities from misappropriating federal grants made to residents on MedicaidHB 1290 in 202395%
Voted against improving public access to occupational therapyHB 1683 in 202393%
Voted against including the names of people found guilty of child abuse or neglect in a central registryHB 2572 in 202366%
Voted against prohibiting the state from retaliating against employees who report a criminal offenseSB182/Amendment 1 in 202352%
Voted against expanding disposal programs for expired prescription drugs statewideSB 2173 in 202360%
Voted against a program to improve health outcomes for pregnant women and their childrenHB 1575 in 202387%
Voted against a training program for those investigating child abuse/neglectSB 1447 in 202364%
Voted against providing luggage for transporting belongings of foster childrenHB 3765 in 202374%
Voted against aid for human-trafficking victimsHB 2633 in 202171%
Voted against waiving driver’s license fees/costs for foster or homeless childrenSB 2054 in 202187%
Voted against a bill prohibiting construction of new assisted living facilities in Harris County 100-year floodplainsHB1681 in 202161%
Voted against a bill increasing penalties for felons in unlawful possession of a firearmHB4843 in 202382%
Voted against a motor-fuel tax exemption for food-bank trucksHB 3599 in 202397%
Voted against creating a Texas Space CommissionHB 3447 in 202386%
Voted against record-keeping requirements for used catalytic converter sales HB 4110 in 2021 63%

Actions Speak Louder than Hired Trolls and Campaign Platitudes

By voting NO, Toth boosts his “conservative” rating among some right-leaning think tanks. He touts that rating heavily, but…

Understanding what Toth voted NO on gives you deeper insight into the man and his values.

Toth Voted No On Flood-Mitigation

Toth represents the sand-mining areas in Montgomery County. They send much of the sediment downstream that reduces conveyance of our rivers and streams. Yet he has done nothing I have seen to help control them.

Even worse, he voted NO on Charles Cunningham’s bill (HB 1532) to create a dredging district for the Lake Houston Area in the last session.

He also voted NO on HB 1681 in 2021, a bill that prohibited building assisted-living facilities in Harris County’s 100-year floodplains. (See red entry above.)

One third of all the people in Harris County who died as a result of Harvey lived in one such facility near Kingwood Town Center – in a 500-year flood plain.

After the Camp Mystic tragedy last year when more than 135 people died in flash flooding, Toth even voted for the right to continue building kids camps in floodplains.

Get Out the Vote

Make sure you vote in the upcoming primaries. And make sure you get all your friends and neighbors out to vote, too. This will literally be a life-and-death election for the Lake Houston Area.

I’m voting for Crenshaw. I hope you do, too.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 2/1/2027

3078 Days since Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

Toth Fights for Right to Build Kids’ Camps in Floodplains

8/21/25 – State Representative Steve Toth, who has announced his intention to run against U.S. Congressman Dan Crenshaw in the next election cycle, posted a video on Facebook today. In it, he says prohibiting the building of youth camps in floodplains is “ridiculous.” He also worries that it would “destroy camping in Texas.”

His comment about destroying camping is a slap in the face to the parents who lost children at Camp Mystic in the July disaster on the Guadalupe River. More than 135 people died in flash flooding, many of them young girls at Camp Mystic.

Toth Video

Below is the 48-second video that Toth posted.

Text of Toth Video

Because of background noise in the video, I’ve transcribed the text below.

Toth: “HB-1 sets up legislation to protect kids from the devastating floods that took so many lives at Camp Mystic. Only the amendment that the Democrats put on it basically restricts the building of any kind of sleeping quarters in floodways, not floodplains. The kids that were killed at Mystic were actually in a floodway.”

“This is going to basically close most of the youth camps in Texas. Twenty percent of Texas is in floodplains – not floodways – floodplains. And while, yes, we want to keep camps out of floodways … the idea of trying to say that you can’t build in a floodplain is ridiculous. This is going to destroy camping in the state of Texas.

Specifics of Bill and Amendments

HB-1 is the Youth CAMPER Act. CAMPER stands for youth Camp Alert, Mitigation, Preparedness and Emergency Response. The bill requires youth camps to develop emergency plans; train employees how to implement them; make the plans available to campers and their parents; and share them with emergency response personnel in the vicinity.

Here’s the full text of the bill as introduced, which Toth co-authored with dozens of his colleagues. For more on HB-1, see the House analysis.

Representative Donna Howard, a Democrat from Austin (another co-author of the bill) offered the amendment that Toth complained about. It says that a state license may not be issued or renewed “for a youth camp that operates one or more cabins located within a floodplain.” Elsewhere in her amendment, Howard defines “floodplain” as the FEMA 100-year floodplain.

Howard’s amendment passed 73 to 59. Toth voted against it, even though he later voted for the bill itself as amended. HB-1 passed in the House by 135 to 1. The engrossed (as amended) version now goes to the Senate.

Problems with Toth Claims

Toth makes several misleading statements in his video.

Implying All Victims in Floodway

Toth implies all fatalities occurred in cabins located in the floodway of the Guadalupe. However, news reports indicate that many of the victims were in cabins outside the floodway although I can’t find an official count at this time.

Implying It’s Safe to Build in Floodplains

Mr. Toth implies that if all the campers had slept in the floodplain instead of the floodway, they would have been safe. That’s like a drug company downplaying a dangerous side effect.

Almost six million people live in Texas floodplains. And according to USGS, Texas consistently leads the nation in flood-related fatalities. In fact, we have more than twice the number of the next nearest state. 

Serious Omissions

In Mr. Toth’s black-and-white view of flood risk (Floodway is bad; floodplain is safe), he fails to disclose the considerable uncertainty, politicking, and protesting that accompanies flood maps, largely because of the way they affect developers and flood insurance. Toth should know that if he’s running for Congress.

FEMA’s maps are based on statistical probabilities and often revised after major storms to reflect new knowledge. In the case of Camp Mystic, FEMA last revised that area’s flood maps in 2011, years before Hurricane Harvey and Atlas 14. Both the floodway and floodplains will expand based on newly acquired data. So, cabins shown outside the floodway are, in all likelihood, deep into it. That’s another potentially fatal misleading statement by Toth.

Camp Mystic in FEMA’s National Flood Hazard Layer Viewer. Cross-hatch = floodway. Aqua = 100-year floodplain. Tan = 500-year floodplain. Note small green type showing date of map: 2011. Great enlargement shows many of the cabins appear to be built in the aqua and tan areas in the upper right next to the floodway.
“Saying You Can’t Build in a Floodplain is Ridiculous”

Mr. Toth seems to be trying to legitimize building in floodplains. It’s true that many people do. In fact, about 20% of the people in Texas (5.9 million) live in 100- and 500-year floodplains. Toth seems to dismiss the risks, costs, deaths, and disruptions to the economy, like many before him.

Because of thinking like that, more people live in Texas floodplains than the populations of 30 states. And that comes at a tremendous cost to taxpayers, not just those who pay with their lives.

As a society, we spend trillions of dollars on flood mitigation, flood repairs, and flood insurance. The Joint Economic Committee (JEC) estimates that the total annual economic cost of flooding—covering infrastructure damage; lost productivity; home and commercial damage; ecosystem losses; and more—ranges between $179.8 billion and $496.0 billion in 2023 dollars.

That’s a pretty hefty share of the annual federal budget. But I guess Mr. Toth isn’t thinking that far ahead. That’s not good for a man who wants to represent you in Congress.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 8/21/2025

2914 Days since Hurricane Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

Explanation of Toth’s Negative Votes on Dredging Bills Not Supported by Evidence

7/28/2025 – State Representative Steve Toth has announced a bid to unseat U.S. Congressman Dan Crenshaw in next year’s Republican primary. While Crenshaw helped secure more than $120 million dollars for dredging in the Lake Houston Area after Harvey to reduce flood risk, Toth voted against bills to create a Lake Houston Dredging District THREE times in five years.

Toth claims that the Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF), a powerful Republican think tank, was “also against the bill.” However, a search of the TPPF website turned up no mention of any of the three bills. They included:

  • HB 2525 in 2021 (by former State Rep. Dan Huberty)
  • HB 5341 in 2023 (by current State Rep. Charles Cunningham)
  • HB 1532 in 2025 (also by Cunningham)

I searched the TPPF website for each of the bill numbers (with and without spaces and hyphens). I also searched it for key words such as “dredging” and “Lake Houston.” None of the searches turned up any mention of any of the bills. Moreover, neither of the bills’ authors could recall TPPF taking a stance for or against the bill(s), nor could their chiefs of staff.

Likewise, neither Google, nor ChatGPT, found any public records indicating that TPPF adopted a position against the creation of a Lake Houston Dredging District.

Witness Lists Don’t Support Toth Claim Either

The list of witnesses who addressed the House Natural Resources Committee on HB 2525 in 2021 shows no one from the TPPF. Ditto for the Senate testimony.

I could find only two public comments in 2023 – both written and neither from TPPF.

The same holds true for HB 1532 in 2025. No comments from TPPF in the House, nor in the Senate!

The only people who ever testified against any of the three versions of the Dredging District bills represented water authorities, not TPPF.

Error-Ridden Defense of Negative Votes

A close examination of Rep. Toth’s defense of his negative votes shows other troubling issues, too. See below.

From Facebook post by Toth Campaign
Five Issues in Six Sentences

In the six full sentences above, I quickly spotted five major issues.

  • #1 – I can find no public records of TPPF being against any of the dredging bills as discussed above.
  • #2 – “One more taxing agency.” The 2025 version of the bill (HB 1532) that became law states explicitly that the dredging district cannot levy taxes. Do you really want a representative who doesn’t read the legislation he’s voting on?
  • #3 – SJRA responsible for Kingwood flooding? It was a combination of factors. Lack of dredging for decades reduced the conveyance of the West Fork by up to 15 feet. That’s why we need regular dredging as the Army Corps recommended.
  • #4 – Even if TPPF was against the bill, who cares? Toth is running to represent tens of thousands of Lake Houston Area residents and business people that flooded – not the TPPF. Do you really want a representative who votes against the needs of constituents to curry favor with a think tank in Austin that doesn’t even list flooding as an issue it cares about?
  • #5 – If the TPPF was against the 2025 bill, why did so many Republicans vote for it? It passed the House by 114 to 19 and the Senate by 30 to 1.

Mr. Toth certainly doesn’t inspire my trust.

No Reply from Toth Yet

Johnna Wells, the lady who elicited the response above from Rep. Toth has invited him to come to Kingwood and address voters on these issues. He indicated a willingness to talk to her, but wouldn’t say when.

In the hall of mirrors that political discourse has become in recent years, it’s important to verify the claims you hear or see.

If Mr. Toth wishes to respond to the observations in this post, I will be happy to print his point of view. But he must start with who at TPPF came out against the bill. What did they say? When? And where? And how can it be verified?

What started out as unexplained votes has quickly morphed into a major trust issue.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 7/28/2025

2990 Days since Hurricane Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

West Fork Dredging Contract Complete, But Job Far from Over

7/27/25 – Callan Marine is done with its City of Houston West Fork dredging contract. The contract used the last of the FEMA money that U.S. Congressman Dan Crenshaw helped obtain for dredging the West Fork Mouth Bar and the surrounding area after Harvey.

The City hired Callan to dredge 800,000 cubic yards from the San Jacinto West Fork between Kings Point, Atascocita and FM1960. But even though that contract is now complete, the need for dredging is far from over. Let me explain.

Pictures Taken Today

The General Pershing, Callan’s dredge was docked today on the east side of Lake Houston, just south of FM1960.

Dredging Demobilization
Miles of massive dredge pipe used in the operation were pulled onshore, waiting for removal.
The placement area next to the Luce Bayou Inter-Basin Transfer Canal was vacant. Callan had removed all of its equipment.
The gates that let return-water out of the placement area had been removed (lower right).
The return-water channel from the placement area was filled in. Straw had been placed across the filled channel to retard erosion.
Callan filled the area inside the perimeter berms almost completely.

But just upstream from from where the dredging took place, the West Fork is already filling in again near the West Lake Houston Parkway Bridge.

need for more dredging
The area near Kings Harbor is only 1-2 feet deep. The Army Corps dredged this area just a few years ago.
Not many people will be tying their boats up here near Raffa’s.
Dredging complete
Farther upstream, it’s the same story. Boaters told me today the outfall of the Kingwood Diversion Ditch (shown above) is only about 6″ to a 1′ deep at River Grove Park.

Ironically, the Army Corps liberated River Grove from a giant sand build up just a few years ago. Remember what this area looked like then? See below.

River Grove Sand Bar
Same area in 2018 before Army Corps dredging. An estimated 500+ homes above this point flooded during Harvey.

Sediment buildups like these reduced the conveyance of both the East and West Forks by 15 feet in places.

Another massive build up less than a half mile downstream from River Grove took the Corps months to dredge.

The Would-Be Congressman Who Denies Need for Dredging

Reducing flood risk in the Lake Houston Area requires reducing sediment build ups like these. Before the Corps left the West Fork, it recommended setting up a maintenance dredging program to help prevent such massive buildups in the future.

Following the Corps’ lead, former State Rep. Dan Huberty tried to set up such a program in 2021. So did State Rep. Charles Cunningham in 2023. Cunningham finally succeeded this year when HB1532 became law.

And yet a person upstream who wants to represent the Lake Houston Area in Congress, State Representative Steve Toth, voted against Cunningham’s Dredging District bill. And now he’s challenging Crenshaw.

I have yet to hear a credible explanation as to why Toth voted against the dredging district bill and the needs of the people he hopes to represent. Perhaps he would care to go on the record.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 7/27/25

2889 Days since Hurricane Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

Flood-Victim Video Brilliantly Lampoons Rep Who Consistently Voted against Flood Mitigation

7/22/25 – State Representative Steve Toth has announced that he will run for U.S. Representative Dan Crenshaw’s seat in Congress. Yet Toth, who lives outside the District, has repeatedly voted against flood-mitigation measures vitally needed by the people inside the district that he now wants to represent.

That inspired a student, whose home flooded badly during Hurricane Harvey, to create this 2-minute, satirical video that brilliantly lampoons Toth. The student has asked to remain anonymous.

Click image to play. Two minute video about Toth’s vote against flood-mitigation measures vital to the people he now wants to represent.

Toth voted against bills to create a Lake Houston Dredging District three times – even when language was added the third time – in HB1532 this year – that would eliminate any tax impact. He also voted against HB13 designed to improve flood-warning systems. 

Crenshaw Actions on Flood Mitigation

Crenshaw, on the other hand, has worked diligently to obtain flood-mitigation funding for projects in his district. He even helped muck out flooded homes in Elm Grove after Imelda.

Among other things, Crenshaw helped obtain funding for:

  • Emergency West Fork Dredging by the Army Corps of Engineers 
  • TC Jester Detention Basin
  • Westador Detention Basin
  • Taylor Gully and Woodridge Village Drainage Improvements
  • Additional flood gates for Lake Houston
  • New bridge across the Kingwood Diversion Ditch
  • Harris County Flood Control District Channel Improvement projects
  • Kingwood High School Flood Gates
  • Home buyouts along West Fork
  • Home-elevation projects

I have known Dan Crenshaw since he first ran for office and have immense respect for him. He has worked hard to protect the people of this district by securing funding for numerous flood-mitigation projects. Steve Toth, on the other hand, has consistently voted against flood-mitigation measures. That tells me he’s out of touch with the needs of people in this congressional district. I plan on voting for Crenshaw.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 7/22/25

2884 Days since Hurricane Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.

Flood-Victim Video Brilliantly Lampoons Rep Who Consistently Votes against Flood Mitigation

7/22/25 – State Representative Steve Toth has announced that he will run for U.S. Representative Dan Crenshaw’s seat in Congress. Yet Toth, who lives outside the District, has repeatedly voted against flood-mitigation measures vitally needed by the people inside the district that he now wants to represent.

That inspired a student, whose home flooded badly during Hurricane Harvey, to create this 2-minute, satirical video that brilliantly lampoons Toth. The student has asked to remain anonymous.

Two minute video about Toth’s vote against flood-mitigation measures vital to the people he now wants to represent.

Toth voted against bills to create a Lake Houston Dredging District three times – even when language was added the third time in HB1532 that would eliminate any tax impact. He also voted against HB13 designed to improve flood-warning systems.

Crenshaw Actions on Flood Mitigation

Crenshaw, on the other hand, has worked diligently to obtain flood-mitigation funding for projects in his district. He even helped muck out flooded homes in Elm Grove after Imelda.

Among other things, Crenshaw helped obtain funding for:

  • Emergency West Fork Dredging by the Army Corps of Engineers
  • TC Jester Detention Basin
  • Westador Detention Basin
  • Taylor Gully and Woodridge Village Drainage Improvements
  • Additional flood gates for Lake Houston
  • New bridge across the Kingwood Diversion Ditch
  • Harris County Flood Control District Channel Improvement projects
  • Kingwood High School Flood Gates
  • Home buyouts along West Fork
  • Home-elevation projects

I have known Dan Crenshaw since he first ran for office and have immense respect for him. He has worked hard to protect the people of this district by securing funding for numerous flood-mitigation projects. Steve Toth, on the other hand, voted against flood-mitigation measures. That tells me he’s out of touch with the needs of people in this congressional district. I plan on voting for Crenshaw.

Posted by Bob Rehak on 7/22/25

2884 Days since Hurricane Harvey

The thoughts expressed in this post represent opinions on matters of public concern and safety. They are protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution and the Anti-SLAPP Statute of the Great State of Texas.