Texas is a great state and our economy is the envy of the nation. But as Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee for the past three years, I have seen firsthand that our state’s tax collection system badly needs reform.

In the past decade, the balance of power in tax disputes has troublingly tilted toward the state and against the Texas taxpayer. That runs afoul of a fundamental fairness principle: The state should have no greater rights than the taxpayer. The goal should be to balance the playing field.

I have proposed a comprehensive Texas Taxpayer Bill of Rights, which, as Comptroller, I will implement through executive action, legislative action, and eventually push to enshrine in the Texas Constitution through a Constitutional Amendment so that these rights cannot be changed on a whim.

This is my top priority should I be elected Comptroller. Let me be specific about what my Texas Taxpayer Bill of rights would do:

I will advance taxpayer protections on these broad principles:

If the IRS opens a federal audit, any subsequent state audit will be limited in scope and time only to that which the IRS is investigating.

If a federal audit uncovers facts that conclude a taxpayer is due a refund from the state, the state should make it easier for the taxpayer to obtain that refund.

If a legal tax protest is underway, a taxpayer does not have to pay the full tax amount until it is adjudicated.

The time requirement to file a tax protest will increase to 90 days from 30 days.

Taxpayers should receive the same interest rate on refunds due as the state charges taxpayers when collecting deficient taxes.

The statute of limitations on tax audits will be limited and cannot be continually extended.

Tax collection is part of the constitutional role of government. But tax rules must be fairly applied.

State Rep. Harvey Hilderbran is a candidate for Texas Comptroller.