David Lowe, Texas State Representative of the 91st district (R) | https://www.facebook.com/DavidLowe4TX/
David Lowe, Texas State Representative of the 91st district (R) | https://www.facebook.com/DavidLowe4TX/
More specifically, the official text was summarized by the state legislature as ’’Relating to the compensation and professional representation of certain students participating in University Interscholastic League activities’’.
The following is our breakdown, based on the actual bill text, and may include interpretation to clarify its provisions.
This bill addresses the compensation and professional representation of students involved in University Interscholastic League (UIL) activities. It prohibits schools or the UIL from implementing policies that prevent eligible secondary school students from earning compensation for the use of their name, image, or likeness (NIL) outside official activities or from obtaining professional legal representation for NIL-related contracts. Eligibility for such activities is limited to students in ninth grade and above who meet UIL rules. The bill mandates that compensation not be used to influence school enrollment or transfers and restricts NIL endorsements involving certain products and services. Moreover, it requires financial literacy education for participating students. The legislation, once enacted, will apply only to contracts entered into on or after its effective date, taking immediate effect if it gains sufficient legislative support, or on Sept. 1, 2025, otherwise.
David Lowe, member of the House Committee on S/C on County & Regional Government, proposed another nine bills during the 89(R) legislative session.
Lowe graduated from American Military University in 2018 with a BA.
David Lowe is currently serving in the Texas State House, representing the state's 91st House district. He replaced previous state representative Stephanie Klic in 2025.
Bills in Texas go through a multi-step legislative process, including committee review, debates, and votes in both chambers before reaching a final decision. Each session, there are typically thousands of bills introduced, but only a portion successfully navigate the process to become law.
You can read more about the bills and other measures here.
Bill Number | Date Introduced | Short Description |
---|---|---|
HB 3262 | 03/20/2025 | Relating to an election to approve the issuance of bonds or other debt |
HB 3137 | 03/20/2025 | Relating to a prohibition on certain herbicides and food and beverage additives; authorizing a civil penalty |
HB 2998 | 03/20/2025 | Relating to requiring voter approval for mass pesticide application by municipalities or counties |
HB 2990 | 03/20/2025 | Relating to elimination of the countywide polling place program |
HB 2948 | 03/19/2025 | Relating to the cessation of tolls by toll project entities in certain circumstances |
HB 2796 | 03/19/2025 | Relating to the permissible uses of money received from the purchase of attendance credit by a school district |
HB 2549 | 03/17/2025 | Relating to the inclusion of a person's sex on driver's licenses, commercial driver's licenses, commercial learner's permits, and personal identification certificates |
HB 2291 | 03/14/2025 | Relating to the required inclusion of a person's sex on a birth certificate and prohibited change of sex on the birth certificate of certain persons |
HB 2194 | 03/14/2025 | Relating to the repeal of or limitations on certain state and local taxes, including school district maintenance and operations ad valorem taxes, the enactment of state and local value added taxes, and related school finance reform; imposing taxes |