Imagine losing someone you love in a violent crime during a hurricane, wildfire, or other disaster. While you’re trying to process unthinkable grief, you’re also facing funeral costs, lost income, and emergency expenses – all while waiting months for state assistance to work through red tape.
That nightmare scenario just got a lot less complicated for Texas families, thanks to a new law that cuts straight through bureaucracy when people need help most.
What Just Changed for Every Texas Family
HB 3745 just gave the Texas Attorney General the power to immediately send emergency funds to families who lose someone to violent crime during a declared state of emergency. No more waiting for investigations to wrap up. No more proving “undue hardship” while planning a funeral. Just immediate help when your world falls apart.
Here’s what this actually means: If a violent crime takes someone’s life during an official emergency – think hurricanes, wildfires, severe storms, or mass violence events – their family can now receive written emergency funds right away to cover immediate expenses.
Why This Matters Right Now
For Hurricane Season: When storms hit and violence unfortunately follows, families won’t have to choose between paying for a funeral and keeping their lights on.
For Wildfire Country: In areas where evacuations and disasters create chaos, if tragedy strikes, help arrives faster than ever before.
For Any Emergency: Whether it’s a natural disaster or a declared emergency due to violence, families get support immediately instead of waiting months.
The Money Side That Actually Works
Here’s the smart part: this doesn’t cost taxpayers a dime. The Crime Victims’ Compensation fund is funded through court fees, not your tax dollars. The state designed this to handle extra payouts within the existing budget, so it’s sustainable help that doesn’t burden communities already dealing with disaster.
What Your Family Needs to Know
- When it starts: September 1, 2025 (just in time for peak hurricane season)
- Who it helps: Families of violent crime victims when the crime happens during a declared emergency
- What it covers: Immediate expenses like funeral costs, lost income, emergency needs
- How it works: Emergency funds come first, full investigation and compensation follow later
The Reality Check: This only applies to crimes that happen on or after September 1, 2025, during officially declared emergencies. It’s not retroactive, but it’s ready for whatever comes next.
Why This Law Got Bipartisan Support
Nobody wants to watch families struggle with paperwork while they’re planning funerals. This law passed both the House (May 8) and Senate (May 25) with bipartisan support because it solves a real problem that hits Texas communities hard during disaster seasons.
The old system: Families had to prove their case was “likely” to succeed and that they faced “undue hardship” before getting emergency help.
The new system: If someone dies in violent crime during a declared emergency, families get immediate support first, paperwork later.
What This Means for Your Community
For Local Officials: You now have a tool that shows Texas takes care of its own when disasters hit.
For First Responders: You can tell families that financial help is coming immediately, not months from now.
For Community Leaders: This law shows how preparation and compassion can work together to support people in their darkest moments.
The Bigger Picture
This isn’t just about money – it’s about dignity. When someone loses a family member to violence during an already traumatic emergency, they shouldn’t have to fight bureaucracy for basic support.
Texas gets hit by hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, and severe weather every year. Unfortunately, disasters sometimes bring out the worst in people, and violence can follow. This law recognizes that reality and prepares for it with immediate, practical help.
Ready or Not, Disaster Season is Here
September 1st launches this new system just as we head into peak hurricane season. Whether you’re in Houston dealing with storm surge, East Texas facing wildfires, or anywhere else in the state dealing with severe weather, this law is now part of Texas’s disaster response toolkit.
The Bottom Line: When the worst happens during the worst of times, Texas families now get help immediately instead of eventually. That’s the kind of preparation that actually matters when real people face real tragedy.
This fall, when you see news about emergency declarations, remember that families dealing with violent crime during those emergencies now have one less thing to worry about. Help arrives when they need it, not when paperwork clears.
That’s Texas taking care of Texas – exactly when it matters most.




