Fort Worth, Texas — Acting Texas Comptroller Kelly Hancock will step down at the end of July, leaving the statewide office that manages Texas revenue estimates, tax collection and other core finance duties.
Fort Worth, about 35 miles west of Dallas in Tarrant County, has roughly 1 million residents and major employers including American Airlines and Lockheed Martin.
The Texas Tribune reported that Hancock submitted a resignation letter to Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday, one year after Abbott selected him to replace Glenn Hegar, who left to become chancellor of the Texas A&M University System.
Hancock’s tenure included the start of Texas Education Freedom Accounts, the state’s $1 billion private-school voucher program. The comptroller’s office is responsible for implementing that program along with its long-running role in state finances.
Kelly led the Comptroller’s office during a pivotal chapter for Texas, Abbott wrote on social media, according to The Texas Tribune.


