About

About


Judge KP George was overwhelmingly elected to office by the voters as Fort Bend County Judge in 2018 and re-elected in 2022.


After years of service to our community from local non-profits to parent-teacher organizations, Judge George proudly served as a two-term member of the Fort Bend ISD school board. Judge George fought for all of the district’s students to have equal access to education and resources while ensuring the district remained transparent and accountable to local communities.


Judge George’s passion for giving back to his community stems from the challenges he faced growing up in a tiny South Indian village. Getting an education meant walking barefoot to the local schoolhouse and doing homework by the light of a kerosene lamp in the family’s thatch-straw hut. After years of balancing schoolwork with helping out on the family farm, Judge George achieved his life goal: coming to the land of opportunity and living the American Dream.


Judge George immigrated to the U.S. in 1993 on a work visa for a financial firm and has since earned multiple financial certifications and licenses. As a Certified Financial Planner, Judge George co-owns and manages an independent financial planning practice in Sugar Land.

Judge George and his wife Sheeba, a Fort Bend ISD teacher, have raised their three children in Fort Bend County. All three of their children are proud products of Fort Bend public schools. Beau and Rico, two furry friends, are the newest additions to the George family coming as rescues from the Fort Bend County Animal Shelter.


County governments provide the underlying infrastructure—the glue—that enables Texans to live productive lives in harmony with each other. As the functional arm of state government, key county services include support of public safety and criminal justice, effective regional transportation, support for the court system, emergency management, flood mitigation, reliable record-keeping for deeds and public documents, operating elections, and certain environmental, health and human services including the jurisdictional response to COVID-19

Judge KP George was overwhelmingly elected to office by the voters as Fort Bend County Judge in 2018 and re-elected in 2022.


After years of service to our community from local non-profits to parent-teacher organizations, Judge George proudly served as a two-term member of the Fort Bend ISD school board. Judge George fought for all of the district’s students to have equal access to education and resources while ensuring the district remained transparent and accountable to local communities.


Judge George’s passion for giving back to his community stems from the challenges he faced growing up in a tiny South Indian village. Getting an education meant walking barefoot to the local schoolhouse and doing homework by the light of a kerosene lamp in the family’s thatch-straw hut. After years of balancing schoolwork with helping out on the family farm, Judge George achieved his life goal: coming to the land of opportunity and living the American Dream.


Judge George immigrated to the U.S. in 1993 on a work visa for a financial firm and has since earned multiple financial certifications and licenses. As a Certified Financial Planner, Judge George co-owns and manages an independent financial planning practice in Sugar Land.

Judge George and his wife Sheeba, a Fort Bend ISD teacher, have raised their three children in Fort Bend County. All three of their children are proud products of Fort Bend public schools. Beau and Rico, two furry friends, are the newest additions to the George family coming as rescues from the Fort Bend County Animal Shelter.


County governments provide the underlying infrastructure—the glue—that enables Texans to live productive lives in harmony with each other. As the functional arm of state government, key county services include support of public safety and criminal justice, effective regional transportation, support for the court system, emergency management, flood mitigation, reliable record-keeping for deeds and public documents, operating elections, and certain environmental, health and human services including the jurisdictional response to COVID-19

Share by: