Governor Thanks General Assembly

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee marked the close of the 2019 legislative session, a session which included the unanimous passage of his budget as well as the passage of his full agenda as outlined during his State of the State address in March. 
 
“In March, I presented our budget and a series of priorities which I believe will be foundational to making Tennessee a leader in the nation,” said Lee. “Working with the General Assembly leadership and members, we passed reforms that will continue to build on the momentum our state has seen in recent years.”
 
 
Gov. Lee’s slate of priorities included 16 legislative initiatives to work towards strengthening public education and school choice, enhancing workforce development, addressing criminal justice reform and public safety, promoting good government and developing solutions for rural Tennessee.
 
 
The passage of the fiscal year 2020 budget marked the first unanimous budget approval from the General Assembly since 2011. Notably, this budget includes a historic deposit to the state’s Rainy Day Fund that will elevate reserves to over $1.1 billion. Tax cuts included a full repeal of the Gym Tax, the elimination of sales and use tax on agricultural trailers and a reduction to the professional privilege tax.
 
 
“I commend the General Assembly for their work this session and I look forward to joining members in their districts in the coming months to highlight all that was accomplished this session” said Lee. “I am especially pleased with the outcome of the budget and our joint commitment to making sure Tennessee is well-managed and fiscally sound.”
 
 
Highlights from Gov. Lee’s legislative agenda include the following:
 
 
Strengthening Public Education and Expanding School Choice
 

Creating the Governor’s Investment in Vocational Education (GIVE) to expand access to vocational and technical training to students

Establishing an education savings account program to expand school choice for low-income students in Davidson and Shelby counties

Creating the Future Workforce Initiative to prepare students for the jobs of the future in science, technology, engineering and math

A $71 million investment in pay raises for teachers across Tennessee and investment in professional development programming

A three-year pilot program to provide support services for high school students in Tennessee’s 15 distressed counties

Establish the Governor’s Civics Instructional Seal to support and recognize schools that prioritize teaching our nation’s history and civic values

Investing an additional $175 million in new funding to support teachers and students in public schools

Establishing an independent statewide charter school authorizer and adding $6 million to the charter school facilities fund

 
 
Enhancing Public Safety and Criminal Justice Reform
 

Investing $40 million in school safety enhancements

Increasing penalties for trafficking fentanyl

Increasing the training pay supplement for firefighters and police officers

Increasing salaries for corrections professionals

Expanding the Electronic Monitoring Indigency fund to reduce needs for pre-trial incarceration

Eliminating the state fee for the expungement of records for those who have paid their debt to society

$5 million to expand recovery courts and services for people in the justice system with drug abuse issues

$4 million investment in pre-release rehabilitation and education for incarcerated individuals

 
 
Investing in Health Care and Good Government Initiatives
 

Establishing the Office of Faith Based Initiatives to support partnerships with the non-profit community

Expanding the state’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit with an additional 24 positions dedicated to identifying fraud and waste

Investing an additional $11 million to support mental health services through the behavioral health safety net and regional mental institutes.

Increasing funding for graduate medical education at Tennessee’s medical schools and critical incentive programs that provide financial support to resident physicians who commit to living and working in our rural communities

Investing an additional $2 million recurring for the primary care safety net for federally-qualified health centers (FQHCs) and community- and faith-based clinics, providing primary care services to low-income, uninsured adults

A $3 million recurring increase to support medical students who agree to work in an underserved area after graduation. These state dollars would draw down an additional $5.7 million in federal funds

$11.9 million investment to maintain pay increases funded in last year’s budget for providers delivering services to individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities