Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill to protect businesses from virus lawsuits dies on House floor,

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee General Assembly ended its annual session early Friday morning after failing to come to agreement on an effort by businesses, schools, nonprofits and others to make it tougher for people to win COVID-19 liability lawsuits.

A conference committee report that sought to iron out difference­s between the House and Senate chambers on the proposed Tennessee Recovery and Safe Harbor Act received 46 votes for passage in the House but needed 50 for approval.

It was the last remaining major bill on lawmakers’ agenda. Shortly after the bill failed at 2:40 a.m. CDT, lawmakers ended their annual legislativ­e session.

The bill was brought by a 30-group coalition spearheade­d by the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce and Industry. It sought to change the legal standard for people filing claims from the coronaviru­s, which so far has infected 32,829 Tennessean­s, with 509 dead and 2,209 hospitaliz­ed.

Under the measure, qualifying businesses or other entities wouldn’t have been liable for any “damages, injury or death” from anyone allegedly contractin­g the coronaviru­s at their establishm­ent unless the claimant could prove “gross negligence or willful misconduct” in that the entity didn’t comply with public health guidelines.

The bill sought to extend its shield of protection for businesses back to March 5, when the first known coronaviru­s case was reported in Tennessee. That retroactiv­ity provision is what killed the legislatio­n.

“There is nothing more clear in the Tennessee Constituti­on than we can’t change the rules midway through the process,” said House Majority Leader William Lamberth, a Portland Republican, attorney and former state prosecutor who voted no.

While acknowledg­ing “there’s been an enormous amount of work” done on the bill, Lamberth told the chamber, “I have had constituen­ts who’ve died from COVID in a nursing home. And all I asked in this bill that it not be retroactiv­e — or at least a little retroactiv­e.”

Lamberth’s district includes the Gallatin Center for Rehabilita­tion and Healing, a nursing home that has been subject to lawsuits after 23 residents died from COVID-19.

Others pointed out that the Tennessee Constituti­on’s Article I, Section 20, states, “no retrospect­ive law, or law impairing the obligation­s of contracts, shall be made.”

Former House Speaker Glen Casada, R-Franklin, sought to counter that, citing a legal opinion he said was once issued by then-Tennessee Supreme Court Justice William Koch. It “said it can be retroactiv­e if they advance the public interest” and an entity’s rights, Casada said. “It’s what we need to protect our businesses in Tennessee.”

The Tennessee Chamber and others had argued the bill was necessary with employers needing assurances they can resume operations without facing a wave of lawsuits. Critics said that workers and others already face a high barrier to receiving restitutio­n from businesses that may place them at risk.

It was a rare and big legislativ­e loss for the Tennessee Chamber and coalition members.

Among those who spoke against the bill on the floor was Rep. Mike Carter, an Ooltewah Republican, attorney and former judge. He had raised concerns about it earlier in a House committee and unsuccessf­ully sought to amend it at the time.

Carter said the cleaner solution would have been to state “there simply is no cause of action for a suit against COVID-19. That protects everyone.”

The bill was carried in the Senate by Judiciary Committee Chairman Mike Bell, R-Riceville, who along with many Senate colleagues and others resisted efforts to strip out the retroactiv­ity section of the bill. Bell said the bill was seeking to protect businesses and others who at times were grappling with no or little guidance and then constantly evolving, multiple health orders or guidance from Gov. Bill Lee, who supported the bill, and others.

The bill had a severabili­ty clause designed to keep the remainder intact if any provision was found unconstitu­tional. Bell and others said that would be sufficient to protect the core business protection­s in the legislatio­n.

Rep. Patsy Hazlewood, R-Signal Mountain, said the severabili­ty clause bothered her, asking “what happens to pending lawsuits [or] potential lawsuits until [or when] the severabili­ty clause is invoked? … We would leave a lot of people in limbo while this is litigated and there’s no doubt about that. I’m not an attorney, but it does seem to me that it would be common sense wrong to just change the rules.”

Another Southeast Tennessee House member, Rep. Robin Smith, R-Hixson, a nurse by training, told colleagues she was supporting the bill, recalling the situation that developed when AIDS first appeared in the 1980s with no guidelines.

“It’s not the rich and powerful” who benefit from protection­s, Smith said. She added, “I’m going to stand with schools and dorms … even healthcare providers.”

“It’s what we need to protect our businesses in Tennessee.” – GLEN CASADA, R-FRANKLIN

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