The Commercial Appeal

Tenn. Senate panel makes changes, advances tourism secrecy bill

- Angele Latham Nashville Tennessean USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

Many of Tennessee's future tourism records are one step closer to potentiall­y becoming confidenti­al.

A bill which seeks to allow records from the Tennessee Department of Tourist Developmen­t to be exempt from public records laws if the tourism commission­er and attorney general deem them “sensitive” passed nearly unanimousl­y in a Senate committee Tuesday after passing the House in late February.

SB2093, proposed by the Lee administra­tion and sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Jack Johnson, R-franklin, has faced strong pushback due to its transparen­cy concerns.

A key change to the bill was presented to the Senate State and Local Government Committee, however.

The previous version of the bill stated if documents were deemed “sensitive,” they could be kept secret for up to two five-year periods. This timeframe posed a concern for some lawmakers, who pointed out that state regulation­s allow many contract records to be destroyed after only six years, effectivel­y eliminatin­g any chance for the public to see what a publicly funded agency is doing.

Now, the bill details that records deemed sensitive can only remain confidenti­al until one of three things has happened: 10 years have passed since they were declared sensitive; state funds were disbursed; or “the conclusion of the event in which the contract or event was negotiated.”

Additional­ly, the updated bill says any record deemed sensitive cannot be destroyed while it remains confidenti­al, and must be retained for at least five years after the record becomes unsealed.

These rules do not apply to trade secrets, marketing informatio­n or capital plans, according to the bill.

“I appreciate the bill,” said Sen. Jeff Yarbro, D-nashville, who was the lone senator in the committee to question the legislatio­n before ultimately voting for it. “I feel like we're putting a lot of trust and faith in the attorney general here to make sure that we're policing this accurately. I think we just need to be cautious of it.”

The bill passed the committee on a 8-1 vote, and has been referred to the Senate calendar.

If the full Senate passes the amended bill, the two chambers will have to work out the difference­s in the legislatio­n before sending it to Gov. Bill Lee for his signature.

Bill will help 'get the Super Bowl,' according to lawmakers

Proponents of the bill have repeatedly touted it as a solution to attract large tourism deals — like Rep. Andrew Farmer, R-seviervill­e, who presented the bill to the House in February and repeatedly said the option of secrecy would help Nashville "get the Super Bowl."

The bill is modeled after a similar exemption for the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t that passed in 1988 and keeps records deemed sensitive secret for five years, with the possibilit­y of an extension for a second fiveyear term.

This similarity drove much of the concern from lawmakers, including Reps. Justin Jones, D-nashville and Aftyn Behn, Dnashville, who cited a costly economic developmen­t trip to France and Italy that Lee and other administra­tion officials took last year. Some of the records from that trip were kept secret under the ECD'S public records rules, from which this bill is modeled.

Farmer brushed aside these transparen­cy concerns because the bill will allegedly help "bring big things" to Tennessee.

The USA Today Network - Tennessee's coverage of First Amendment issues is funded through a collaborat­ion between the Freedom Forum and Journalism Funding Partners.

Have a story to tell? Reach Angele Latham by email at alatham@gannett.com, by phone at 931-623-9485, or follow her on Twitter at @angele_latham

 ?? NICOLE HESTER/THE TENNESSEAN ?? Outside the Tennessee State Capitol Building in Nashville on Feb. 27, 2023.
NICOLE HESTER/THE TENNESSEAN Outside the Tennessee State Capitol Building in Nashville on Feb. 27, 2023.

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