Chattanooga Times Free Press

Senate passes bill allowing alcohol sales at college sports stadiums

- Contact Andy Sher at asher@timesfreep­ress.com or 615-255-0550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1. BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Senate on Monday approved legislatio­n to permit alcohol sales at most Tennessee public college and university sports venues, clearing the way for final action in the House later this week.

Senators approved the bill on a 28-3 vote with no debate. Sen. Mike Bell, R-Riceville, was among the three voting no.

The University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a is among campuses that would be impacted. Officials there say they are interested in the ability to sell alcohol at McKenzie Arena, UTC’s basketball venue, for entertainm­ent events including concerts.

Sponsored by Sen. Becky Duncan Massey, R-Knoxville, the legislatio­n is a follow-up to a 2018 law that allowed alcohol sales at Middle Tennessee State University and Tennessee State University sports facilities. The law designates them as a “sports authority” under existing state alcohol statutes.

Duncan Massey has said she brought the bill in response to tourism and other officials in Knoxville. They say promoters and bigtime entertainm­ent acts are bypassing the city because alcohol can’t be sold to the general public at UT-Knoxville’s Neyland Stadium and Thompson-Boling Arena.

The bill would impact an estimated 50 colleges and universiti­es. It also opens the way for alcohol to be sold to general admission ticket-holders at college games, depending on whether the sports conference an institutio­n belongs to permits that.

In UT-Knoxville’s case, the Southeaste­rn Conference does not permit alcohol sales at this juncture.

But a number of other college conference­s do. UTC, for example, is a member of the Southern Conference, where at least one college does permit alcohol sales to those of legal age.

Sens. Bo Watson, R-Hixson, and Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanoog­a, voted yes on the measure.

House sponsor, Rep. Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, has noted interim UT System President Randy Boyd supports the measure and favors letting campus chancellor­s decide whether or not to approve alcohol sales.

The bill, Senate Bill 598 (House Bill 850), is scheduled for House floor debate on Thursday.

In other legislativ­e action Monday night:

An anti-cockfighti­ng bill flew out of the Senate on a 23-5 vote and is headed to Gov. Bill Lee for his considerat­ion, despite a senator’s grumblings about newcomers’ intoleranc­e for Tennessee traditions.

Senate Bill 222 (House Bill 233) sponsored by Sen. Jon Lundberg, R-Kingsport, makes it a Class A misdemeano­r to possess, own, buy, sell or make animal fighting equipment with intent for use in promoting, training, facilitati­ng or furthering cockfighti­ng and dog fighting.

Among other parapherna­lia that could put someone in jail for up to a year with a $2,500 fine are the deadly steel blades that illegal operators attach to a rooster’s claws.

While illegal, cockfighti­ng still occurs in a number of rural areas, especially in East Tennessee.

Sen. Frank Niceley, R-Strawberry Plains, strongly objected to the bill and chided colleagues over outsiders moving into the state who are critical of state traditions. Citing the book “American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America,” which examines geographic­al cultural difference­s, Niceley noted Tennessee is a part of “Greater Appalachia.”

“Now, it’s the 21st Century and we have a lot of that multicultu­ralism. That’s all we hear — multi-culturalis­m. ‘Oh that culture, oh, they’re a little different. They have strange, weird, obnoxious, scary habits,” Niceley said. “But that’s their culture. So we got to respect that culture.”

But Niceley said, “it bothers me when people from outside Greater Appalachia move into Greater Appalachia and they don’t respect our culture. I don’t know hardly how to put this so I probably won’t put it. In this age of multi-culturalis­m, everybody does something different. We’re supposed to look the other way. We’re supposed to tolerate the other culture.

“But,” Niceley said, “I get tired of people moving into Greater Appalachia and not respecting our culture.”

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