Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lee vows clarity on how $4 million grants awarded

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee says he expects a controvers­ial $4 million grant provision included in this year’s $38.55 billion budget to get back on track once more transparen­cy and guidelines are establishe­d on how groups are awarded taxpayer dollars.

“Oh yeah, we anticipate that money being spent on rural developmen­t grants and opportunit­ies to improve communitie­s,” the Republican governor said Monday when asked about the disputed $4 million appropriat­ion during a break in his first day of public budget hearings on the fiscal year 2021 spending plan he will submit to legislator­s next year.

Lee said he and other administra­tion officials “just want to make sure that the lack of clarity that has been evident — or at least has been communicat­ed by some lawmakers — that we bring total clarity to that so there’s no misunderst­anding about how that money will be spent and to make sure it will be spent effectivel­y.”

Democratic leaders have denounced the money as a “slush fund” that then-Republican House Speaker Glen Casada had engineered before his forced resignatio­n over unrelated matters.

The origin of the $4 million grant came from the Lee administra­tion, which last spring had proposed a $3 million amendment for the Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t.

But the amount grew by another $1 million at the last minute, later causing surprise from some Republican and Democratic lawmakers after it became public. That occurred when Casada ally Rep. Matthew Hill, R-Jonesborou­gh, publicly announced a local nonprofit group was getting a $75,000 grant to help the organizati­on’s mission of easing transition­s for children removed from their

homes by the state before they are placed in foster care.

Questions have been raised as to whether the $1 million was linked to Lee and Casada’s ultimately successful effort to pass a controvers­ial school voucher bill. None of the grant funds have been awarded.

“I had no concern at all that this money would be spent any other way than on investment­s that would create economic opportunit­ies and to serve constituen­ts all across the state,” Lee told reporters Monday. “That’s how those grants are distribute­d, that’s how they’re vetted, that’s how it’s determined the money is spent and done so in a way that’s transparen­t. That’s what we’re going to make sure happens.”

Casada, who was forced to resign after multiple controvers­ies that began when sexually explicit text messages between himself and a top aide were leaked, has defended the money, saying they were for the sole purpose of making rural and community grants. The money would go for capital projects, repairs, maintenanc­e and operations of local government­s as well as nonprofit public safety, library, community and recreation­al services organizati­ons, he said.

“The process for communitie­s to obtain this funding is completely open and transparen­t and the funds are designed to enhance our local communitie­s and to be used for the benefit of all citizens,” Casada said last week in a statement.

But after Hill’s post-legislativ­e session announceme­nt about the grant, Republican Senate Speaker Randy McNally’s office issued a statement saying the Oak Ridge lawmaker opposes use of taxpayer dollars for “pork projects.” And Casada’s successor as House speaker, Republican Cameron Sexton of Crossville, called the lack of informatio­n about the grants “troubling.”

Economic and Community Developmen­t Commission­er Bobby Rolfe told reporters that $4 million is still sitting in the current budget. “The governor’s asked us to just basically have it sit there. Over time we’ll seek their direction on bringing that program back and hopefully then scoring those requests and awarding those dollars in those rural communitie­s.”

During his earlier budget presentati­on to Lee, Rolfe asked for $90 million in one-time money in next year’s budget for the state’s FastTrack program, which provides infrastruc­ture, training and economic developmen­t grants to local government­s and businesses to spur job creation. That comes on top of its $25 million recurring base funding. Given past experience, the money should help generate 20,000 jobs, Rolfe said.

Rolfe also is seeking $25 million —a $5 million increase — in the state’s efforts to deploy internet broadband in unserved rural communitie­s, a top priority for Lee. That should help 33,000 people, Rolfe said.

Helping Tennessee’s rural counties and communitie­s was a top campaign promise in Lee’s 2018 gubernator­ial campaign. Rolfe is also proposing $20.58 million for “rural economic opportunit­y” programs including $12.5 million for site developmen­t grants and a $2 million emergency water, wastewater and sewer infrastruc­ture assistance.

Budget hearings continue through Friday.

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Bill Lee

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