The Commercial Appeal

Falconry raid tops annual list of government overreach, waste

- Melissa Brown

The Tennessee Wildlife Resource Agency’s aggressive actions against a Nashville falconer who legally owned 13 birds topped the Beacon Center of Tennessee’s annual Pork Report on excessive waste and spending released Wednesday.

The report, which highlights 12 examples from 2023, is often tongue-incheek, but Beacon Vice President Mark Cunningham said it highlights the “risk to taxpayers for these wasteful projects.”

Tennessee Wildlife Resource Agency officers are now facing a lawsuit from Nashville falconer and songwriter Holly Lamar, who was charged with 30 misdemeano­rs related to birds in her care before the Davidson County District Attorney’s Office dropped all charges and blasted the TWRA. One of Lamar’s birds died in state custody. Lamar alleges TWRA misapplied wildlife law to target her falconry business.

“Government officials shouldn’t prey on Tennessee residents and business owners, especially if they don’t know the law. If the government is going to enforce its laws and regulation­s to the point of the demise of an animal’s life, it should know without a doubt which laws have been broken,” the Pork Report states.

“Government officials must put in due diligence around the scope of their duties, or risk Tennessean­s’ livelihood­s

and tax dollars on improper actions or future lawsuits.”

The Beacon Center is a conservati­ve think tank that has long focused on government spending. Here are other highlights from the annual report.

Tennessee Performing Arts Center relocation

Lawmakers recently funded the relocation

of the Tennessee Performing Arts Center to the tune of $200 million this year. The center is expected to help anchor Nashville’s East Bank redevelopm­ent, and TPAC must match some of the funds to trigger the state’s allocation.

The Beacon Center panned an ongoing trend of “tax dollars funding private venues.”

“Taxpayers shouldn’t be used as

props to justify massive government handouts to move or attract

private businesses or foundation­s,” the report said, citing recent payouts for a new Titans stadium and to attract Ford to West Tennessee.

Williamson County In-n-out

Financial incentives for private businesses are always a thorn in Beacon Center’s side, with the recruitmen­t of the In-n-out burger chain to Williamson County making the Pork Report’s list.

The county and Franklin shelled out $2 million to add to $2.75 million from the state in government incentives for the relocation.

“The government should stop picking winners and losers by subsidizin­g private businesses at the expense of taxpayers. Instead of lowering taxes or improving the business climate, government leaders decided to make cheap fast food an expensive venture,” the Pork Report stated.

 ?? JOHN PARTIPILO / THE TENNESSEAN ?? Tennessee Performing Arts Center is sporting a new exterior look and marquis as the moon rises in the blue hour of twilight in downtown Nashville Oct 3, 2003. TPAC spent 7.9 million in renovation­s. “Government officials shouldn’t prey on Tennessee residents and business owners, especially if they don’t know the law. If the government is going to enforce its laws and regulation­s to the point of the demise of an animal’s life, it should know without a doubt which laws have been broken,” the Pork Report states.
JOHN PARTIPILO / THE TENNESSEAN Tennessee Performing Arts Center is sporting a new exterior look and marquis as the moon rises in the blue hour of twilight in downtown Nashville Oct 3, 2003. TPAC spent 7.9 million in renovation­s. “Government officials shouldn’t prey on Tennessee residents and business owners, especially if they don’t know the law. If the government is going to enforce its laws and regulation­s to the point of the demise of an animal’s life, it should know without a doubt which laws have been broken,” the Pork Report states.

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