Plain English Breakdown
The official summary does not provide specific details on the fiscal impact or the number of reserve officers affected, leaving this information uncertain.
Private Protective Services Exemption for Reserve Officers
This bill changes Tennessee laws to exempt commissioned reserve deputy sheriffs and auxiliary police officers from private protective services licensing requirements if they work under contracts with state-licensed businesses.
What This Bill Does
- Adds a new part to the law that says commissioned reserve deputy sheriffs and auxiliary police officers can be exempt from certain licensing requirements when working for private companies that are already licensed by the state.
- Changes parts of Title 38, Title 39, and Title 62, Chapter 35 in Tennessee's laws about private protective services.
Who It Names or Affects
- Commissioned reserve deputy sheriffs who work for private businesses
- Auxiliary police officers working under contracts with private companies
Terms To Know
- Private Protective Services
- Services provided by private companies to protect people or property, like security guards.
- Licensed Business
- A business that has been given permission by the state to operate in a certain way.
Limits and Unknowns
- The bill does not specify how much money it will save or cost.
- It is unclear exactly how many reserve officers this change will affect.
- Due to multiple unknown variables, the decrease in revenue to the Board of Detection License Services cannot be quantified with reasonable certainty.