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HB0681 • 2026

Soil Conservation

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 4 and Title 43, Chapter 14, relative to soil.

Agriculture Education Energy Land Taxes
Did Not Pass

The latest official action shows that this bill did not move forward in that session.

Sponsor
Jones J, Kyle
Last action
2025-02-26
Official status
Failed for lack of second in: Agriculture & Natural Resources Subcommittee
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill did not pass during its session, so some details about future implementation are speculative.

Healthy Soil Act

This act establishes a Healthy Soil Program within the Tennessee Department of Agriculture to promote and support farming practices that improve soil health.

What This Bill Does

  • Creates a program called the 'Healthy Soil Program' inside the Department of Agriculture.
  • Includes an assessment and education program, grant program, and other initiatives to help farmers and land managers.
  • Requires the department to work with local groups to encourage better soil management practices.
  • Establishes a fund for grants that support healthy soil projects and provides training for those involved in these efforts.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Farmers, ranchers, land managers, and local government entities in Tennessee.

Terms To Know

Healthy Soil
Soil that enhances its continuing capacity to function as a biological system, increases organic matter and carbon content, improves structure and water- and nutrient-holding capacity, resulting in net, long-term greenhouse gas benefits.
Champion
A land manager declared a soil health champion due to excellence in applying and promoting soil health principles.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill did not pass during its session.
  • Local governments may receive varying amounts of revenue from the Healthy Soil Grant Fund, depending on demand and funding availability.

Bill History

  1. 2025-02-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    Failed for lack of second in: Agriculture & Natural Resources Subcommittee

  2. 2025-02-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Agriculture & Natural Resources Subcommittee for 2/26/2025

  3. 2025-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed on Second Consideration, refer to Senate Energy, Ag., and Nat. Resources Committee

  4. 2025-02-10 Tennessee General Assembly

    Assigned to s/c Agriculture & Natural Resources Subcommittee

  5. 2025-02-10 Tennessee General Assembly

    Introduced, Passed on First Consideration

  6. 2025-02-06 Tennessee General Assembly

    P2C, ref. to Agriculture & Natural Resources Committee- Government Operations for Review

  7. 2025-02-05 Tennessee General Assembly

    Intro., P1C.

  8. 2025-02-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

  9. 2025-02-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

Official Summary Text

HEALTHY SOIL PROGRAM

This bill enacts the
"Healthy Soil Act
,
"
which creates a program
within the department to be known as the "healthy soil program." The department, with support and advice from the
Tennessee soil and water conservation commission
("
commission
")
,
must
administer the program
, the purpose of which is
to promote and support
farming and ranching systems and other forms of land management that increase soil organic matter, carbon content, aggregate stability, microbiology, and water retention to improve the health, yield, and profitability of the soils of this state.

The progr
am must include

(
i
)
a
healthy soil assessment and education program;

(
ii
)
a
healthy soil grant program; and

(
iii
)
o
ther programs established by the department
of agriculture ("department")
to effectuate this
bill
.

This bill requires the department to
enc
ourage producer, land manager, landowner, and interagency collaboration in the management of healthy soils and
to (i) w
ork with technical assistance providers to advance soil health stewardship across private, state, and federal land jurisdictions by foste
ring collaboration among producers, land managers, and landowners; and

(
ii
)
c
onduct outreach to producers and land managers to promote the program and other federal, state, or local grant opportunities that support and promote healthy soils.

In administer
ing the program, the department
must
support local economic growth in this state
by doing all of the following:



Identify
ing
ways to increase the generation and use of compost to build healthy soils
.



To the extent permitted by law, prioritiz
ing
in-state sourcing of the resources needed for the program, including testing resources, compost, seeds, fencing supplies, and equipment
.



Support
ing
the emerging market for food grown in this state under management for healthy soils.

ADMINISTRATION OF TH
E HEALTHY SOIL ASSESSMENT AND EDUCATION PROGRAM

In administering the healthy soil assessment and education program,
this bill requires
the department
to do all of the following:



Work through
soil and water conservation district
s
created pursuant to the Soil and Water Conservation Districts Law
("
districts
")
, technical assistance providers, or
local governmental entit
ies
with proven land management capacity to support healthy soil
("
eligible entities
")
to
(i) e
ncourage farmers, ranchers, and land managers to undertake voluntary soil health measurements;

(ii) raise awareness about desirable soil health characteristics
;
(iii) facilitate on-site, producer-led workshops and training sessions to promote and engender soil health stewardship; and

(iv) complete a baseline soil health assessment by testing the carbon content, water infiltration rate, microbiology, and aggregate stability of soils, in addition to monitoring soil cover or bare ground percentage
.



Establish a statewide network of champions to promote soil health stewardship, offer guidance to producers and land managers, and encourage teamwork between persons involved in increasing soil health
. As used in this bill, a
"
c
hampion" means a land manager that is declared a soil health champion due to the land manager's excellence in applying and promoting soil health principles, as modeled by the Soil Health Champion Program of the National Association of Conservation Districts
.



Create a program to provide ongoing training in soil health stewardship and workshop facilitation for champions, districts, and eligible entities
.



In collaboration with technical assistance providers, sponsor soil health workshops and training sessions at research centers and learning sites throughout this state
.



Educate students and the general public about the importance of soil health stewardship.

CREATION AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE HEALTHY SOIL GRANT PROGRAM

This bill creates

the
healthy soil grant fund
in the state treasury
, which is separate and distinct from the general fund and all other reserve funds, to be administered by the department.

The fund consists of moneys appropriated by the general assembly. Funds appropriated to the fund must only be
used to provide grants as described in this
bill
.

In administering the grant program,
this bill requires
the department
to do all of the following:



Award grants to districts and eligible entities to provide technical assistance to producers and land managers in advancing soil health principles and implementing supported methods

that
are
based upon soil health principles and scientifically supported to promote healthy soil
.



Develop a user-friendly grant program application and application and reporting processes
.



Develop criteria for the award
ing
of grants
.

G
rants must be awarded equitably
,

but
priority may be given to districts or eligible entities serving young producers, veterans, small farms, or ranches, or for projects that benefit economically or socially disadvantaged communities
.



Ensure that grant funds are only used to advance soil health and soil health stewardship.



Develop
eligibility criteria by rule.

HEALTHY SOIL ADVISORY GROUP

This bill creates
a healthy soil advisory group
that is
administratively attached to the department
and is
composed of eight members
, including the following:



One individual from each grand division of this state, to be appointed by the governor
.


Two individuals who are qualified and knowledgeable regarding soil health, including soil health specialists, producers, champions, or representatives of nongovernmental organizations, to be appointed by the commissioner of agriculture
.


One individual from an emergent agriculture market, to be appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives
.


One individual from a socially disadvantaged group traditionally excluded from agricultural policy-making, to be appointed by the speaker of the senate
.


The commissioner of agriculture, or the commissioner's designee, as a nonvoting ex officio member.

In making appointments to the advisory group,
this bill requires
the appointing authorities
to
coordinate the appointments to ensure that the advisory group membership is inclusive and reflects the diversity of this state.

A vacancy on the advisory group must be filled for the unexpired term by the appointing authority and in such a manner to ensure that the requirements of this
bill
are met.

This bill requires the
advisory group
to
provide recommendations to the departme
nt for
(i) p
reventative measures and training to prevent future environmental degradation from development within this state, including ways that existing environmental degradation may be reversed; and

(
ii
)
a
daptation and mitigation of healthy soils to add
ress the emergent climate crisis and effects that poor soil management and degradation have on carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions.

USE OF FUNDING

This bill requires f
unds appropriated to the department to effectuate this
bill
, or obtained by the
department through state or federal grants,
to
be used for
t
he healthy soil grant program
,

t
he healthy soil assessment and education program
, p
romotion and outreach for the program and its grant and assessment and education programs
, d
epartment staffing su
pport
,
and
c
apacity building for the districts and other eligible entities.

RULEMAKING

This bill requires t
he department
to
promulgate rules to effectuate this
bill.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SENATE BILL 700
By Kyle

HOUSE BILL 681
By Jones J

HB0681
002135
- 1 -

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 4 and
Title 43, Chapter 14, relative to soil.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:
SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 43, Chapter 14, is amended by adding
the following as a new part:
43-14-401. Short title.
This part is known and may be cited as the "Healthy Soil Act."
43-14-402. Part definitions.
As used in this part:
(1) "Champion" means a land manager that is declared a soil health
champion due to the land manager's excellence in applying and promoting soil
health principles, as modeled by the Soil Health Champion Program of the
National Association of Conservation Districts;
(2) "Commission" means the Tennessee soil and water conservation
commission created in § 43-14-203;
(3) "Department" means the department of agriculture;
(4) "District" means a soil and water conservation district created
pursuant to the Soil and Water Conservation Districts Law, compiled in part 2 of
this chapter;
(5) "Eligible entity" means a local governmental entity with proven land
management capacity to support healthy soil;

- 2 - 002135

(6) "Healthy soil" means soil that enhances its continuing capacity to
function as a biological system, increases its organic matter and carbon content,
and improves its structure and water- and nutrient-holding capacity, resulting in
net, long-term greenhouse gas benefits;
(7) "Program" means the healthy soil program created in § 43-14-403;
(8) "Soil health principle" means a principle that promotes soil health and
includes:
(A) Keeping soil covered;
(B) Minimizing soil disturbance on cropland and minimizing
external inputs;
(C) Maximizing biodiversity;
(D) Maintaining a living root; and
(E) Integrating animals into land management, including grazing
animals, birds, beneficial insects, or keystone species, such as
earthworms;
(9) "Supported method":
(A) Means a method that is based upon soil health principles and
is scientifically supported to promote healthy soil; and
(B) Includes:
(i) Planting cover crops, perennials, hedgerows, native
grasses and other native vegetation;
(ii) Multi-cropping;
(iii) Adopting no-till or conservation tillage;
(iv) Planned grazing with appropriate graze and recovery
periods and herd effect;

- 3 - 002135

(v) Integrated crop livestock systems;
(vi) Mulching;
(vii) Compost application;
(viii) Soil microbial stimulation and inoculation; and
(ix) On-site wetland and riparian restoration;
(10) "Technical assistance":
(A) Means assistance provided to a farmer or rancher to achieve
the purposes of this part; and
(B) Includes outreach, education, financial assistance, and
assistance with project planning, project design, grant applications,
project implementation, or project reporting; and
(11) "Technical assistance provider":
(A) Means a local, state, federal, educational, nonprofit, or
nongovernmental entity with demonstrated technical expertise in
designing and implementing agricultural management practices that
contribute to healthy soils; and
(B) Includes a district, the United States natural resources
conservation service, the United States forest service, the United States
bureau of land management, and the department of environment and
conservation.
43-14-403. Healthy soil program.
(a) There is a program created within the department to be known as the
"healthy soil program." The department, with support and advice from the commission,
shall administer the program.

- 4 - 002135

(b) The purpose of the program is to promote and support farming and ranching
systems and other forms of land management that increase soil organic matter, carbon
content, aggregate stability, microbiology, and water retention to improve the health,
yield, and profitability of the soils of this state.
(c) The program must include:
(1) A healthy soil assessment and education program;
(2) A healthy soil grant program; and
(3) Other programs established by the department to effectuate this part.
(d) The department shall encourage producer, land manager, landowner, and
interagency collaboration in the management of healthy soils and shall:
(1) Work with technical assistance providers to advance soil health
stewardship across private, state, and federal land jurisdictions by fostering
collaboration among producers, land managers, and landowners; and
(2) Conduct outreach to producers and land managers to promote the
program and other federal, state, or local grant opportunities that support and
promote healthy soils.
(e) In administering the program, the department shall support local economic
growth in this state and shall:
(1) Identify ways to increase the generation and use of compost to build
healthy soils;
(2) To the extent permitted by law, prioritize in-state sourcing of the
resources needed for the program, including testing resources, compost, seeds,
fencing supplies, and equipment; and
(3) Support the emerging market for food grown in this state under
management for healthy soils.

- 5 - 002135

43-14-404. Administration of the healthy soil assessment and education program.
In administering the healthy soil assessment and education program, the
department shall:
(1) Work through districts, technical assistance providers, or eligible
entities to:
(A) Encourage farmers, ranchers, and land managers to
undertake voluntary soil health measurements;
(B) Raise awareness about desirable soil health characteristics;
(C) Facilitate on-site, producer-led workshops and training
sessions to promote and engender soil health stewardship; and
(D) Complete a baseline soil health assessment by testing the
carbon content, water infiltration rate, microbiology, and aggregate
stability of soils, in addition to monitoring soil cover or bare ground
percentage;
(2) Establish a statewide network of champions to promote soil health
stewardship, offer guidance to producers and land managers, and encourage
teamwork between persons involved in increasing soil health;
(3) Create a program to provide ongoing training in soil health
stewardship and workshop facilitation for champions, districts, and eligible
entities;
(4) In collaboration with technical assistance providers, sponsor soil
health workshops and training sessions at research centers and learning sites
throughout this state; and
(5) Educate students and the general public about the importance of soil
health stewardship.

- 6 - 002135

43-14-405. Creation and administration of the healthy soil grant program.
(a)
(1) There is created in the state treasury the healthy soil grant fund,
which is separate and distinct from the general fund and all other reserve funds,
to be administered by the department.
(2) The fund consists of moneys appropriated by the general assembly.
Funds appropriated to the fund must only be used to provide grants as described
in this section.
(3) Interest accrued by the fund must remain in the fund, and
unexpended funds must be retained and carried forward to be used for the same
purposes.
(b) In administering the grant program, the department shall:
(1) Award grants to districts and eligible entities to provide technical
assistance to producers and land managers in advancing soil health principles
and implementing supported methods;
(2) Develop a user-friendly grant program application and application and
reporting processes;
(3) Develop criteria for the award of grants; provided, that grants must be
awarded equitably and priority may be given to districts or eligible entities serving
young producers, veterans, small farms, or ranches, or for projects that benefit
economically or socially disadvantaged communities; and
(4) Ensure that grant funds are only used to advance soil health and soil
health stewardship.
(c) The department shall develop eligibility criteria by rule.
43-14-406. Healthy soil advisory group.

- 7 - 002135

(a) There is created a healthy soil advisory group. The advisory group is
administratively attached to the department.
(b)
(1) The advisory board is composed of eight (8) members and must
include:
(A) One (1) individual from each grand division of this state, to be
appointed by the governor;
(B) Two (2) individuals who are qualified and knowledgeable
regarding soil health, including soil health specialists, producers,
champions, or representatives of nongovernmental organizations, to be
appointed by the commissioner of agriculture;
(C) One (1) individual from an emergent agriculture market, to be
appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives;
(D) One (1) individual from a socially disadvantaged group
traditionally excluded from agricultural policy-making, to be appointed by
the speaker of the senate; and
(E) The commissioner of agriculture, or the commissioner's
designee, as a nonvoting ex officio member.
(2) In making appointments to the advisory group, the appointing
authorities shall coordinate the appointments to ensure that the advisory group
membership is inclusive and reflects the diversity of this state.
(3) A vacancy on the advisory group must be filled for the unexpired term
by the appointing authority and in such a manner to ensure that the requirements
of this section are met.
(4)

- 8 - 002135

(A) Members appointed pursuant to subdivision (b)(1)(A) are
appointed for an initial term of two (2) years. Members appointed
pursuant to subdivision (b)(1)(B)–(D) are appointed for an initial term of
three (3) years. After the initial term, each member serves for a term of
four (4) years.
(B) Each member shall hold over after the expiration of the
member's term until a successor has been dully appointed and qualified.
(C) Members may be reappointed for additional terms.
(5) Members serve without compensation, but members appointed
pursuant to subdivisions (b)(1)(A)–(D) may receive travel expenses in
accordance with the comprehensive travel regulations promulgated by the
department of finance and administration.
(c) The advisory group shall provide recommendations to the department for:
(1) Preventative measures and training to prevent future environmental
degradation from development within this state, including ways that existing
environmental degradation may be reversed; and
(2) Adaptation and mitigation of healthy soils to address the emergent
climate crisis and effects that poor soil management and degradation have on
carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions.
43-14-407. Use of funding.
Funds appropriated to the department to effectuate this part, or obtained by the
department through state or federal grants, must be used for:
(1) The healthy soil grant program;
(2) The healthy soil assessment and education program;

- 9 - 002135

(3) Promotion and outreach for the program and its grant and
assessment and education programs;
(4) Department staffing support; and
(5) Capacity building for the districts and other eligible entities.
43-14-408. Rulemaking authority.
The department shall promulgate rules to effectuate this part. The rules must be
promulgated in accordance with the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act, compiled in
title 4, chapter 5.
SECTION 2. The headings in this act are for reference purposes only and do not
constitute a part of the law enacted by this act. However, the Tennessee Code Commission is
requested to include the headings in any compilation or publication containing this act.
SECTION 3. For purposes of promulgating rules, this act takes effect upon becoming a
law, the public welfare requiring it. For all other purposes, this act takes effect July 1, 2025, the
public welfare requiring it.