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HB1270 • 2026

Education

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 4; Title 8; Title 9, Chapter 8; Title 29, Chapter 20 and Title 49, relative to freedom of speech.

Children Education Labor Parental Rights
Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Cochran, Rose
Last action
2025-05-15
Official status
Comp. became Pub. Ch. 453
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official source material does not provide specific details regarding the effective date or potential legal challenges beyond constitutional rights interpretations.

Act to Protect Freedom of Speech in Schools

This act amends Tennessee laws to protect individuals from being required to use preferred names or pronouns that do not match their biological sex, and prohibits disciplinary actions for non-compliance.

What This Bill Does

  • Allows teachers, employees, students, contractors, and others in public schools and institutions of higher education to use a person's legal name or pronoun consistent with their biological sex without facing disciplinary action.
  • Prohibits asking individuals to provide their preferred pronouns and taking adverse actions against those who refuse to do so.
  • Requires written consent from parents or guardians before addressing an unemancipated minor student by a name or pronoun inconsistent with the student's legal identity.
  • Creates private causes of action for individuals affected by violations, allowing them to seek injunctive relief and damages.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Teachers
  • Students
  • Employees
  • Contractors
  • Public schools and institutions of higher education

Terms To Know

Preferred Pronoun
A pronoun that a person prefers others to use when referring to them, which may differ from their biological sex.
Biological Sex
The physical characteristics of an individual's body, such as chromosomes and reproductive organs.

Limits and Unknowns

  • Does not specify the effective date for implementation.
  • May face legal challenges or interpretations based on constitutional rights to free speech and expression.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

Amendment 1-0 to HB1270

Plain English: The amendment changes parts of a bill to protect individuals from being punished for not using preferred pronouns and adds rules for filing complaints if someone is forced to use them.

  • Public institutions of higher education cannot punish students, faculty, or employees who refuse to provide their preferred pronouns.
  • Students, parents, teachers, and staff can file a complaint within ten days if they are required to use preferred names or pronouns against the new rules.
  • If a school does not fix the issue after thirty days of receiving a complaint, individuals have two years to sue for damages and legal fees.
  • The amendment text is complex and includes many specific details that are hard to summarize fully without additional context.
Amendment 2-0 to HB1270

Plain English: The amendment adds a new section to HB1270, naming it the 'Imposition of Specific Expressions Act'.

  • Adds a new Section 1 to HB1270.
  • Names the act as the 'Imposition of Specific Expressions Act.'
  • The amendment text does not provide details about what the 'Imposition of Specific Expressions Act' entails, so its full impact is unclear.
Amendment 3-0 to HB1270

Plain English: The amendment removes a specific part of an existing bill that was meant to be changed.

  • Removes subsection (e) from the proposed changes made by HB1270.
  • The exact content and purpose of removed subsection (e) are not provided, making it hard to explain its full impact.
Amendment 4-0 to HB1270

Plain English: This amendment adds provisions that prohibit public schools, local education agencies (LEAs), public institutions of higher education, and the state from asking individuals for proof of their biological sex.

  • Public schools and LEAs cannot ask people to show evidence of their biological sex.
  • Public colleges and universities cannot ask people to provide proof of their biological sex.
  • The state government cannot request individuals to produce evidence of their biological sex.
Amendment 5-0 to HB1270

Plain English: The amendment adds a new section to HB1270, naming it the 'Bullying LGBTQ Students Act'.

  • Adds a new Section 1 to HB1270.
  • The official text does not provide details about what protections or actions this act would include for bullying LGBTQ students.
  • Further information is needed from the full bill and additional sections of the amendment to understand the concrete changes it will make.
Amendment 1-0 to SB0937

Plain English: The amendment removes certain restrictions and adds new protections for individuals at public institutions of higher education regarding preferred pronouns.

  • Removes the requirement that public institutions of higher education or their employees take adverse action against someone who refuses to use an individual's preferred pronouns.
  • Requires public institutions of higher education to annually inform students, faculty members, and employees about this new protection.
  • The amendment text does not provide details on the consequences for non-compliance with these changes.

Bill History

  1. 2025-05-15 Tennessee General Assembly

    Comp. became Pub. Ch. 453

  2. 2025-05-15 Tennessee General Assembly

    Effective date(s) 05/09/2025

  3. 2025-05-15 Tennessee General Assembly

    Pub. Ch. 453

  4. 2025-05-09 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by Governor.

  5. 2025-05-01 Tennessee General Assembly

    Transmitted to Governor for action.

  6. 2025-04-30 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by H. Speaker

  7. 2025-04-29 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by Senate Speaker

  8. 2025-04-23 Tennessee General Assembly

    Enrolled and ready for signatures

  9. 2025-04-21 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  10. 2025-04-21 Tennessee General Assembly

    Concurred, Ayes 27, Nays 6 (Amendment 1 - HA0259)

  11. 2025-04-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Message Calendar for 4/21/2025

  12. 2025-04-16 Tennessee General Assembly

    Comp. SB subst.

  13. 2025-04-16 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  14. 2025-04-16 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed H., as am., Ayes 77, Nays 18, PNV 0

  15. 2025-04-16 Tennessee General Assembly

    H. adopted am. (Amendment 1 - HA0259)

  16. 2025-04-16 Tennessee General Assembly

    Subst. for comp. HB.

  17. 2025-04-15 Tennessee General Assembly

    H. Placed on Regular Calendar for 4/16/2025

  18. 2025-04-14 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Calendar & Rules Committee for 4/15/2025

  19. 2025-04-14 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  20. 2025-04-14 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass; ref to Calendar & Rules Committee

  21. 2025-04-09 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Finance, Ways, and Means Committee for 4/14/2025

  22. 2025-04-09 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass by s/c ref. to Finance, Ways, and Means Committee

  23. 2025-04-07 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rcvd. from S., held on H. desk.

  24. 2025-04-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Engrossed; ready for transmission to House

  25. 2025-04-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  26. 2025-04-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed Senate as amended, Ayes 25, Nays 5

  27. 2025-04-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Senate adopted Amendment (Amendment 1 - SA0275)

  28. 2025-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Finance, Ways, and Means Subcommittee for 4/9/2025

  29. 2025-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Assigned to s/c Finance, Ways, and Means Subcommittee

  30. 2025-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass. if am., ref. to Finance, Ways, and Means Committee

  31. 2025-04-01 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Regular Calendar for 4/3/2025

  32. 2025-03-27 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  33. 2025-03-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Education Committee for 4/1/2025

  34. 2025-03-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    Recommended for passage with amendment/s, refer to Senate Calendar Committee Ayes 8, Nays 1 PNV 0

  35. 2025-03-25 Tennessee General Assembly

    Action def. in Education Committee to 4/1/2025

  36. 2025-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Education Committee for 3/25/2025

  37. 2025-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Education Committee calendar for 3/26/2025

  38. 2025-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Action deferred in Senate Education Committee to 3/26/2025

  39. 2025-03-18 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass by s/c ref. to Education Committee

  40. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  41. 2025-03-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Education Administration Subcommittee for 3/18/2025

  42. 2025-03-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Education Committee calendar for 3/19/2025

  43. 2025-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Assigned to s/c Education Administration Subcommittee

  44. 2025-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    P2C, ref. to Education Committee

  45. 2025-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed on Second Consideration, refer to Senate Education Committee

  46. 2025-02-10 Tennessee General Assembly

    Intro., P1C.

  47. 2025-02-10 Tennessee General Assembly

    Introduced, Passed on First Consideration

  48. 2025-02-06 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

  49. 2025-02-05 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

Official Summary Text

Present law provides that a teacher or other employee of a public school or LEA is not:

(1) Required to use a stu
dent's preferred pronoun when referring to the student if the preferred pronoun is not consistent with the student's biological sex;

(2) Civilly liable for using a pronoun that is consistent with the biological sex of the student to whom the teacher or e
mployee is referring, even if the pronoun is not the student's preferred pronoun; and

(3) Subject to an adverse employment action for not using a student's preferred pronoun, if the student's preferred pronoun is inconsistent with the student's biologica
l sex.

Under present law, a public school or LEA is not civilly liable if a teacher or employee of the public school or LEA refers to a student using a pronoun that is consistent with the biological sex of the student to whom the teacher or employee is r
eferring, even if the pronoun is not the student's preferred pronoun.

This bill extends the provisions of (1)
–
(3) and the present law concerning civil immunity for public schools and LEAs to students and contractors of public schools and LEAs while at
school and prohibits disciplinary action against a student or adverse action against a school contractor for failure to use a preferred pronoun that is inconsistent with the preferer's biological sex. This bill makes the provisions of (1)
–
(3) and the p
r
esent law concerning civil immunity for public schools and LEAs applicable to the use of preferred pronouns of teachers, school employees, and school contractors that are inconsistent with such persons' biological sex. This bill adds that all persons who

cannot be required to use a preferred pronoun that is inconsistent with biological sex cannot be required to use the preferred name of a student, teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA, if the individual's preferred name is not the ind
i
vidual's legal name or a derivative thereof. The same immunities that apply to not using a preferred pronoun will also apply to not using a name other than an individual's legal name or a derivative thereof.

This bill prohibits a public school, LEA, o
r teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA from:

(1) Asking a student, teacher, employee, or contractor of the public school or LEA to provide the individual's preferred pronouns; and

(2) Subjecting a student, teacher, employee, or c
ontractor of the public school or LEA to an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to provide the individual's preferred pronouns.

This bill prohibits a teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA from:

(1) Knowingly address
ing or referring to an unemancipated minor student who is enrolled in the public school or LEA by a name other than the student's legal name, or a derivative thereof, or by a pronoun or title that is inconsistent with the student's sex without first obtai
n
ing written consent to do so from the unemancipated minor student's parent or legal guardian; and

(2) Asking a student to refer to the teacher, employee, or contractor using a pronoun or honorific that is inconsistent with the sex of the teacher, employe
e, or contractor.

This bill creates a cause of action in favor of a student or the student's parent or legal guardian if the student is an unemancipated minor, teacher, employee, or contractor who is required to use, or acted against or punished for refu
sing to use, a preferred pronoun or name in violation of this bill. A plaintiff in any such action may pray for injunctive relief, monetary damages, and any other relief available under law. Additionally, the plaintiff may recover reasonable costs and a
t
torney fees. The statute of limitations for an action under this bill is two years from the date of the violation.

This bill creates prohibitions and causes of action, which are substantially the same as those described above in the context of public
schools, related to requiring the use of a preferred pronoun that is inconsistent with an individual's biological sex or a name other than a person's legal name or a derivative thereof, for students, faculty, employees, and contractors of public instituti
o
ns of higher education, and state employees and contractors.

ON APRIL 3, 2025, THE SENATE ADOPTED AMENDMENT #1 AND PASSED SENATE BILL 937, AS AMENDED.

AMENDMENT #1 replaces this bill's prohibition against a public institution of higher education or a f
aculty member, employee, or contractor of the institution asking a student, faculty member, employee, or contractor of the institution to provide the individual's preferred pronouns and subjecting a student, faculty member, employee, or contractor of the
i
nstitution to an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to provide the individual's preferred pronouns. This amendment instead:

(1) Prohibits a public institution of higher education or a faculty member, employee, or contractor of the insti
tution from subjecting a student, faculty member, employee, or contractor of the institution to an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to provide the individual's preferred pronouns; and

(2) Requires each public institution of higher educat
ion to annually notify students, faculty members, and employees of the institution of the prohibition in (1). The notice must be submitted to students, faculty members, and employees separate from any other notice or report provided by the institution.

This amendment also clarifies that the provisions of this bill concerning state employees and contractors do not apply to an employee, faculty member, or contractor of a public institution of higher education who are covered by other provisions of this bi
l
l.

ON APRIL 16, 2025, THE HOUSE SUBSTITUTED SENATE BILL 937 FOR HOUSE BILL 1270, ADOPTED AMENDMENT #1, AND PASSED SENATE BILL 937, AS AMENDED.

AMENDMENT #1 incorporates the changes made by Senate Amendment #1 and makes the following additional changes
to this bill:

(1) Prohibits a
public school, LEA, or teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA
from "requiring" (instead of "asking")
a student, teacher, employee, or contractor of the public school or LEA to provide the individual's pr
eferred pronouns
;

(2) Prohibits a
teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA
from "requiring" (instead of "
ask
ing")
a student to refer to the teacher, employee, or contractor using a pronoun or honorific that is inconsistent with the sex
of the teacher, employee, or contractor
;

(3) Adds a requirement that, prior to pursing a private right of action under this bill, an aggrieved party must first f
ile a complaint
within 10 days of the date of the violation
, in writing, with the director of
the public charter school or the director of schools for the LEA, as applicable, alleging a violation of
this bill
. The director shall require the public school or LEA to remedy a violation no later than 30 days from the date on which the complaint was f
iled. The appropriate director, or the director's designee, shall notify the complainant, in writing, of the steps taken by the public school or LEA to address the alleged violation; and

(4) Replaces the cause of action against the state with a requirem
ent that e
ach state board, commission, department, agency, and contractor annually notify its employees and personnel of th
is bill's
prohibition
that applies to the
state or a state employee or contractor of the state
. The notice must be submitted to
employees and personnel separate from any other notice or report provided by the state board, commission, department, agency, or contractor.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SENATE BILL 937
By Rose

HOUSE BILL 1270
By Cochran

HB1270
002934
- 1 -

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 4;
Title 8; Title 9, Chapter 8; Title 29, Chapter 20 and
Title 49, relative to freedom of speech.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:
SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 49-6-5102, is amended by deleting
the section and substituting instead the following:
(a) The general assembly finds that:
(1) Students, teachers, employees, and contractors of public schools and
LEAs do not shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech and expression
while at school or work;
(2) Protecting the right to free speech for students, teachers, employees,
and contractors of public schools and LEAs promotes important state interests;
(3) The use of names and pronouns by students, teachers, employees,
and contractors of public schools and LEAs in an educational setting is a matter
of free speech or expression; and
(4) A student, teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA
should never be compelled to affirm a belief with which the student, teacher,
employee, or contractor disagrees.
(b) A student, teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA is not:
(1) Required to use the:
(A) Preferred name of a student, teacher, employee, or contractor
of a public school or LEA, if the individual's preferred name is not the
individual's legal name or a derivative thereof; or

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(B) Preferred pronoun of a student, teacher, employee, or
contractor of a public school or LEA, if the individual's preferred pronoun
is not consistent with the individual's sex;
(2) Civilly liable for using:
(A) The legal name or a derivative thereof of a student, teacher,
employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA when addressing or
referring to the student, teacher, employee, or contractor, even if the
individual's legal name is not the individual's preferred name; or
(B) A pronoun that is consistent with the sex of the student,
teacher, employee, or contractor to whom the student, teacher,
employee, or contractor is referring, even if the pronoun is not the
individual's preferred pronoun; or
(3) Subject to an adverse action or disciplinary action for not using:
(A) The preferred name of a student, teacher, employee, or
contractor of a public school or LEA, if the individual's preferred name is
not the individual's legal name or a derivative thereof; or
(B) The preferred pronoun of a student, teacher, employee, or
contractor of a public school or LEA, if the individual's preferred pronoun
is inconsistent with the individual's sex.
(c) A public school or LEA is not civilly liable if a teacher, employee, or
contractor of the public school or LEA refers to a student, teacher, employee, or
contractor of the public school or LEA using:
(1) The individual's legal name or a derivative thereof, even if the
individual's legal name is not the individual's preferred name; or

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(2) A pronoun that is consistent with the sex of the individual to whom the
student, teacher, employee, or contractor is referring, even if the pronoun is not
the individual's preferred pronoun.
(d)
(1) A public school, LEA, or teacher, employee, or contractor of a public
school or LEA shall not ask a student, teacher, employee, or contractor of the
public school or LEA to provide the individual's preferred pronouns and shall not
subject a student, teacher, employee, or contractor of the public school or LEA to
an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to provide the individual's
preferred pronouns.
(2) A teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA shall not
knowingly address or refer to an unemancipated minor student who is enrolled in
the public school or LEA by a name other than the student's legal name, or a
derivative thereof, or by a pronoun or title that is inconsistent with the student's
sex without first obtaining written consent to do so from the unemancipated minor
student's parent or legal guardian.
(3) A teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA shall not
ask a student to refer to the teacher, employee, or contractor using a pronoun or
honorific that is inconsistent with the sex of the teacher, employee, or contractor.
(e)
(1) If a public school, LEA, or a teacher, employee, or contractor of a
public school or LEA requires a student, teacher, employee, or contractor of the
public school or LEA to use a preferred name or preferred pronoun in violation of
subdivision (b)(1) or subjects a student, teacher, employee, or contractor of the
public school or LEA to an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to

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use a preferred name or preferred pronoun in violation of subdivision (b)(3), then
the student or the student's parent or legal guardian if the student is an
unemancipated minor, teacher, employee, or contractor who was required to use
a preferred name or preferred pronoun in violation of subdivision (b)(1) or who
was subjected to an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to use a
preferred name or preferred pronoun in violation of subdivision (b)(3) has a
private cause of action against the public school or LEA for injunctive relief,
monetary damages, and any other relief available under law. The student or the
student's parent or legal guardian if the student is an unemancipated minor,
teacher, employee, or contractor is also entitled to recover reasonable costs and
attorney fees. A student or the student's parent or legal guardian if the student is
an unemancipated minor, teacher, employee, or contractor has two (2) years
from the date of a violation of subdivision (b)(1) or (b)(3) to file an action.
(2) If a public school, LEA, or a teacher, employee, or contractor of a
public school or LEA violates subdivision (d)(1), then the student or the student's
parent or legal guardian if the student is an unemancipated minor, teacher,
employee, or contractor of the public school or LEA who was required to provide
their preferred pronouns or who was subject to an adverse action or disciplinary
action for refusing to provide their preferred pronouns in violation of subdivision
(d)(1) has a private cause of action against the public school or LEA for injunctive
relief, monetary damages, and any other relief available under law. The student
or the student's parent or legal guardian if the student is an unemancipated
minor, teacher, employee, or contractor is also entitled to recover reasonable
costs and attorney fees. A student or the student's parent or legal guardian if the

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student is an unemancipated minor, teacher, employee, or contractor has two (2)
years from the date of the violation of subdivision (d)(1) to file an action.
(3) If a teacher, employee, or contractor of a public school or LEA
violates subdivision (d)(2) or (d)(3), then the student, or the student's parent or
legal guardian if the student is an unemancipated minor, who was addressed or
referred to in violation of subdivision (d)(2) or who was asked to refer to a
teacher, employee, or contractor of the public school or LEA has a private cause
of action against the public school or LEA for injunctive relief, monetary
damages, and any other relief available under law. The student, parent, or legal
guardian is also entitled to recover reasonable costs and attorney fees. A
student, parent, or legal guardian has two (2) years from the date of the violation
to file an action.
SECTION 2. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 49, Chapter 7, Part 24, is amended by
adding the following as a new section:
(a) The general assembly finds that:
(1) Students, faculty, employees, and contractors of public institutions of
higher education do not shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech and
expression while at work or while receiving an education on a campus of the
institution;
(2) Protecting the right to free speech for students, faculty, employees,
and contractors of public institutions of higher education promotes important
state interests;
(3) The use of names or pronouns by students, faculty, employees, and
contractors of public institutions of higher education is a matter of free speech or
expression; and

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(4) A student, faculty member, employee, or contractor of a public
institution of higher education should never be compelled to affirm a belief with
which the student, faculty member, employee, or contractor disagrees.
(b) A student, faculty member, employee, or contractor of an institution is not:
(1) Required to use the:
(A) Preferred name of a student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor, if the individual's preferred name is not the individual's legal
name or a derivative thereof; or
(B) Preferred pronoun of a student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor, if the individual's preferred pronoun is not consistent with the
individual's sex;
(2) Civilly liable for using:
(A) The legal name or a derivative thereof of a student, faculty
member, employee, or contractor when addressing or referring to the
student, faculty member, employee, or contractor, even if the individual's
legal name is not the individual's preferred name; or
(B) A pronoun that is consistent with the sex of the student,
faculty member, employee, or contractor to whom the student, faculty
member, employee, or contractor is referring, even if the pronoun is not
the individual's preferred pronoun; or
(3) Subject to an adverse action or disciplinary action for not using the:
(A) Preferred name of a student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor, if the individual's preferred name is not the individual's legal
name or a derivative thereof; or

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(B) Preferred pronoun of a student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor, if the individual's preferred pronoun is inconsistent with the
individual's sex.
(c) A public institution of higher education is not civilly liable if a student, faculty
member, employee, or contractor of the institution refers to another student, faculty
member, employee, or contractor of the institution using:
(1) The individual's legal name or a derivative thereof, even if the
individual's legal name is not the individual's preferred name; or
(2) A pronoun that is consistent with the sex of the individual to whom the
student, faculty member, employee, or contractor is referring, even if the pronoun
is not the individual's preferred pronoun.
(d) A public institution of higher education or a faculty member, employee, or
contractor of the institution shall not ask a student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor of the institution to provide the individual's preferred pronouns and shall not
subject a student, faculty member, employee, or contractor of the institution to an
adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to provide the individual's preferred
pronouns.
(e)
(1) If a public institution of higher education or a faculty member,
employee, or contractor of the institution requires a student, faculty member,
employee, or contractor of the institution to use a preferred name or preferred
pronoun in violation of subdivision (b)(1) or subjects a student, faculty member,
employee, or contractor of the institution to an adverse action or disciplinary
action for refusing to use a preferred name or preferred pronoun in violation of
subdivision (b)(3), then the student, faculty member, employee, or contractor who

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was required to use a preferred name or preferred pronoun or who was subject
to an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to use a preferred name or
preferred pronoun has a private cause of action against the institution for
injunctive relief, monetary damages, and any other relief available under law.
The student, faculty member, employee, or contractor is also entitled to recover
reasonable costs and attorney fees. A student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor has two (2) years from the date of a violation of subdivision (b)(1) or
(b)(3) to file an action.
(2) If an institution or a faculty member, employee, or contractor of the
institution violates subsection (d), then the student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor who was required to provide their preferred pronouns or who was
subject to an adverse action or disciplinary action for refusing to provide their
preferred pronouns has a private cause of action against the institution for
injunctive relief, monetary damages, and any other relief available under law.
The student, faculty member, employee, or contractor is also entitled to recover
reasonable costs and attorney fees. A student, faculty member, employee, or
contractor has two (2) years from the date of the violation to file an action.
SECTION 3. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 8, Chapter 50, Part 1, is amended by
adding the following as a new section:
(a) The general assembly finds that:
(1) State employees and contractors of the state do not shed their
constitutional rights to freedom of speech and expression while at work;
(2) Protecting the rights to free speech and expression for state
employees and contractors of the state promotes important state interests;

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(3) The use of names and pronouns by state employees and contractors
of the state is a matter of free speech and expression; and
(4) A state employee or contractor of the state should never be
compelled to affirm a belief with which the employee or contractor of the state
disagrees.
(b) A state employee or contractor of the state is not:
(1) Required to use the:
(A) Preferred name of a state employee, contractor of the state,
or a person with whom the state employee or contractor of the state is
communicating for purposes of, and within the scope of, the employee's
state employment or the contractor's contract with the state, if the
individual's preferred name is not the individual's legal name or a
derivative thereof; or
(B) Preferred pronoun of a state employee, contractor of the
state, or a person with whom the state employee or contractor of the state
is communicating for purposes of, and within the scope of, the employee's
state employment or the contractor's contract with the state, if the
individual's preferred pronoun is not consistent with the individual's sex;
(2) Civilly liable for using:
(A) The legal name or a derivative thereof of a state employee,
contractor of the state, or a person with whom the state employee or
contractor of the state is communicating for purposes of, and within the
scope of, the employee's state employment or the contractor's contract
with the state when addressing or referring to the individual, even if the
individual's legal name is not the individual's preferred name; or

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(B) A pronoun to refer to a state employee, contractor of the
state, or a person with whom the state employee or contractor of the state
is communicating for purposes of, and within the scope of, the employee's
state employment or the contractor's contract with the state that is
consistent with the sex of the individual to whom the state employee or
contractor of the state is referring, even if the pronoun is not the
individual's preferred pronoun; or
(3) Subject to an adverse action for not using the:
(A) Preferred name of a state employee, contractor of the state,
or a person with whom the state employee or contractor of the state is
communicating for purposes of, and within the scope of, the employee's
state employment or the contractor's contract with the state, if the
individual's preferred name is not the individual's legal name or a
derivative thereof; or
(B) Preferred pronoun of a state employee, contractor of the
state, or a person with whom the state employee or contractor of the state
is communicating for purposes of, and within the scope of, the employee's
state employment or the contractor's contract with the state, if the
individual's preferred pronoun is inconsistent with the individual's sex.
(c) The state is not civilly liable if a state employee or contractor of the state
refers to a state employee, contractor of the state, or a person with whom the state
employee or contractor of the state is communicating for purposes of, and within the
scope of, the employee's state employment or the contractor's contract with the state
using:

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(1) The individual's legal name or a derivative thereof, even if the
individual's legal name is not the individual's preferred name; or
(2) A pronoun that is consistent with the sex of the individual to whom the
state employee is referring, even if the pronoun is not the individual's preferred
pronoun.
(d) The state or a state employee or contractor of the state shall not ask a state
employee, contractor, or a person with whom the state employee or contractor is
communicating for purposes of, and within the scope of, the employee's state
employment or the contractor's contract with the state to provide the individual's
preferred pronouns, and shall not subject a state employee, contractor, or a person with
whom the state employee or contractor is communicating for purposes of, and within the
scope of, the employee's state employment or the contractor's contract with the state to
an adverse action for refusing to provide the individual's preferred pronouns.
(e)
(1) If the state or a state employee or contractor of the state requires a
state employee or contractor of the state to use a preferred name or preferred
pronoun in violation of subdivision (b)(1) or subjects a state employee or
contractor of the state to an adverse action for refusing to use a preferred name
or preferred pronoun in violation of subdivision (b)(3), then the state employee or
contractor of the state who was required to use a preferred name or preferred
pronoun or who was subjected to an adverse action for refusing to use a
preferred name or preferred pronoun has a private cause of action against the
state for injunctive relief, monetary damages, and any other relief available under
law. The state employee or contractor of the state is also entitled to recover
reasonable costs and attorney fees. A state employee or contractor of the state

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has two (2) years from the date of a violation of subdivision (b)(1) or (b)(3) to file
an action.
(2) If the state or a state employee or contractor of the state violates
subsection (d), then the state employee, contractor of the state, or person with
whom the state employee or contractor was communicating who was subject to
an adverse action for refusing to provide their preferred pronouns has a private
cause of action against the state for injunctive relief, monetary damages, and any
other relief available under law. The state employee, contractor of the state, or
person with whom the state employee or contractor was communicating is also
entitled to recover reasonable costs and attorney fees. A state employee,
contractor of the state, or person with whom the state employee or contractor
was communicating has two (2) years from the date of the violation to file an
action.
SECTION 4. If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance
is held invalid, then the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the act that
can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to that end, the provisions of
this act are severable.
SECTION 5. This act takes effect upon becoming a law, the public welfare requiring it.