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HB1672 • 2026

Local Government, General

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 9, Chapter 13, Part 2 and Title 9, Chapter 21, Part 7, relative to local government debt.

Taxes
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
Jones R, Crowe
Last action
2026-03-23
Official status
Comp. SB subst.
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill does not provide specific details on how local governments will demonstrate economic distress to the comptroller.

Local Government Debt Law Changes

This bill modifies Tennessee's laws regarding local government debt issuance, particularly concerning emergency financial assistance and grant anticipation notes.

What This Bill Does

  • Expands the definition of 'local government' to include utility authorities for issuing emergency financial assistance notes.
  • Allows local governments to issue notes that mature beyond their fiscal year if approved by the comptroller due to economic distress caused by a natural disaster.
  • Clarifies when and how local governments can sell interest-bearing grant anticipation notes before receiving state or federal grants.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Local governments in Tennessee
  • Utility districts and utility authorities

Terms To Know

Grant anticipation notes
Financial instruments issued by local governments before receiving grant money from state or federal agencies.
General obligation pledge
A promise by a local government to use its general tax revenue to pay back borrowed funds.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify the exact fiscal impact on local governments due to multiple variables.
  • It is unclear how this legislation will affect specific local government budgets and financial stability in practice.

Bill History

  1. 2026-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Transmitted to Governor for action.

  2. 2026-04-01 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by H. Speaker

  3. 2026-03-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by Senate Speaker

  4. 2026-03-25 Tennessee General Assembly

    Enrolled and ready for signatures

  5. 2026-03-23 Tennessee General Assembly

    Comp. SB subst.

  6. 2026-03-23 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed H., Ayes 82, Nays 0, PNV 2

  7. 2026-03-23 Tennessee General Assembly

    Subst. for comp. HB.

  8. 2026-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    H. Placed on Consent Calendar for 3/23/2026

  9. 2026-03-18 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Calendar & Rules Committee for 3/19/2026

  10. 2026-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass; ref to Calendar & Rules Committee

  11. 2026-03-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Finance, Ways, and Means Committee for 3/17/2026

  12. 2026-03-11 Tennessee General Assembly

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

  13. 2026-03-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Finance, Ways, and Means Subcommittee for 3/11/2026

  14. 2026-03-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Action Def. in s/c Finance, Ways, and Means Subcommittee to 3/11/2026

  15. 2026-03-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  16. 2026-02-25 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Finance, Ways, and Means Subcommittee for 3/4/2026

  17. 2026-02-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  18. 2026-02-19 Tennessee General Assembly

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

  19. 2026-02-18 Tennessee General Assembly

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

  20. 2026-02-18 Tennessee General Assembly

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

  21. 2026-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Engrossed; ready for transmission to House

  22. 2026-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  23. 2026-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed Senate, Ayes 32, Nays 0

  24. 2026-02-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. State & Local Government Committee for 2/18/2026

  25. 2026-02-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass by s/c ref. to State & Local Government Committee

  26. 2026-02-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  27. 2026-02-10 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Consent Calendar 2 for 2/12/2026

  28. 2026-02-05 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  29. 2026-02-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Cities & Counties Subcommittee for 2/11/2026

  30. 2026-02-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Recommended for passage, refer to Senate Calendar Committee

  31. 2026-01-28 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate State and Local Government Committee calendar for 2/3/2026

  32. 2026-01-21 Tennessee General Assembly

    Assigned to s/c Cities & Counties Subcommittee

  33. 2026-01-21 Tennessee General Assembly

    P2C, ref. to State & Local Government Committee

  34. 2026-01-21 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed on Second Consideration, refer to Senate State and Local Government Committee

  35. 2026-01-15 Tennessee General Assembly

    Intro., P1C.

  36. 2026-01-15 Tennessee General Assembly

    Introduced, Passed on First Consideration

  37. 2026-01-14 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

  38. 2026-01-14 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

Official Summary Text

The "
Emergency Financial Aid to Local Government Law of 1995
"
provide
s
procedures whereby local governments may acquire emergency technical and financial assistance provided and guaranteed by the state or, in the case of natural disaster, may obtain adequate financing, thus enabling such local governments to stabilize their
financial condition and to meet their current operational and debt service costs.
For purposes of such law, a "local government" includes a
utility district for purposes of
the issuanc
e of notes. This bill expands the term to also include utility authorities.

Further, this bill clarifies when a governing body of a local government may issue notes that mature beyond the close of the fiscal year, and allows a local government to issue a note if it is a
pproved by the comptroller of the treasury or the comptroller's designee after the local government has reasonably demonstrated that a natural disaster has caused economic distress to the local government.

LOCAL GOVERNMENT PUBLIC OBLIGATIONS ACT OF 1986

The "
Local Government Public Obligations Act of 1986
"
provide
s
a uniform and comprehensive statutory framework authorizing any local government to issue general obligation bonds and revenue bonds for public works projects, general obligation bonds for certain unfunded pension obligations, general obligation refundin
g bonds, revenue refunding bonds, bond anticipation notes, capital outlay notes, grant anticipation notes, tax anticipation notes, and health care revenue anticipation notes, and to authorize th
e destruction of bonds, notes and coupons.
This bill makes changes relative to interest-bearing grant anticipation notes as described below.

Timing of Issue and Sale

This bill clarifies when the governing body of a local government may issue and sell interest-bearing grant anticipation notes. The governing body of a local government, acting by resolution, may issue and sell
such
notes for public works projects in anticipation of money to be received pursuant to a grant contract between a state or federal agency
,
and the local government. The resolution is not effective until the contract has been executed by all parties to the contract. The governing body must recei
ve approval from the comptroller of the treasury or the comptroller's designee prior to the issuance of the grant anticipation notes.

Security

This bill requires g
rant anticipation notes
to
be secured by a pledge of the money to be received pursuant to a grant contract between a state or federal agency and a local government, in an amount not less than the principal amount of such notes. At its discretion, the local government may add as a
dditional security to the grant anticipation notes
any
of the following:



A general obligation pledge
.



A revenue pledge from a special revenue or enterprise fund, as defined by generally accepted accounting principles, that benefits from the grant.

Interest

This bill authorizes i
nterest on grant anticipation notes
to
be a general obligation of a local government, and the local government has the authority to levy ad valorem taxes for the payment of interest on such notes.
However, t
his
bill
does not preclude a local government from issuing capital outlay notes or bond anticipation notes in conjunction with grant anticipation notes issued
as long as
the proceeds from the sale of any such capital outlay notes or bond anticipation notes
are
not applied to the payment of such grant anticipation notes.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SENATE BILL 1679
By Crowe

HOUSE BILL 1672
By Jones R
HB1672
010585
- 1 -

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 9,
Chapter 13, Part 2 and Title 9, Chapter 21, Part 7,
relative to local government debt.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:
SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 9-13-203(3), is amended by adding
the language "or utility authority" after "utility district".
SECTION 2. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 9-13-206, is amended by deleting the
section and substituting:
Notwithstanding another law to the contrary, the governing body of a local
government may issue notes that mature beyond the close of the fiscal year in which
such notes are issued when such notes are:
(1) Approved by the comptroller of the treasury or the comptroller's
designee and guaranteed by the state funding board;
(2) Approved by the comptroller of the treasury or the comptroller's
designee in the case of economic distress due to a natural disaster certified by
the federal emergency management agency (FEMA); or
(3) Approved by the comptroller of the treasury or the comptroller's
designee after the local government has reasonably demonstrated to the
comptroller or the comptroller's designee that a natural disaster has caused
economic distress to the local government.
SECTION 3. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 9-21-701, is amended by deleting the
section and substituting the following:

- 2 - 010585

The governing body of a local government, acting by resolution, may issue and
sell interest-bearing grant anticipation notes for public works projects in anticipation of
money to be received pursuant to a grant contract between a state or federal agency
and the local government. The resolution is not effective until the contract between the
state or federal agency and the local government has been executed by all parties to the
contract. The governing body must receive approval from the comptroller of the treasury
or the comptroller's designee prior to the issuance of the grant anticipation notes.
SECTION 4. Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 9-21-704, is amended by deleting the
section and substituting the following:
(a) Grant anticipation notes issued under this part must be secured by a pledge
of the money to be received pursuant to a grant contract between a state or federal
agency and a local government, in an amount not less than the principal amount of such
notes. At its discretion, the local government may add as additional security to the grant
anticipation notes one (1) or both of the following:
(1) A general obligation pledge; or
(2) A revenue pledge from a special revenue or enterprise fund, as
defined by generally accepted accounting principles, that benefits from the grant.
(b) Interest on grant anticipation notes may be a general obligation of a local
government, and the local government has the authority to levy ad valorem taxes for the
payment of interest on such notes. This section does not preclude a local government
from issuing capital outlay notes or bond anticipation notes in conjunction with grant
anticipation notes issued under this section; provided, that the proceeds from the sale of
any such capital outlay notes or bond anticipation notes must not be applied to the
payment of such grant anticipation notes.
SECTION 5. This act takes effect upon becoming a law, the public welfare requiring it.