Senate OKs limited eligibility for private-school athletes in public athletics
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Summary
Senate Bill 18-22 passed after debate over whether students at small private schools (under 200 high-school students) should be eligible to compete for teams in the public schools where they are zoned; sponsors said the measure provides parity for small private schools and mirrors access provided to homeschool students; vote was 26-4.
The Tennessee Senate on Feb. 24 approved Senate Bill 18-22, expanding eligibility for students enrolled in small private high schools (fewer than 200 students) to participate in athletics for the public school in which their family is zoned.
Sponsor Senator Lowe said the bill removes a geographic requirement that a private school be located within a local education agency and clarifies the bill's scope is limited to private schools that serve fewer than 200 high-school students. "This limits that to students who are enrolled in a private school less than 200 high school students," Lowe said, adding the change aligns access for these students with recent treatment of homeschoolers.
Opponents, including Senator Oliver, argued the policy could create "double-dipping," where private-school students benefit from public-school teams without attending the public school academically and could take roster spots from local students. Senator Yarbrough raised concerns about parity and the potential for expanded eligibility to create extra competition and disparities between schools.
Sponsor Lowe responded that existing cross-district public-school arrangements already allow participation where a local school lacks a particular sport and that the 200-student cap addresses capacity concerns. After discussion, the Senate passed SB 18-22; the roll-call record reported 26 yeas and 4 nays.
