Senate Government Operations advances a package of appointment, licensing and cleanup bills

Tennessee Senate Committee on Government Operations · February 25, 2026

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Summary

On Feb. 25 the committee advanced multiple bills — including board-appointment cleanups, a massage-therapy compact, benefits-committee changes and reconstituting the Arts Commission — with most measures receiving unanimous or strongly favorable committee votes and referrals to the next committees.

The Senate Committee on Government Operations advanced a series of bills on Feb. 25 that the committee described as administrative cleanups, board-appointment adjustments, and licensing changes; most measures were approved by voice vote or roll call and were referred to appropriate committees.

Key outcomes

- Tennessee Technology Development Corporation board (amendment 013298): Committee adopted an amendment to fix board composition and meeting requirements and advanced the bill by roll call (eight ayes) to the Commerce Committee.

- DOE administration cleanup (drafting code 13860 / SB 2228): Committee adopted an amendment and gave the bill a positive recommendation (7 ayes, 1 no, 1 absent); the bill moves to the Senate Education Committee. The bill includes summer program funding flexibility, parental leave language, background checks, virtual schools provisions and multiple boards-and-commissions adjustments.

- Assessment reporting and TCAP review (SB 2403): Committee adopted a verbal amendment to rename the newly created review panel and voted 6–2–1 to forward the bill to the Senate Education Committee (see separate article).

- Benefits Administration cleanup (administration bill for Department of Finance and Administration): Sponsor said the bill addresses committee membership to resolve a previously identified conflict-of-interest issue; the committee voted 6–2–1 to move the bill to the State and Local Government Committee.

- Interstate Massage Therapy Licensure Compact (SB 2446): Sponsor said the compact eases licensing burdens for mobile workforces, including military families, and preserves Tennessee’s regulatory authority; the committee voted 8–0 (1 absent) to send the bill to the Senate Health and Welfare Committee.

- Appointment and vacancy cleanup (SB 2562): The committee advanced a cleanup aligning appointment rules across several boards and commissions; the bill passed committee with eight ayes and one absent.

- Board of Dietitians and Nutritionists (SB 2579): The bill would increase the board from five to nine governor-appointed members and extend the sunset by two years; committee approved and forwarded the measure with eight ayes and one absent.

- Tennessee Arts Commission (SB 2589): As amended, the bill would vacate and reconstitute the commission while retaining 15 governor-appointed seats and adding geographic representation; the measure moved to the calendar following an 8–0 (1 absent) roll call.

The committee closed its business and scheduled to reconvene next Wednesday.