Franklin County commissioners opt out of federal refugee resettlement, 11–2 after split public comment
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After a brief, divided public-comment period, Franklin County commissioners approved a resolution declaring the county does not want to participate in the federal refugee resettlement program, voting 11–2 on March 16, 2020.
Franklin County commissioners voted 11–2 on March 16 to adopt Resolution 3x-0320 declaring that the county does not want to participate in the federal refugee resettlement program.
Commissioner Greg King suspended the rules to bring the off-agenda measure to the floor and moved the resolution, which states in part that "Franklin County does not want to be forced into participating in the Federal Refugee Settlement Program." King’s motion was seconded by Sam Hiles and debated before a 10‑person public‑comment period that allowed five supporters and five opponents to speak for three minutes each.
The suspension of rules passed on a roll‑call vote reported in the minutes as 11–2. After the public comments and additional discussion, commissioners approved the resolution by roll call, with 11 voting yes and 2 voting no. The minutes record the two dissenting votes were cast by Commissioners Helen Stapleton and Barbara Finney; the tally and individual votes are recorded in the commission transcript.
Proponents who addressed the commission said they supported the right of local governments to decline initial resettlement placements; opponents argued the resolution was unnecessary or inconsistent with county authority and Tennessee law. The commission did not record any immediate policy implementation steps in the meeting minutes beyond adopting the resolution.
The resolution will be entered into the county record and become a formal statement of the board’s position on initial refugee resettlement placements in Franklin County.
