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Collegedale staff outlines state bills of interest, urges outreach on property-tax cap
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Summary
City staff briefed the commission on several state measures moving quickly this session — including a property-tax-cap bill backed by Sen. Watson that staff said merits opposition — and flagged items affecting 9-1-1 funding, judicial residency and local annexation authority.
Bridget, a city staff member, told the Collegedale City Commission the Tennessee legislature is moving quickly this year and highlighted several measures the city is watching.
"They are probably about three weeks, I would think, away from dismissing, we hope," Bridget said, adding that committee schedules and an election-year push mean many bills are being rushed through. She flagged what she described as one of the largest concerns for the city: "our Senator Watson's property tax cap bill," which she said is garnering traction and has prompted the Tennessee Municipal League (TML) to ask cities to oppose it.
Bridget described an amendment she said has been filed in the Senate, from a Knoxville senator, that would impose a 3% cap that may be stacked over four years and would include inflation — a combination she warned could produce a larger effective cap if jurisdictions delay adjustments. She said TML "is extremely concerned about that and has asked us to please reach out to our legislators and oppose that."
She also reviewed other items on the commission's watch list: a joint resolution the Senate passed last year ratifying an increase to the 9-1-1 surcharge (which Bridget said would raise the fee from $1.50 to $1.86); a targeted sales-tax holiday under consideration for residents 65 and older; and a proposed constitutional amendment affecting judicial residency requirements that could allow judges assigned to a circuit or district to reside in the county rather than a narrower subdistrict.
On local-government bills, Bridget said some annexation proposals are in flux. She told the commission that one bill relevant to annexation had failed in the House and that others concerning municipal zoning authority and opt-out amendments were still being debated in committee. "If that happens, then we believe the Senate will not pass that bill," she said of a bill that several counties were seeking to opt out of.
The briefing included procedural notes: Bridget said staff compiles a list of bills of interest and coordinates final details with TML before distributing them to commissioners. She encouraged outreach to state legislators on items of concern and said staff will monitor committee actions and report back.
What happens next: Staff will continue to track the bills Bridget identified and provide commissioners with updated lists and suggested action steps for outreach. No formal action was taken at the workshop.
