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Senate approves overhaul of major airport boards; lawmakers split over local control and potential state liability

Tennessee Senate · April 13, 2026

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Summary

Lawmakers voted to reconstitute boards for Tennessee's commercial airports to increase state representation where the state invests in airport infrastructure. Supporters cited oversight and stewardship; critics warned the change could move airport finances onto the state's balance sheet and erode local control. Vote: Ayes 25, Nays 8.

The Tennessee Senate voted to reconstitute the boards of several major commercial airports and adjust appointment authority to reflect the state’s investment in airport infrastructure.

Senator Bailey, the bill’s sponsor, said the measure would “bring clarity to all of our commercial airports across the state” and allow Tennessee, which is investing millions in airport infrastructure, to have representation on airport authorities. "We should have a seat or the ability to appoint seats at the table," Bailey said, noting the state’s capital contributions and urging members to support the change.

Opponents argued the change risks moving airport financial obligations onto the state’s books and undermines long‑standing local governance. Senator Yarbrough raised concerns that, under accounting standards, majority state appointments could cause airports to appear on the state balance sheet and shift liabilities to taxpayers. “We are just shifting these liabilities from the local governments to the state government without any thought about what that means for the long term finances of the state,” he said.

Senator Campbell, who represents Nashville, told colleagues that the Nashville Airport Authority has been successful under its current local governance and warned that removing local control could harm operational expertise. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it," Campbell said.

Supporters, including Leader Johnson, said state representation is appropriate given state funding and called for broader geographic representation on boards that serve statewide and regional travelers. The Senate adopted an amendment that sets appointment slots (two appointments by the speaker of the house, two by the speaker of the senate, two by the governor and three by the local executive officer) and provides for staggered terms; sponsors said the bill does not itself alter airport balance sheets.

Final outcome: The bill passed with a recorded vote of 25 Ayes and 8 Nays.

Why it matters: The law centralizes more appointment authority at the state level for major airport authorities, potentially altering governance and oversight of significant infrastructure that serves broad portions of Tennessee’s economy. Opponents flagged accounting and fiscal consequences that, if realized, could affect the state budget and bonding.