The University of Memphis recently announced their largest tuition increase in the last eight years after approval from the university’s board of trustees in June. However, current students have mixed emotions about this hike, as they don’t believe the student experience will improve as a result.
According to the university’s finance and audit committee, this recommendation was made off of a number of factors including student affordability, financial aid, inflation and more. The university said they have policies and structures in place to minimize the cost of attendance for in-state students, however they “must remain competitive with their national peers.”
“The University of Memphis has taken numerous steps over the past several years to contain costs and to keep tuition as low as possible,” the university said in a statement. “This resulted in the UofM having the lowest average tuition increase in the State of Tennessee of 1.3% over the past eight years, including 0% tuition and fee increases in three of the past eight years.”
The Tennessee Higher Education Commission (THEC) has a binding range of zero to five point five percent to which colleges and universities can increase undergraduate in-state tuition and mandatory fees. As a result, the university was faced with the decision to either increase tuition within that range or eliminate the guaranteed tuition plan, which is available to first-time and first-year students and guarantees “locked-in rates for eight consecutive semesters.
The board decided to raise full-time undergraduate in-state tuition by 3.71 percent, and out-of-state tuition by 4.1 percent. In-state graduate tuition increased by 3.69 percent, while law tuition for Tennessee residents increased by 3.78 percent. Out of state students will see a 4.02 percent increase for graduate programs and 4.03 percent for law school.
Redding Johnson is an in-state transfer student who is a senior at the university studying journalism and feels that the decision to increase tuition without student input is “deceptive.” She also feels that the students don’t have a concrete understanding as to where this money is going and have no say in where it should go.
“We did get a new STEM building this past year so I’m sure some of the money went to that, but we don’t see the money going to programs that actually need it like journalism and architecture programs,” Johnson said. “The money doesn’t seem like it’s going to campus security either, which is a huge problem at U of M. I personally think they are trying to make up for the loss of students enrolling over the last decade.”
For Fall 2023, the university reported 21,731 students enrolled in their programs, a 0.83 percent decrease from Fall 2022 (21,912.) Enrollment increased in 2022 following the decline in enrollment in Fall 2021 from Fall 2020 (2.63 percent.)
On the other hand, students like Ashleigh Porter, a senior from Memphis, says they’re “amongst the few people” that feel the tuition increases have been worth it, as she has noticed building upgrades and improvements in her communications program.
“Things are really starting to be more polished and the campus offers a lot of new things that it didn’t when I first started two years ago,” P added.
Chadai Jones, an out-of state nursing student from Atlanta, Georgia going into her sophomore year said she understands the shock and “disbelief” that her fellow students are experiencing due to the tuition percentage increase, but she’s hopeful that it will benefit students with more funding for campus events and other additions to student life.
“It’s not like they’re just taking more money and we don’t benefit from it,” Jones said. “We would be getting our money’s worth, but it does suck that out of the blue tuition is being raised. I personally just hope they stick to their word and make sure it does benefit all students.”
Ninth District Congressman Steve Cohen (D-Memphis), a senior member of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, announced Friday that the Tennessee and Arkansas Departments of Transportation were successful in securing $393,750,000 for a new Interstate 55 Bridge over the Mississippi River at Memphis to be known as America’s River Crossing.
Cohen has worked with the Biden-Harris Administration to secure funding for this project, inviting Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to Memphis when the Hernando DeSoto Bridge was out of commission in May of 2021 to see how critical the Mid-South transportation corridor is to interstate commerce. Cohen also joined Administrator Shailen Bhatt of the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) during his trip to Memphis in May to talk about the need to replace the I-55 Bridge and his concerns that it would be vulnerable to serious damage in an earthquake and is far out of date.
In addition to writing a letter of support, Cohen has discussed the regional and national significance of this project in Transportation and Infrastructure Committee hearings, most recently with Buttigieg on June 28. See his recent committee hearing exchanges with Buttigieg here and with Bhatt in May here.
Cohen was the only member of the current Tennessee and Arkansas Congressional delegations to vote for the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), also known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the source of major funding for the project.
Cohen made the following statement:
“I’m proud to have worked with the President, the U.S. Department of Transportation, as well as the outstanding team in Memphis and the governor’s office in successfully getting this extremely large and necessary grant for the construction of the new bridge. As President Biden would say, ‘This is a big … deal!’ And it sure is: Probably the biggest investment made in Memphis by the federal government ever.
“I was proud to vote for the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that created this Bridge Program and allow these funds to be available for Memphis. Mine was the only vote for the bill in either the Tennessee or the Arkansas Congressional delegations. We are two red states. This shows how President Biden works for the best interest of the country. It is important to America and not politically good for a red or a blue state. It’s the United States of America and that’s what this bridge is for. Transportation across America creates jobs and improves our economy — America’s River Crossing.”
Memphis Mayor Paul Young made the following statement:
“This historic investment in Memphis will help further connect our community with the region and the world. Memphis’ prominence as a logistics hub is made stronger by the investment in this key piece of infrastructure and we are honored by the grant.”
Greater Memphis Chamber President and CEO Ted Townsend made the following statement:
“For over two decades, the Greater Memphis Chamber has led local efforts to ensure a new bridge would be built further solidifying Memphis as a global logistics leader. Over those 20 years, Congressman Steve Cohen has remained a constant advocate with us. We want to appreciate the leadership of the Tennessee Department of Transportation for helping to initiate and convene this most recent effort, the Mayor’s office — both Jim Strickland and Paul Young — for being local advocates, and the Chamber’s Transportation Committee for being persistent and never taking their eye off of the ball.”
The Tennessee and Arkansas Departments of Transportation submitted a joint application through the Bridge Investment Program (BIP) Large Bridge Projects Program. The Federal Highway Administration announced today that the project will move forward.
Maika Monroe wonders what it all means in Longlegs. (Courtesy Neon)
Looks like a busy weekend at the movies — which is good, because it’s gonna be a hot one.
Longlegs
The great Nicholas Cage stars as a serial killer motivated by his devotion to Satan. Maika Monroe (of It Follows fame) is Lee Harker, an FBI agent assigned to catch him. Blair Underwood (of Krush Groove fame) is her partner, and Alicia Witt (of Dune and Twin Peaks fame) is her mom. Writer/director Osgood Perkins is not super famous yet, but his dad is Anthony Perkins of Psycho fame.
Fly Me To The Moon
Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum star as NASA’s PR director and launch director for the Apollo 11 mission. His job is to get the astronauts to the moon. Her job is to fake the moon landing if the astronauts fail. This film probably sounded like a good idea at the time.
MaXXXine
Ti West and Mia Goth’s trilogy of twentieth century terror concludes with a slam-bang finale. Read my full review.
A Quiet Place: Day One
Lupita Nyong’o leads this hit prequel to 2018’s alien invasion movie. She plays Sam, a terminally ill cancer patient who witnesses the silent alien invasion in New York City. Can Sam and her cat Frodo survive the mass slaughter? Djimon Housou reprises his role as Henri from AQuiet Place Part II.
Despicable Me 4
You know those oval yellow Minons your batty aunty and drunk uncle are always sharing memes about? They’re from the Despicable Me franchise. And guess what? They made another one!
Kinds of Kindness
Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone follow the Academy Award-winning Poor Things with a triptych of stories about debasing yourself for the benefit of others. Read my full review.
Inside Out 2
The movie of the summer is all about anxiety, and it couldn’t be more timely. Amy Poehler reprises her voice role as Joy, whose hold on the mind of her 13-year-old charge Riley (Kensington Tallman) is jarred loose by Anxiety (Maya Hawke), just a a pivotal hockey game threatens her self image.
The Bikeriders
Director Jeff Nichols’ gritty portrait of Midwestern biker gangs stars Austin Butler and Tom Hardy looking mighty manly. Read my full review.
Imbibe summer fun at the Summer Cocktail Festival this Friday. (Photo: Courtesy Willmott Events)
Memphis Summer Cocktail Festival The Kent Friday, July 12, 6-9 p.m. Get your drink on at the hottest festival of the summer featuring seasonal sips, tasty eats, and throwback vibes. Your ticket includes 12 fun-size summer cocktails, plus access to all the fun and entertainment. Put on your freshest throwback threads and chillax this event supporting Volunteer Memphis. Tickets can be purchased here in advance for $54/general admission and $85/early entry (which gets you early admission and a welcome cocktail). General admission tickets will be sold at the door for $65 if they are not sold out. Check social media for the sold-out notification.
Two-Day Pickleball 901 Party at Wiseacre Wiseacre Brewing Company HQ – Little Bettie Saturday, July 13, noon-8 p.m. | Sunday, July 14, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Don’t get yourself in a pickle when it comes to your weekend plans. Just go and play pickleball (and enjoy food and beer and music and vendors and friends and family). Wiseacre hosts two days of pickleball and more, including four premium pickleball courts and beginner clinics if you are new to the game. Free pickleball will be happening in the Wiseacre back lot from noon to 8 p.m. on Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
Goo Goo Dolls Radians Amphitheater At Memphis Botanic Garden Friday, July 12, 8 p.m. I don’t care if you go goo goo or ga ga for the Goo Goo Dolls this weekend. But I’m here to inform you that they’ll be playing at The Live at the Garden Summer Concert Series. Lawn tickets are $84.35 and can be purchased here. The lawn is always first come, first served; there are no assigned seats on the lawn. Chairs are not provided but guests can bring their own. Food and drinks will be available for purchase, and attendees are also allowed to bring their own outside food and beverages including coolers. For more information, go here.
Puppy Gala Crosstown Brewing Company Saturday, July 13, 2-5 p.m. The dog days are here! It’s time for Crosstown Brewing’s second annual Puppy Gala, where dogs of all ages can walk the red carpet and strut their stuff. Categories will include: Best Dressed, Most Like Owner, Best Pet Trick, Cutest Puppy, Best Senior Dog, and Best in Show. There will be plenty of water to drink and play in as well as small treats for the puppies who participate. The event will coincide with the return of the brewery’s pink lemonade shandy, Dog Days (we see what they did there).
Puppy Yoga Sana Yoga Downtown Saturday, July 13, 3:30 p.m. I will never pass up an opportunity to talk about puppy yoga. So lemme tell you about puppy yoga. It’s happening. Be there this Saturday. Admission is $30. Sign up here.
Always Sunny in Philadelphia Brunch Black Lodge Sunday, July 14, 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Black Lodge brings what you’ve all been waiting for: Always Sunny Brunch, a monthly brunch screening the best of the best episodes of your favorite gang of dysfunctional degenerates. The theme for this first one is the Best of the Gang, so think: any episodes that revolve around all five characters. Next month Lodge will screen the best of Dennis. Audience suggestions will be taken for episodes screened after 1 p.m. The day will feature $3 mimosas/$20 mimosa pitchers and the food special will be Mac’s Breakfast Chimichanga, a large fried flour tortilla stuffed with chorizo, eggs, shredded cheese, and potatoes, topped with fresh pico de gallo and sour cream, served on a plate with a side of crispy tater tots.
V&E Greenline’s Ice Cream Social Idlewild Sun Garden at V&E Greenline Sunday, July 14, 2-4 p.m. I scream, you scream, the V&E screams, we all scream for ICE CREAM! Head to the V&E Greenline for a sundae funday with ice cream galore. Chill out in our kiddie pools, make your own sundae, and cone-plete with games for all ages. There will be toppings available, but feel free to BYOT (bring your own toppings). The cherry on top: All proceeds go towards the development and maintenance of our community trail. Admission is free, ice cream is $2 per scoop.
There’s always something happening in Memphis. See a full calendar of events here.
Smokeable THCA and CBD products are wildly popular in Tennessee, according to industry advocates, but they remain at risk of disappearing from store shelves under new state rules.
State lawmakers passed new laws last year to regulate the growing cannabis industry in Tennessee. For example, cannabis products were moved behind shelves of stores that aren’t 21 and up. A new 6-percent tax on cannabis products was levied, too. A single serving of a cannabis product cannot exceed a dosage of 25 milligrams in the state.
The new law also made the Tennessee Department of Agriculture (TDA) responsible for regulating the cannabis industry here. Late last year, the department issued new rules for cannabis producers and products.
The department updated those rules at the beginning of this month after a public comment period. Tennessee Growers Coalition (TGC) executive director Kelley Mathis Hess said nearly 19,000 comments were submitted to the agency. But officials must not have listened, she said.
The new rules still include new THC standards for THCA and CBD flower. New limits could see those products removed completely. The new rules would also allow police to arrest manufacturers, retailers, and consumers for selling or possessing these smokable products, according to Cultivate Tennessee, another hemp advocacy group.
The new state rules redefine THC to include a product’s total THC. This includes a lot of THCA — the cannabinoid that produces a “high” — smokeable products.
“They’re trying to redefine it by combining two different cannabinoids,” Hess said, “two different things when it should just be Delta 9, and Delta 9 only. They’re trying to put a limit on [THCA] but the limit would, basically, ban a lot of it.”
Hess said these products are probably the most popular products on the market right now. Many small businesses have built their business around sales of these products, she said. Removing them could prove fatal to them.
TGC and Cultivate Tennessee have promised to fight.
“We will fight to keep smokable hemp products, such as THCA flower, concentrates, and vapes legal in Tennessee,” Cultivate Tennessee says on its website. “We will defend against the TDA attempting to rewrite laws through the rules. We assert that the TDA rules are potentially illegal and unconstitutional.”
The new rules, though, are considered “emergency rules,” meaning they are not the final rules. So, they’re not set in stone. Hess said she hopes agency officials will reconsider the new rules for cannabis flower. If they don’t, TGC will file a lawsuit for legal clarification, she said.
These particular products were likely targeted by the agency, Hess said, for one big open secret.
“These products get you high,” she said. “That’s not a secret anymore. That’s the whole reason [Rep. William Lamberth (R-Portland)] and [Sen. Richard Briggs (R-Knoxville)] brought a bill, because it gets you high and they wanted it regulated.”
The new rules won’t affect edible products, like gummies, Hess said. Those products are made with cannabis oils that can be measured, fine-tuned all along the production process, and remain stable on the shelf. Cannabinoid profiles in flower products, however, can change.
No state official has made any public comment on the new rules. However, when the Biden administration announced new rules not approved by Congress in a different matter, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti led a multi-state revolt against them (and temporarily won). The U.S. Department of Education added “gender identity” to Title IX. Skrmetti said only Congress could change rules and that the government agency “has no authority to let boys into girls’ locker rooms.”
The 59-year-old owned a podiatry clinic, Advanced Foot & Ankle Care of Memphis, which had two in-house pharmacies. He was convicted of five counts of healthcare fraud in March, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Tennessee. Officials said he had patients soak their feet in tubs of water that contained antibiotic and antifungal drugs that he prescribed.
“These drug cocktails included capsules, creams, and powders that were not indicated to be dissolved in water and some of which were not even water soluble,” officials said.
They added that Lucas did this for the “anticipated reimbursement amount,” as opposed to “medical necessity.” As a result, Lucas’ pharmacies submitted nearly $4 million in claims to Medicare and TennCare from October 2018 through September 2021, and they were reimbursed more than $3 million.
In March it was reported that Lucas faced a maximum penalty for 10 years in prison for each of the five counts he was convicted on.
A Memphis company is bringing outdoor guide services to the Digital Age and just got a huge infusion of cash to do it.
AnyCreek connects outdoor enthusiasts with guides and outfitters for experiences such as hunting and fishing. The platform has already reached thousands of adventurers in 183 markets to discover, book, and pay for fishing and hunting experiences.
The company completed a $1.8 million round of seed funding last month. The money brings AnyCreek’s total funding to $3.3 million since its launch in 2022.
“With so many guides and outfitters offline, it can be challenging and intimidating to find great, local guides,” said Nick Larson, co-founder and Chief Technology Officer at AnyCreek. “Our platform is stress-tested by the best guides and outfitters and makes discovering, booking, and paying for high-quality hunting and fishing trips easy and convenient for any adventurer.”
The platform offers guides and outfitters a set of tools — calendar management, payments, referrals and easy guide assignments, SEO, marketing, customer communication, CRM, and 24/7 support.
Credit: AnyCreek
It gives consumers an online experience similar to AirBnB. Type your destination (such as South Carolina) or your activity (such as fly fishing) into the website’s search bar. It returns a host of guides and outfitters working in the area who offer the experiences that you’re looking for, giving you prices, guide bios, and reviews.
Credit: AnyCreek
With its new round of funding, AnyCreek says it will continue to enhance its technology and expand its services into new markets.
””We believe that humans in nature represent the best of human nature, and we have a profound respect for the businesses facilitating this connection,” said Benjamin Lazarov, co-founder and CEO of AnyCreek. “It’s our mission to equip guides and outfitters with the latest technology to get more people outside. This funding will help us continue this momentum as we expand into additional markets and offerings.”
The late Rep. Barbara Cooper of Memphis gets vaccinated against COVID-19 in February 2021. (Photo: Karen Pulfer Focht)
The former leader of Shelby County’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout has lost a legal bid to declare she was wrongly blamed for allowing hundreds of doses to expire during the pandemic.
Judy Martin, Shelby County’s former chief of nursing and immunizations, lost her job amid public fallout over the lost doses in early 2022.
Martin had reported 1,000 expired doses she discovered during an inventory. With even more doses set to go bad, she loaded hundreds of vaccines into her car to take to a local prison. But a snowstorm in Memphis scuttled those plans. She left 700 doses in the car and told nobody, legal filings said.
When news broke that Shelby County had allowed even more doses to expire than initially reported, Martin retired in order to avoid being fired.
“I learned that the information regarding the level of vaccine that expired in Shelby County was not accurate,” Mayor Lee Harris soon tweeted. “We have terminated the site manager who managed the relationship with the pharmacy and allegedly provided the initial false information.”
Martin sued the county alleging the tweet was defamatory and asserted her right to a “name-clearing hearing.” A federal court in Memphis dismissed those claims, siding with the county.
On Tuesday the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals again sided with the county in a ruling that concluded Martin had not suffered any harm from the mayor’s tweet. The ruling noted Martin had received community support amid the controversy, the nursing board took no disciplinary action against her and that she was able to land quickly in another job.
“Getting fired is unpleasant,” the ruling said. “And having that termination broadcast is even more so. But the Constitution of the United States says little about lost jobs and nothing about this one.”
Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com. Follow Tennessee Lookout on Facebook and X.
Follow the Facebook group called Through the Eyes of Black Memphis for some cool history and fun photos. Top contributor Don Johnson posted the photo above of Penny Hardaway stopping by the Nike store on Shelby Drive in the 1990s.
The city invited everyone to stay positive about, well, the city last week. An Instagram Reel features Memphis Mayor Paul Young, Al Kapone, Greater Memphis Chamber president and CEO Ted Townsend, and more sharing what they love most about Memphis.
If you need a shot of positivity, search #MemphisProud, #PositiveMemphis, and #CelebrateMemphis.
@Memphis
Posted to X by Memphis Depay
After years of saying we wouldn’t feature him just because of his name, here we are. Dutch footballer Memphis Depay, owner of the @Memphis X handle, helped push the Netherlands to the Euro 2024 semifinals with a win over Turkey last week.
As states across the country adopt harsh new sentencing laws, private prison companies are celebrating, telling investors that they soon expect more people in their prisons — and even higher profits.
From Mississippi to California, many states have taken a decidedly “tough on crime” tack over the past two years in a strengthening backlash against criminal justice reform efforts after George Floyd’s murder in 2020. This year, Louisiana passed a package of harsh sentencing laws that will keep some people in prison for years longer. A new parole board in Mississippi is keeping people in prison for longer terms by denying early release. In March, Washington, DC, enacted a sweeping anti-crime package.
These laws, advocates warn, threaten to reverse years of progress in the fight against mass incarceration. Instead, they would again trap people in prison for lengthy terms, ripping apart communities and exacerbating racial and socioeconomic inequality — while enriching the private firms that manage prisons and their shareholders.
Perhaps no state is more emblematic of the recent sentencing crackdown — and the private interests that stand to benefit — than Tennessee, where one of the world’s largest prison companies is headquartered.
Since 2022, lawmakers in Tennessee have fought to enact a slate of harsh sentencing laws that are expected to increase the state’s spending on incarceration by tens of millions of dollars annually. The key power brokers behind the legislation are also some of the top recipients of private prison company cash, The Lever found.
On May 28th, Gov. Bill Lee signed the latest of these proposals into law, a bill that will end the use of so-called “sentence reduction credits,” which allow people incarcerated in Tennessee to serve shorter sentences as a reward for a clean record in prison. The law, which will only apply to future offenses, is projected by the state to result in a “significant increase” in spending on incarceration.
For the people locked up in Tennessee’s prison system, who are disproportionately poor and Black, this will mean, in some cases, that they will spend years longer in a prison cell. There’s little evidence that longer sentences deter crime.
But the law does have at least one key beneficiary: Tennessee’s private prison contractor, CoreCivic, formerly the Corrections Corporation of America, one of the world’s largest prison companies, which will almost certainly see new profits as a direct result of the legislation. The company, which spends millions of dollars a year lobbying both in states and on a federal level, has begun telling its investors that harsh sentencing laws across the country will soon translate to bigger profits from the 70-plus prisons it runs nationwide.
“There has been a fair amount of activity both this year, and really the last two years, within state legislatures on adjustments to sentencing reform,” Damon Hininger, CoreCivic’s CEO, who has political aspirations in Tennessee, said in an earnings call last month.
Hininger said he expected this development to lead to “pretty significant increases” in prison populations — good news for the prison company, which is often paid by how many inmates are housed in prison at a given time. Already, he said, higher occupancy rates in CoreCivic-managed prisons had led to, in turn, “strong financial results” for investors.
Bianca Tylek, the executive director of Worth Rises, an advocacy organization that focuses on the harms of prison industries, called Hininger’s comments “brazen” and proof that the companies “don’t think people are listening.”
“It’s a real travesty that we’re allowing industry to shape what our carceral system looks like,” she said.
Tennessee lawmakers on the Joint Ad Hoc Committee to Review the Adequacy of the Supervision, Investigation, and Release of Criminal Defendants review prison release and sentencing policies at October 6th hearing. (Photo: John Partipilo)
“Increased the Sentences Tremendously”
David Raybin, a criminal defense attorney in Nashville, has been fighting for sentencing reform in Tennessee since the 1970s. He has witnessed decades of ebbs and flows in sentencing policies. Yet the crackdown that Tennessee lawmakers have launched over the last two years is like nothing he’s ever seen before. “Over time, it will have an enormous effect,” he said.
In 2022, the Tennessee legislature passed a “truth in sentencing” bill, a sweeping law that essentially rewrote sentencing practices in the state, requiring people to serve, in some cases, up to 10 years longer for certain felony crimes.
“It just absolutely increased the sentences tremendously,” Raybin said.
The 2022 law was just the beginning of Tennessee’s draconian sentencing crackdown. Last year, lawmakers proposed a “three-strike” bill requiring even harsher sentences for people with prior convictions. The legislation passed a key House committee last year but did not reach the governor’s desk, though it has continued to move forward in the Tennessee Senate this session.
Should the three-strike bill ultimately pass, it will require an entirely new prison to be built in Tennessee to house 1,400 more inmates, costing taxpayers at least $384 million.
In May, ignoring the outcry of criminal justice advocates around the state, Lee signed a bill that will largely end early release from prison, which inmates were able to earn through participation in educational programming and maintaining a clean record in the system.
Now, people in Tennessee’s prisons will only be released early on parole, which in the state is rarely granted. The effect will be to “keep people incarcerated longer,” said Matthew Charles, a Nashville-based policy advisor with Families Against Mandatory Minimums, a nonprofit that advocates for more just sentencing reform.
Lee also signed a new law this spring that will impose adult sentences on teenagers after they have served a juvenile sentence, which criminal justice reform advocates say will have “alarming” repercussions for youth in the state.
It will take several years before the full impact of the laws becomes clear as new cases wend their way through the courts.
“It’s not immediate,” said Dawn Deaner, the executive director of the Nashville organization Choosing Justice Initiative. She estimated that it would take more than five years to start to see the full effect of the new sentencing laws.
“But we’re going to see the prison populations grow,” she said.
House Speaker Cameron Sexton, center, with House Majority Leader William Lamberth at left and Republican Caucus Leader Jeremy Faison (Photo: John Partipilo)
“The People That Have the Money”
Tennessee is an important state for CoreCivic, as evidenced by the company’s significant lobbying expenditures in the state. The private prison company is headquartered in Nashville, and it has long been one of the state’s biggest political spenders. Since 2009, the company has spent $3.7 million on lobbying and campaign donations in the state, a Tennessee Lookout analysis found.
In response to a request for comment from The Lever, CoreCivic spokesperson Brian Todd wrote the company “supports candidates and elected officials who understand the limited but important solutions our company can provide,” and noted that it employs 1,200 people at its prisons in Tennessee.
Although a Tennessee law from the 1980s mandates that the state have only one privately-run prison, CoreCivic has carved out a loophole after years of attempts to rewrite the law entirely. The company now runs four of the state’s fourteen prisons by routing contracts through counties rather than the state. Together, the value of those four contracts exceeds $200 million.
Lobbying records from last year indicate that CoreCivic has a small army of eight lobbyists working on its behalf in Tennessee’s state house. According to state campaign spending data aggregated by FollowTheMoney.org, Tennessee’s current governor has received the most money from the private prison company of any politician in the nation: $65,400 over the last two election cycles, including donations from company executives, making the company one of his largest donors.
This year, Hininger, CoreCivic’s CEO, who is said to be considering a run for Tennessee governor in 2026, chaired a fundraiser dinner for the state Republican Party and personally gifted each attendee a souvenir glass emblazoned with the state’s Republican Party logo. Hininger himself has donated more than $100,000 to politicians in Tennessee over the years.
Meanwhile, lawmakers who have pushed the slate of harsh sentencing laws in Tennessee have been rewarded.
House Republican Majority Leader Rep. William Lamberth of Portland, a former county prosecutor, has spearheaded the sentencing bills in the state, championing the sweeping 2022 law and sponsoring the more recent bill that did away with early release. “He’s been very active in trying to pass harsher sentencing laws,” Deaner of the Choosing Justice Initiative said.
Lamberth is also one of CoreCivic’s biggest beneficiaries in Tennessee, receiving $8,500 from the company. So, too, are other Republican champions of the sentencing bills, including Lt. Gov. Randy McNally of Oak Ridge, who has received $7,500 from CoreCivic, House Speaker Cameron Sexton of Crossville ($10,000), and Rep. Jerome Moon of Maryville ($3,000).
The money is “absolutely” having an impact on policy, Deaner said.
“Who are the people that have the money in Tennessee?” she said. “Particularly in rural places, there are not a lot of wealthy donors.” In the absence of other campaign funding sources, this state of affairs has allowed CoreCivic to wield an especially significant influence with state lawmakers, she said.
”Driven By Greed”
CoreCivic regularly claims it does not lobby on sentencing-related bills — in Tennessee or elsewhere — and did so again in response to questions from The Lever. “CoreCivic does not lobby or take positions on any policies, regulations or legislation that impact the basis for or duration of an individual’s incarceration,” Todd, the company spokesperson, wrote.
But it’s clear from executives’ statements to investors that they are, at the very least, monitoring these laws closely.
“Going forward, the next three years to five years, a lot of states are looking at pretty significant increases [to prison populations] because, again, of changes, maybe, in sentencing reform,” Hininger said in the May call.
For the first time in a decade, prison populations across the country are rising after a dramatic drop in 2020 during the pandemic, when court backlogs and early releases due to Covid-19 lowered the number of people in prisons. The majority of states have reported an increase in the number of people incarcerated in their prisons over the last two years, according to a study published by the U.S. Department of Justice last November. According to the report, there were currently more than 1.2 million people behind bars — raising the country’s already sky-high incarceration rate.
A significant part of this incarceration surge is the return of normal court systems as judges worked through case backlogs that had persisted through the pandemic. But tough sentencing laws, criminal justice reforms say, also appear to be playing a role.
Prison executives agree. “In conclusion,” Hininger said in May, “the macro environment in which we operate continues to improve.”
The agency found Tennessee is seeing one of the country’s sharpest increases in its prison population — a reported 8 percent surge between 2021 and 2022. Colorado, Montana, and Mississippi all reported incarceration rates growing at 8 percent or above, and another 42 states reported some growth in their prison populations.
Many of CoreCivic’s prison contracts, including in Tennessee, are paid on a “per inmate, per day” basis, meaning that these fluctuations in prison populations directly impact the company’s bottom line. Many of the company’s facilities, its financial statements show, are not at full occupancy levels — and laws that could change this would put money directly into the pockets of prison companies.
CoreCivic’s “unholy alliance,” in the words of one state Democratic lawmaker, with the state of Tennessee illustrates just how greatly private interests are profiting from rollbacks to criminal justice reforms — whether that’s prison companies raking in cash from harsh sentencing laws or the bail industry’s success in Georgia, which reimposed cash bail requirements after experimenting with bail reform, a move that will benefit bail bond agents and insurers.
“This moment is revealing exactly what we’ve known about the carceral system,” Tylek of Worth Rises said. “The expansive use of incarceration as a solution to social failures is driven by greed.”
This article was originally published by The Lever, an investigative newsroom.