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Shelby County Landlord Registry Could Be Created With New Bill

Renters across Shelby County could easily find contact information for their landlords on a new registry proposed by state Rep. Dwayne Thompson (D-Cordova). 

The bill would require property owners and landlords to publicly list all the rental property they own or manage. Thompson said the list would help ensure that renters would be able to contact their landlord or their agent, helping to eliminate absentee landlords who hide their identity and try to avoid renters seeking maintenance, security, or other services. 

“This is a fairly simple consumer protection bill that could streamline renters’ access to their landlords and hopefully give them the means to avoid a long legal battle,” Thompson said in a statement. 

“My hope is that this will offer more peace of mind to the hundreds of thousands of Shelby County residents who rent or lease their home.”

Rep. Dwayne Thompson (D-Cordova)

Current law allows a landlord registry if a county has a consolidated, metropolitan government and more than 500,000 residents. This means they’re only allowed in Nashville, which has such a registry. 

“My hope is that this will offer more peace of mind to the hundreds of thousands of Shelby County residents who rent or lease their home,” Thompson said. 

The bill will be heard during coming session of the Tennessee General Assembly. State lawmakers are due to convene in Nashville on Tuesday.

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Block Grants Bill Advances Despite Memphians’ Protest

JB

Dwayne Thompson musing during block grant hearing

NASHVILLE — Two Memphis Democrats, state Reps. Dwayne Thompson and Larry Miller, did their best on Wednesday to put the brakes on a proposal, emanating from the Republican leadership of the General Assembly, insisting that federal Medicaid funding to Tennessee be in the form of block grants.

But, like it or not, and there is no indication that Gov. Bill Lee is opposed to the concept, HB1280, which requires that the governor request the state’s Medicaid funding via block grants, advanced a step closer to him on Wednesday in newly strengthened form.

The bill was amended in the TennCare Subcommittee on Wednesday by voice vote and is on its way to the full House Insurance Committee with an amendment from the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Timothy Hill ( R-Blountville), requiring legislative approval of any block-grant arrangement reached with the federal government. Meanwhile, SB1428, the Senate version sponsored by Senator Paul Bailey (R-Sparta), is pending before the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee.

In the TennCare Subcommittee, Reps. Thompson and Miller objected to the amendment and then to the bill as amended. Thompson had asked sponsor Hill how many other states received their Medicaid funding via block grants and when Hill professed not to know, Thompson supplied the answer: “I understand that it’s zero.” He then asked why Hill was proposing that the state pursue the “experiment” of block grants.

Hill alluded to the state’s volunteer tradition. “It’s the Tennessee way,” he answered. “Why not?”

Rep. Jason Zachary (R-Knoxville) responded similarly. “Let’s be the first. Let’s be the precedent,” he said.

Subcommittee Chairman Rep. Matthew Hill (R-Jonesborough) then indulged himself in what he himself branded as a “joke” by saying, “Chairman Hill, this is a great bill!” He went on to express enthusiasm that Tennessee, “known for innovation,” could by passing the bill, escape the “fetters of federal intervention” and maintain control of Medicaid spending at the state level.

In a brief question-and-answer session with reporters afterward, Hill exulted that his measure had passed its “first hurdle” and was presumably on its way to full passage. He acknowledged that there was some opposition to the bill, to be expected “whenever you’re proposing something that’s cutting edge.”

Asked whether there was polling to suggest popular support for his bill, Hill said he hadn’t conducted any. But he expressed confidence that the bill has “broad support…certainly with this supermajority” and would pick up more support “as we go along.”

He said he had “sat down” with TennCare officials but could not say what their opinion on the measure was. He acknowledged that the terms of the bill could alter the way TennCare operates but did not elaborate.