All Roll Calls
Yes: 357 • No: 90
Sponsored By: Jack Johnson (Republican)
Became Law
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11 provisions identified: 6 benefits, 0 costs, 5 mixed.
IEA money is paid at least every quarter. The yearly IEA amount equals your LEA’s base funding plus its average special education funds under TISA. If your child got IEA funds in 2024–25, they cannot get less in 2025–26 or later. Your child is still counted in your home LEA’s enrollment, and the state subtracts IEA funds from that LEA’s state payments.
To qualify for six workweeks of paid parental leave, you must be full time with the same LEA or public charter for 12 straight months in a licensed job. You must have held a valid license or emergency credential that whole 12 months. Leave must be taken all at once unless your director approves an exception. If taken in parts, you must use at least a full week at a time. You must use the leave within 12 months of the birth, adoption, or stillbirth.
Schools cannot deny admission to a child in state custody just because shots or records are missing. Schools must follow federal rules that protect these students’ education. The law also adds deafness as a covered condition in state special education law.
Schools that add an extra half hour to each day all year can save up to 13 stockpile days. These days can cover time lost to bad weather, major illness outbreaks, disasters, district planning, parent-teacher conferences, or approved teacher training. They can be used in whole, half, or one‑third day blocks. They cannot be used to end the school year early or carried to the next year, and schools must document their use.
If a student attends a school or district for under half the year, their test and growth data cannot be used in that school’s or district’s grades or goals. Their data can count for the school or district where they were enrolled for at least half the year.
The education department can run a grant program to help districts and charter schools provide tutoring. Grants only run if lawmakers provide funding.
A district’s TISA allocation cannot fall by more than 5% from the prior year. If it would, the state adds money so the drop is no more than 5%, unless another law requires different funds. Starting in 2025–26, eligibility for this help uses only funds generated by students in non‑virtual schools.
Rules that rely on a remote-instruction trigger now use five days instead of two. On remote-instruction days, your district must offer school meals when it is safe and possible. Meals must follow school nutrition program rules.
The law corrects cross‑references in a 2024 education act and deletes parts of that act. It also repeals several code sections and subsections in education law. These changes remove or correct prior text; real‑world effects depend on what the deleted parts had required or allowed.
If the comptroller asks, districts must report last year’s average daily membership. If the education department asks, districts must report their use of corporal punishment. When a Senate or House education committee asks, the department must report on academic acceleration.
One finance deadline moves from June 1 to July 31. A recurring report moves from July 1 to February 1 each year, starting in 2026. The law replaces old BEP wording with TISA in statute. It also raises a numeric threshold in finance law from 20 to 30.
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Jack Johnson
Republican • Senate
Dawn White
Republican • Senate
All Roll Calls
Yes: 357 • No: 90
Senate vote • 4/17/2025
FLOOR VOTE: Motion to Concur House Amendment # 2 4/17/2025
Yes: 27 • No: 5
House vote • 4/15/2025
FLOOR VOTE: REGULAR CALENDAR MOTION TO ADOPT AMENDMENT # 2 BY LAMBERTH PASSAGE ON THIRD CONSIDERATION 4/15/2025
Yes: 74 • No: 21
House vote • 4/15/2025
FLOOR VOTE: REGULAR CALENDAR AS AMENDED PASSAGE ON THIRD CONSIDERATION 4/15/2025
Yes: 70 • No: 23
House vote • 4/15/2025
FLOOR VOTE: REGULAR CALENDAR MOTION TO CONSIDER AMENDMENT # 2 BY LAMBERTH PASSAGE ON THIRD CONSIDERATION 4/15/2025
Yes: 77 • No: 19
House vote • 4/14/2025
FLOOR VOTE: REGULAR CALENDAR PASSAGE ON THIRD CONSIDERATION 4/14/2025
Yes: 72 • No: 22
Senate vote • 3/6/2025
FLOOR VOTE: as Amended Third Consideration 3/6/2025
Yes: 28 • No: 0
Senate vote • 2/26/2025
SENATE EDUCATION COMMITTEE
Yes: 9 • No: 0
Pub. Ch. 235
Effective date(s) 04/23/2025
Transmitted to Governor for action.
Signed by Governor.
Enrolled and ready for signatures
Signed by Senate Speaker
Signed by H. Speaker
Concurred, Ayes 27, Nays 5 (Amendment 2 - HA0435)
Placed on Senate Message Calendar for 4/17/2025
Enrolled and ready for signatures
Motion to lift from table adopted.
Motion to reconsider adopted.
Passed H., as am., Ayes 70, Nays 23, PNV 0
H. adopted am. (Amendment 2 - HA0435)
Subst. for comp. HB.
Am. withdrawn. (Amendment 1 - HA0294)
Passed H., Ayes 72, Nays 22, PNV 0
Rcvd. from S., held on H. desk.
Senate adopted Amendment (Amendment 1 - SA0028)
Passed Senate as amended, Ayes 28, Nays 0
Engrossed; ready for transmission to House
Placed on Senate Regular Calendar for 3/6/2025
Sponsor(s) Added.
Recommended for passage with amendment/s, refer to Senate Calendar Committee Ayes 9, Nays 0 PNV 0
Placed on Senate Education Committee calendar for 2/26/2025
Enrolled / Public Chapter
Fiscal Note
HA0294
HA0435
Introduced
SA0028
SB 1612 — AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 4 and Title 8, relative to state employees.
HB 1709 — AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 4; Title 7; Title 20; Title 23; Title 33; Title 37; Title 39; Title 42; Title 43; Title 44; Title 45; Title 46; Title 47; Title 49; Title 52; Title 53; Title 55; Title 56; Title 57; Title 59; Title 60; Title 62; Title 63; Title 67; Title 68; Title 69; Title 70; Title 71 and Chapter 463 of the Public Acts of 2025, relative to the regulation of professions.
HB 1673 — AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 7, Chapter 34; Title 7, Chapter 82; Title 9, Chapter 21 and Title 68, Chapter 221, relative to utility regulation.
HB 2532 — AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 49, relative to education.
HB 1708 — AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 55, Chapter 4; Title 55, Chapter 50 and Title 65, Chapter 15, relative to motor vehicles.
HB 1847 — AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 5; Title 6; Title 7; Title 13 and Title 65, relative to data centers.
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