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Commission urges county representation, directs mayor to explore options after NES outages

February 23, 2026 | Sumner County, Tennessee


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Commission urges county representation, directs mayor to explore options after NES outages
The Sumner County Board of County Commissioners unanimously approved a resolution criticizing Nashville Electric Service (NES) leadership for its response to the recent winter storm and asking for county representation on the NES board.

Commissioner Mark Harrison (identified in the record as 'Mister Harrison') introduced the measure, which commended linemen and frontline crews while faulting utility leadership decisions. Harrison noted news reporting that reported a roughly $14.5 million reduction over two years in vegetation and tree-trimming budgets for NES and referenced public statements by state lawmakers about prioritization of diversity, equity and inclusion training over disaster preparedness.

Commissioners debated practical options. Some urged sending a strongly worded letter and engaging the county mayor to 'bird-dog' the issue with the state delegation; Commissioner Brown urged that the resolution be referred to the legislative committee to consider whether to allow Hendersonville residents to opt for Cumberland Electric service. "Cumberland Electric services the majority of Sumner County," Brown said, arguing the board could study options beyond expressing displeasure with NES. Commissioner Wynne said the structural and legal steps to change service boundaries would require state action and asset transfers; he said the resolution should open the door to explore options with Cumberland Electric while recognizing the process is multi-step.

Why it matters: Commissioners said long-standing outages and tree‑related failures made the resolution timely. The resolution combined findings of leadership failure with direction to the county mayor to engage with the state delegation and regional providers. While the commission cannot unilaterally change NES service areas, members said the resolution would formalize county concerns and start conversations with state and utility partners.

Outcome and next steps: The resolution passed unanimously. The body directed the county mayor’s office to engage Cumberland Electric and state delegates to determine what options exist and to pursue county representation on the NES board. Commissioners noted that any change in service boundaries would require action by the state legislature and asset-transfer negotiations.

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