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Votes at a glance: Key outcomes from the House Government Operations Committee (April 6, 2026)

April 06, 2026 | 2026 Legislature TN, Tennessee


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Votes at a glance: Key outcomes from the House Government Operations Committee (April 6, 2026)
The House Government Operations Committee considered a lengthy calendar and voted to advance multiple bills, summarized here with committee tallies and dispositions.

- HB1913 (Regulatory Freedom Act): 12 ayes, 1 nay. Advanced to calendar and rules; would require agencies to publish rules during a 45‑day notice, seek industry input and prepare fiscal impact statements for rules exceeding $1,000,000 over five years.

- HB2139 (fraudulent freight theft): 11 ayes, 0 nays. Advanced to calendar and rules; establishes a Tennessee statutory definition for fraudulent freight theft and permits expanded reporting to assist insurance claims.

- HB2539 (consolidation of regulatory efficiency): 9 ayes, 1 nay. Advanced to calendar and rules; administrative bill to streamline licensure across multiple health professional boards and permit commissioner rulemaking in certain circumstances.

- HB2571 (physician licensure pathway): 9 ayes, 1 nay. Advanced to calendar and rules; expands provisional training pathways for physicians educated abroad and international graduates to practice in Tennessee under supervision for two years before unrestricted licensure.

- HB2095 (higher education cleanup): 10 ayes, 1 nay. Advanced to calendar and rules; statutory modernization and two authorizing amendments (personnel deliberations and HOPE scholarship timing for foster youth).

- HB1979 (Promising Futures — childcare): 8 ayes, 1 nay, 2 present not voting. Referred to Finance, Ways and Means for fiscal consideration; creates a proposed fund and pilots to expand access and workforce support.

- HB2081 (Second Look Commission reforms): 11 ayes, 0 nays. Advanced to Finance, Ways and Means; expands commission membership and reporting timelines and updates definitions for severe child abuse.

- HB2246 (stem cell therapy safeguards): 10 ayes, 0 nays. Advanced to calendar and rules after legal counsel provided clarifications and sponsors said they would follow up on placenta language.

- HB2290 (IVF licensure): 7 ayes, 3 nays, 1 present not voting. Advanced to calendar and rules; requires physician certification and lab licensure for IVF services.

- HB1581 (inmate disciplinary oversight board extension): 7 ayes, 3 nays. Advanced to calendar and rules; extended the board and the executive director testified on sentence credit reviews and data‑sharing with TDOC.

The committee adjourned after completing the calendar. Members advanced many bills with modest debate; several items were referred to Finance for fiscal review or sent on to the full House calendar.

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