Representative Jones (Unicoi) sponsored a bill substituted to Senate Bill 2201 that would give juvenile court judges discretion to suspend or delay a student’s driver’s license for up to one year if the student is adjudicated for unlawful absence (truancy). “If a student has been referred to juvenile court for being unlawfully absent from school and is adjudicated, then the juvenile judge may include the suspension of students’ driving privileges … for a period of up to 1 year,” Jones said on the House floor.
The sponsor described the measure as permissive—judges would have the option, not the mandate—to impose a licensing consequence. Representative Johnson objected, saying judges do not always consider family circumstances and that license suspensions can impose serious hardships: “I’ve had too many students that were truant for reasons because of family, various other things … They might be how they get to work. They have to earn a living to help the family,” Johnson said, arguing she could not support the bill.
The House debated whether judges would reliably factor in mitigating circumstances such as caregiver responsibilities or economic need. Jones replied the authority was designed to be discretionary and used when appropriate. After debate the sponsor renewed the motion and the House voted to pass the measure on third and final consideration; the presiding officer declared the bill passed after the clerk reported the outcome.
The vote resulted in the bill’s passage; the motion to reconsider was tabled. The transcript does not include a complete roll‑call tally in an unambiguous numeric form for public reporting; the House record shows the measure received a constitutional majority and was declared passed. Next steps: the bill will be enrolled and sent according to the chamber’s legislative process.