Legislation To Extend Tennessee’s Sex Offender Registry Stalled In House Finance Subcommittee

Image Credit: capitol.tn.gov

The Tennessee Conservative [By Rebecca Scott] –

A bill to extend the amount of time that a perpetrator remains on the Tennessee Sex Offender Registry was recommended for passage with amendments on April 2nd by the Senate Judiciary Committee. However, in the House, the bill has been placed behind Governor Lee’s budget.

Senate Bill 2630 (SB2630), sponsored by Sen. Mark Pody (R-Lebanon-District 17), passed with 8 Ayes and 0 Nays in the Senate Judiciary Committee on April 2nd.

SB2630 “As introduced, extends from 10 years to 15 years the period of time following termination of active supervision on probation, parole, or any other alternative to incarceration, or discharge from incarceration without supervision after which an offender may file a request for termination of the requirement to register as a sexual offender or violent sexual offender. – Amends TCA Title 39 and Title 40, Chapter 39, Part 2.”

The bill has now referred to the Senate Calendar Committee for scheduling to be heard on the Senate floor.

However, the companion bill, House Bill 1617 (HB1617), sponsored by Rep. Bryan Richey (R-Maryville-District 20), was placed behind the budget in the House Finance Ways & Means Subcommittee.

When a bill is placed “behind the budget” it usually means two things: (1) there is significant fiscal impact associated with the bill’s passage; and (2) the bill is not part of the governor’s proposed budget which takes precedence in the appropriations process.

After Rep. Richey’s presentation of the bill to the subcommittee, having no questions from the subcommittee members about the bill, Chairman Gary Hicks (R-Rogersville-District 9) said, “There is a cost associated with House Bill 1617, so we will have to place it behind the budget and consider it at a later date.”

Representative Richey questioned if the increase in state revenue is the reason for the bill being placed behind the budget.

Hicks replied that the bill has “other fiscal impact” that justifies placing it behind the budget but said “we’ll help to shelter this one through.”

View the “Fiscal Impact” of HB1617 below or in the Fiscal Note HERE.

FISCAL IMPACT:

Increase State Revenue –

$3,800/FY34-35
$7,700/FY35-36
$11,500/FY36-37
$15,300/FY37-38
$19,100/FY38-39 and Subsequent Years


Increase Local Revenue –

$7,700/FY34-35
$15,300/FY35-36
$23,000/FY36-37
$30,600/FY37-38
$38,300/FY38-39 and Subsequent Years


Other Fiscal Impact –

Additional staff for the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation
may be necessary in the future; the extent and timing of any increase in
expenditures cannot be determined at this time.

4 thoughts on “Legislation To Extend Tennessee’s Sex Offender Registry Stalled In House Finance Subcommittee

  • April 4, 2024 at 4:03 pm
    Permalink

    But they can pass a bill that gives a football team 100’s of millions of dollars.

    Reply
  • April 4, 2024 at 7:12 pm
    Permalink

    Senator Gardenhire,
    Since you removed SB2034 from the agenda, it is painfully obvious where your loyalties lie. The people of Tennessee are watching.
    Brigette Gheno

    Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer

    Reply
    • April 6, 2024 at 3:28 pm
      Permalink

      The registry should be abolished, not expanded. Conservaturds love funding useless crap like this bill.

      Reply
  • April 7, 2024 at 12:25 am
    Permalink

    This bill SHOULD die simply because it is another unnecessary retroactive punishment by means of a civil regulatory scheme, a constitutional challenge. If you want to add time for a specific crime, that is what sentencing laws are about. These legislators are dipsh1ts!

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *