
Williamson County Removes 3 Age-Inappropriate Books From School Libraries
In A Special Meeting On December 9th, The Williamson County School Board Opted To Remove Three Titles From School Libraries While Also Limiting Access To Another Title.
In A Special Meeting On December 9th, The Williamson County School Board Opted To Remove Three Titles From School Libraries While Also Limiting Access To Another Title.
A Chancery Court In Franklin Has Ruled In Favor Of Parents Who Sued The Williamson County Board Of Education (Board) Over Five Books They Believed To Be In Violation Of Tennessee’s Age-Appropriate Materials Act Of 2022.
The Tennessee Conservative’s Kelly M. Jackson Is Joined By Fellow Williamson County Patriots, Randy Tate And Emma Holmes, Who Describe The Unusual Encounter They Had On Election Day At Their Polling Place And How That Encounter Not Only Infringed On Their First Amendment Rights But Impeded Them From Access To Their Ballot And The Right To Cast Their Votes For Their Chosen Candidate…At Least Temporarily.
In What Some Critics Are Calling An “Unmitigated Power Grab” Most Of The Williamson County Commission Voted To Install Ousted Williamson County GOP Chair Cheryl Brown Into The Vacated District 10 Seat.
Tonight, At The Williamson County Commission Meeting, The Remaining D10 County Commissioner Meghan Guffey Will Nominate The Former Williamson County GOP Chair, Cheryl Brown, With Virtually No Public Notice For Constituents To Raise Their Concerns, Comments Or Nominate Their Own Choice.
Last Week, The Williamson County GOP Hosted A Candidate Forum For The Tennessee House Of Representatives Seat In District 65, Which Is Being Vacated By A Retiring Sam Whitson.
Williamson County Mayor, Rogers Anderson, Has Been Paying Williamson Inc., A Chamber Of Commerce Affiliated Organization On A $400,000 Contract That Had Apparently Lapsed, Without Anyone Noticing. The Contract Was Renewed In May Of 2022, And Expired On June 30th, 2023.
As The General Session Winds To A Close Likely In The Next Couple Of Weeks, The Opportunity For A Law That Will Allow For Tennesseans To Recall Elected Leaders They Feel Have Failed To Live Up To Promises They Made When They Were Campaigning Will Again Fail To Become A Reality.
A Bill That Would Have Prohibited The Use Of Local And State Law Enforcement For Intelligence Gathering Operations With Tennesseans As The Focus, Died Yesterday In The Senate Judiciary Committee Because None Of The Members Of That Committee Would Motion For The Bill To Be Heard.