Across Tennessee, TN|News|
Editor’s Column: Refute The Big Lie
Following the November 2020 election, all but three of Tennessee’s GOP state senators signed a letter questioning Biden’s win.

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Following the November 2020 election, all but three of Tennessee’s GOP state senators signed a letter questioning Biden’s win.

Banks have been flooded with work since the COVID-19 pandemic started, and American Recovery Plan funds could exacerbate the problem.
Tennessee is one of them.
Safer Schools Nashville says many current proposals in the city budget are great but still don't provide enough resources for students.
Black, Hispanic and Asian households are now more vulnerable than others.
State officials formerly said Tennessee should would wait until it ID's a client before building the sewage line to the Mississippi River.
There’s a delicate balance of being openly supportive of the LGBT community and leading an unassuming existence among conservative peers.
An analysis also found that Black Tennesseans are disproportionately impacted.
The former Tennessee House Speaker, a Davidson County Republican, is waiting to see what decision the Legislature makes on redistricting.
The congressman says Republicans will economically cripple Nashville by “ruining the oasis of blue.”
A lawsuit says the team could lose millions of dollars should the referendum go forward and be passed by Nashville voters.
Tenants of the Nashville apartment complex say they received eviction notices following storm damage despite having lease agreements.
Legislative committees shifts cost of cleaning-up oil spills to taxpayers.
The Girl Scouts of Middle Tennessee is suing its parent organization over the terms of a new technology platform.
Bristol Motor Speedway executive VP Jerry Caldwell said the plan is to hold fewer races and rent the track out for fewer practice runs.
The administration will present plans to the State Building Commission to move forward with building a wastewater discharge pipeline.
The federal benefit of $300 a week – which supplements $275 weekly from the state – is to end July 3 under the governor’s order.
The GOP state senator from Chattanooga is taking a different view on the issue than firebrand conservatives.
A hearing on Monday was the opening foray of a dispute about whether a referendum currently scheduled for July 27 can go forward.
The 30-second ads warn of the negative impacts the group says the charter amendment proposals would have on Metro government’s operations.