New Tennessee laws take effect, with protests accompanying

By: and - July 4, 2022 7:01 am
A protest of a Tennessee law criminalizing camping on public property kicks off Friday. (Photo: John Partipilo)

A protest of a Tennessee law criminalizing camping on public property kicks off Friday. (Photo: John Partipilo)

Dozens of new laws passed in the last session of the General Assembly took effect on Friday, most of which haven’t captured the public’s attention.

There’s little controversy about a law that requires utility companies to provide the estimates of connection fees to potential customers, for instance, for instance, or one that allows defendants for whom bail has been set to pay with a debit card instead of cash.

Other laws, such as one that requires school librarians to classify material as obscene even if it has educational value or the law that creates a misdemeanor for anyone camping on public property, have stirred outcry. Advocates for Tennessee’s homeless population contend the law, which defines camping as erecting tents or tarps under bridges or overpasses and alongside state highways, as targeting houseless Tennesseans.

Gov. Bill Lee said he didn’t approve of the new law and didn’t sign it, saying he wants to look for alternatives to it, but let it become law without his signature.

To protest the new camping law, several hundred people in Nashville marched through the streets of downtown before setting up tents and sleeping  on benches overnight to test it.

Metro Nashville Police declined to make arrests.

Rev. Lindsey Krinks, a street chaplain and founder of the homeless outreach organization Open Table Nashville, speaks during Friday's protest. (Photo: John Partipilo)
Rev. Lindsey Krinks, a street chaplain and founder of the homeless outreach organization Open Table Nashville, speaks during Friday’s protest. (Photo: John Partipilo)

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John Partipilo
John Partipilo

Working as a photojournalist for 40 years, Partipilo has won awards such as NPPA Best of Photojournalism and nominated for two Pulitzers. His photography has also been featured in national and international publications. Most importantly Partipilo’s work is about people — people in their different environments and people in their different stages of life. That’s the heart of his work. To him people are so important, because they all have a unique story.

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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