Current:Home > StocksTennessee judges side with Nashville in fight over fairgrounds speedway -TradeWisdom
Tennessee judges side with Nashville in fight over fairgrounds speedway
View
Date:2025-04-18 17:56:46
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A newly enacted Tennessee law designed to lower the threshold needed for Nashville leaders to approve improvements to its fairgrounds speedway violates the state’s constitution and cannot be enforced, a three-judge panel has ruled.
Thursday’s unanimous ruling is the latest development in the ongoing tension between left-leaning Nashville and the GOP-dominated General Assembly, where multiple legal challenges have been filed over Republican-led efforts to undermine the city’s authority.
The judges found that the statute targeting the Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway violated the Tennessee Constitution’s “home rule,” which says the Legislature can’t pass measures singling out individual counties without local support. This means the law cannot be implemented.
Republican Gov. Bill Lee signed off on the law earlier this year after GOP lawmakers advanced the proposal over the objections of Democrats who represent Nashville. The law dictated that Nashville and any other similar sized city needed just a simple majority to make any demolition on its fairgrounds as long as the facilities would be used for “substantially the same use” before and after the improvements.
The change to lower the approval threshold came as Bristol Motor Speedway is pushing the city to sign off on a major renovation of the Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway with the goal of eventually bringing a NASCAR race to the stadium.
Currently, Nashville’s charter requires that such improvements require a supermajority. While the law didn’t specifically single out Music City, no other municipality fell within the statute’s limits.
The Tennessee Attorney General’s office had argued that the law could be applied statewide, making it exempt from requiring local buy-in as required under the state constitution. However, the three-judge panel disagreed.
“Clearly, the General Assembly may pass laws that are local in form and effect. But the Tennessee Constitution commands that if it does, the legislation must include a provision for local approval,” the judges wrote. “(The law) does not include a local approval provision.”
A spokesperson for the attorney general did not respond to an email request for comment.
The decision is one of several legal battles that have been swirling in state courts ever since the Republican-dominant Legislature enacted several proposals targeting Nashville after city leaders spiked a proposal to host the 2024 Republican National Convention last year.
Angered that the Metro Council refused to entertain hosting the prominent GOP event, Republicans advanced proposals that cut the Democratic-leaning city’s metro council in half and approved plans for the state to make enough appointments to control Nashville’s airport authority — which manages, operates, finances and maintains the international airport and a smaller one in the city.
Nashville leaders have since challenged the statutes and those lawsuits remain ongoing.
veryGood! (72429)
Related
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Southern lawmakers rethink long-standing opposition to Medicaid expansion
- 'Outer Range': Josh Brolin interview teases release date for Season 2 of mystery thriller
- Could Target launch a membership program? Here's who they would be competing against
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Massachusetts man is found guilty of murder in the deaths of a police officer and elderly widow
- Biden says Navalny’s reported death brings new urgency to the need for more US aid to Ukraine
- Cynthia Erivo talks 'Wicked,' coping with real 'fear and horror' of refugee drama 'Drift'
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Polar bears stuck on land longer as ice melts, face greater risk of starvation, researchers say
Ranking
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Body of deputy who went missing after making arrest found in Tennessee River
- Watch Live: Fulton County prosecutors decline to call Fani Willis to return for questioning
- The Census Bureau is thinking about how to ask about sex. People have their opinions
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Protests, poisoning and prison: The life and death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny
- Robert Hur, special counsel in Biden documents case, to testify before Congress on March 12
- 'Hot Ones' host Sean Evans spotted with porn star Melissa Stratton. The mockery crossed a line.
Recommendation
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
What is a discharge petition? How House lawmakers could force a vote on the Senate-passed foreign aid bill
How Jason Kelce got a luchador mask at Super Bowl after party, and how it'll get back home
Brian Wilson needs to be put in conservatorship after death of wife, court petition says
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
Greece just legalized same-sex marriage. Will other Orthodox countries join them any time soon?
After feud, Mike Epps and Shannon Sharpe meet in person: 'I showed him love'
Alexei Navalny, jailed opposition leader and Putin’s fiercest foe, has died, Russian officials say