Category: News

Legal Pot In Tennessee Is Possible

A proposal to legalize medical marijuana is advancing in the state House.

The House Health Subcommittee approved the measure on a voice vote Tuesday after similar measures had quickly failed in previous years.

Democratic Rep. Jeanne Richardson of Memphis, the bill’s main sponsor, said the measure would create the toughest access standards among the states that have enacted similar laws.

Republican Rep. Joey Hensley, a Hohenwald physician, raised concerns that doctors aren’t trained on how to prescribe marijuana.

The companion bill has yet to be scheduled for a hearing in the Senate Government Operations Committee.

$500(M) Drawing Is Friday

It’s almost unimaginable. No one picked the six correct numbers in the latest multi-state Mega Millions lottery game, sending the jackpot to a record $500 million for the Friday drawing.

A winner could get $19.2 million a year for 26 years or a single payment worth $359 million.

Tuesday night’s jackpot was $363 million, fed by weeks of drawings without a top winner. The previous record jackpot in the Mega Millions game was $390 million in 2007, split by two winners in New Jersey and Georgia.

In Tuesday night’s game, 47 players came very close, matching 5 of the 6 winning numbers. Each of those tickets is worth at least $250,000.

Mega Millions is played in more than 40 states, including Tennessee, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Grundy County Looks For New School Leader

Coffee County continues the process of fulfilling the Director of Schools position.  Now Grundy County begins its search for a new leader.  Thirteen applicants are interested in replacing Jody Hargis, the retiring Director of Schools.  John Franklin Bruce, Manchester, Tenn. a retired manager has applied, along with Mary Ann Gemmill, Naples, Fla.; former chief administrative officer, Collier County District School Board. Gemmill was a finalist for the Coffee County director. The Grundy County School Board hopes to hire someone by the end of the year.

Some People Losing Unemployment Benefits

The Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development is warning more than 10,000 people that their extended unemployment benefits will expire soon. The Extended Benefit program is tied to the state’s unemployment rate. Since that rate recently dropped to 8%, the program is coming to an end. Those affected are claimants in the last 20 weeks of the 99 weeks previously available. They will receive their last benefit payments the week of April 12. Approximately 10,000 people should receive notices in the coming days of their benefit expiration. They will not be eligible for benefits again until they earn qualifying wages. Labor and Workforce Development Commissioner Karla Davis said in a news release that as Tennessee’s employment opportunities improve, other federal benefits could be reduced as well.

Man Dies After Hitting Head On Trash Compactor

Jeffrey Fann, 47, of Cannon County was dumping his garbage when he fell into the county’s trash compactor, hit his head and died. Cannon County, like many rural counties, doesn’t have home trash pick-up. Instead, residents take their trash to the transfer station.  After the trash is compacted, it is sent to a landfill.  Saturday evening, Fann was standing on the back of his pickup truck while throwing his trash into the transfer station’s trash compactor.  Eyewitnesses say he slipped inside the compactor and fell to his death. The compacting machine wasn’t running, but Fann his hit head on the metal and died from that injury at a hospital. County officials were already studying how to improve the way they collect trash. In fact, they had already brought in a state consultant to do a study. The County Executive says redesigning the transfer station will be costly, but adds that the county ought to put up a gate so people can’t park too close to the compactor.

Historically Significant Documents Bill Waits On Governor

A proposal that would allow public buildings to display such “historically significant documents” as the Ten Commandments, the Magna Carta, and the Declaration of Independence, now heads to the governor for his consideration. The measure was approved 30-0 by the Senate on Monday evening. The companion bill unanimously passed the House 93-0 last week. The proposal would allow the documents to be displayed in the form of statues, monuments, memorials, tablets or in any other way that in the words of the legislation “respects the dignity of such documents.”

Miners Protest In Nashville

Eric Stewart

A large amount of members of the mining industry in Tennessee staged a protest against a bill pending in the General Assembly to ban mountaintop removal. The group of miners and engineers wore T-shirts and held up “Legalize Coal” signs at the entrance to the legislative office complex in Nashville on Tuesday. The bill (sponsored by Rep. Mike McDonald of Portland and fellow Democratic Sen. Eric Stewart of Winchester) would ban any mining that alters ridgelines more than 2,000 feet above sea level. Opponents argue that Tennessee doesn’t practice mountaintop removal mining, in which mountain ridge tops are blasted apart to expose multiple coal seams. The resulting rock and debris is dumped in streams, creating what the industry calls valley fills.

Murder Trial Moves Into Day 3

The trial of Thomas Greenwood continued Monday in the Coffee Co. Justice Center.
Greenwood, 22, has been housed in the Coffee County Jail since his arrest March 9, 2010, for the murder of Hayden Gage West of Circle Drive, Tullahoma, while he was babysitting for the child’s mother.
Jurors heard testimony from police who were first to arrive on the scene and a nurse who was on duty when the child was brought into the hospital.
Police were called to Harton Hospital due to the child having several bruises all over his body, face and the head area. The state medical examiner determined that the child’s death was the result of multiple blunt force injuries to his body and that his death was the result of homicide. Greenwood told police that he suffered a seizure causing Hayden’s head to hit the bed rail. He said that a few minutes later Hayden began to have difficulty breathing. Greenwood told officers that he then placed the child on his asthma machine to help him breath.
Testimony continues today in day 3 of the trial.

Federal Court In Winchester Could Be No More

Couthouse in Winchester

Federal officials are considering doing away with federal court hearings at locations in Cookeville, Jackson, Columbia, and Winchester. The feds say this move would save a considerable amount of money. The move would cut back on upkeep and staffing.
If officials do away with the court hearings in Winchester, the hearings will be held in Chattanooga.

Saggy Pants Could Be Outlawed

Three years ago, Rep. Joe Towns failed to make Tennessee the first state to fine teenagers for wearing saggy britches. Now the Memphis Democrat has a more comprehensive measure to prohibit “risque dressing” in schools – and its chances of passage are looking good.
The proposal is headed for a House floor vote and is moving steadily in the Senate. It seeks to prohibit students from exposing “underwear or body parts in an indecent manner that disrupts the learning environment.”
In addition to boys not sagging their pants, female student athletes would have to wear shirts over sports bras that school officials deem inappropriate.
Currently, Arkansas and Florida are the only states that target schools for a saggy pants ban, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.