Tennessee 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Tennessee House Bill HB0552 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 03/04/2025

                    SB 494 - HB 552 
FISCAL NOTE 
 
 
 
Fiscal Review Committee 
Tennessee General Assembly 
 
March 4, 2025 
Fiscal Analyst: Alan Hampton | Email: alan.hampton@capitol.tn.gov | Phone: 615-741-2564 
 
SB 494 - HB 552 
 
SUMMARY OF BILL:    Enacts the Family Right to Educational Emancipation (FREE) Act. 
Creates a new category of independent home schools that are not subject to the data collection, 
reporting, or assessment requirements applicable to existing home programs. Exempts such home 
school students and parents from compulsory school attendance requirements and truancy 
intervention. Prohibits the state or a local government from imposing any rules, requirements, 
mandates, or guidelines regarding the curriculum, instructional materials, or educational methods 
used by parents or legal guardians for children being educated in such a home school. 
 
Prohibits the Department of Safety (DOS) from conditioning the issuance of a driver’s license or 
learner’s permit on a school-aged applicant’s attendance record or enrollment status. Prohibits the 
DOS from assessing a first-time applicant a reinstatement fee of $20 if the applicant's driver license 
or learner's permit was suspended prior to July 1, 2025, due to the applicant withdrawing from 
secondary school. Deletes various sections of Tennessee Code Annotated Title 55, Chapter 50, Part 
5 pursuant to the suspension and revocation of a minor’s driver’s license due to withdrawing from 
secondary school. 
 
 
FISCAL IMPACT: 
 
OTHER FISCAL IMPACT 
 
The legislation will require updates to the Department of Safety’s A-List software system. The 
updates are assumed to be accomplished by the relevant vendor under the current contractual 
agreement at no additional cost to the department. However, if the relevant contract provision is 
exhausted by this and other legislation subsequently enacted, the Department of Safety could incur 
an additional increase in expenditures estimated to be $64,000, as provided by the vendor, in FY25-
26. 
 
 
 Assumptions: 
 
• The proposed legislation creates a new category of home school that is not subject to the 
data collection, reporting, attendance, or assessment requirements applicable to existing 
home school programs.  
• Additionally, the parents or legal guardians for children being educated in such a home 
school are authorized to determine the curriculum, instructional materials, or educational 
methods without any oversight or guidance by the state or a local government.   
 	SB 494 - HB 552  	2 
• It is unknown how many parents or legal guardians of students may elect to educate their 
child in such a home school. However, any parent or legal guardian that elects to operate 
such a home school will not require or receive any resources from state or local 
governments in order to do so. It is further assumed that any impact on public schools will 
be minimal. Therefore, any fiscal impact to state or local government is estimated to be not 
significant. 
• Pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 49-6-3017(b)(1) and (b)(2), the DOS is required to deny a 
license or instruction permit for the operation of a motor vehicle to any person under 18 
years of age who at the time of application for a driver license: does not have a diploma or 
certificate of graduation, is not enrolled in high school, or is not enrolled and making 
satisfactory progress in a course leading to a GED. 
• The proposed legislation will require the DOS to issue a license or instruction permit to any 
person under the age of 18 years old without regard to a person’s graduation or enrollment 
status. 
• This legislation would impact two cohorts of minors: those who are denied an initial D-
Intermediate Restricted license and those who have their D-Intermediate Restricted or 
Unrestricted license suspended.  
• The total cost of a D-Intermediate Restricted license is $24.50.   
• The reinstatement cost of a suspended license is $20.   
• The total cost of graduating from a D-Intermediate Restricted or Unrestricted license to a 
Class D license is $10.  
• The percentages of those two specific cohorts which will be impacted by this legislation is 
unknown.  
• The proposed legislation prohibits the DOS from assessing a first-time applicant a 
reinstatement fee of $20 if the applicant's driver license or learner's permit was suspended 
prior to July 1, 2025, due to the applicant withdrawing from secondary school. 
• The DOS is estimated to realize a decrease in revenue related to the loss of reinstatement 
fees for those who have a license suspended and subsequently apply to reinstate.  
• The DOS is also estimated to realize an increase in revenue related to additional minors 
who are currently denied an initial D-Intermediate Restricted License now being eligible to 
obtain one.  
• Any decrease in revenue from loss of reinstatement fees is assumed to be offset equally by 
the increase in revenue from additional minors not being denied an initial D-Intermediate 
Restricted License. 
• The proposed legislation will require changes to the DOS’s A-List software system. Based 
on an estimate provided by the vendor Fast Enterprises, the cost to implement these 
changes is $64,000. It is assumed that these modifications can be accomplished by the 
vendor under the current contractual agreement without a need for additional expenditures; 
therefore, any fiscal impact to DOS is estimated to be not significant. 
• However, if the scope of work required by this and other legislation subsequently enacted 
exhausts the relevant contract provision, the proposed legislation could result in an increase 
in state expenditures up to $64,000 in FY25-26.   
• No impact to the Department of Education.  
 
   
 	SB 494 - HB 552  	3 
CERTIFICATION: 
 
 The information contained herein is true and correct to the best of my knowledge. 
   
Bojan Savic, Executive Director