Tennessee 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Tennessee Senate Bill SB0961 Draft / Bill

Filed 02/05/2025

                     
HOUSE BILL 955 
 By Brooks 
 
SENATE BILL 961 
By Lamar 
 
 
SB0961 
001142 
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AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 7, 
Chapter 53; Title 9; Title 12; Title 13; Title 66 and 
Title 67, relative to housing. 
 
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE: 
 SECTION 1.  This act is known and may be cited as the "Affordable Housing and Tenant 
Protection Act." 
 SECTION 2.  Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 66-35-102, is amended by deleting 
the language "residential or" wherever it appears in subsection (a) and subdivision (b)(1). 
 SECTION 3.  Tennessee Code Annotated, Section 66-35-102(b), is amended by 
deleting subdivisions (2) and (3) and substituting instead: 
(2)  This subsection (b) does not prohibit a local government unit from creating or 
implementing a purely voluntary incentive-based program designed to increase the 
construction or rehabilitation of workforce or affordable private commercial rental units, 
which may include providing local tax incentives, subsidization, real property, or 
infrastructure assistance. 
(3)  A person who suffers an ascertainable loss of money or property, real, 
personal, or mixed, or any other article, commodity, or thing of value wherever situated, 
as a result of the practices prohibited by this section, may bring an action individually to 
recover actual damages. 
 SECTION 4.  Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 66, Chapter 35, Part 1, is amended by 
adding the following as a new section: 
66-35-104.  
(a)  The general assembly finds that:   
 
 
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(1)  A serious public emergency continues to exist in the housing of a 
considerable number of persons in this state;  
(2)  Such emergency necessitates the intervention of state and local 
government in order to prevent speculative, unwarranted, and abnormal 
increases in rents;  
(3)  There continues to exist an acute shortage of dwellings;  
(4)  Unless residential rents are regulated and controlled, disruptive 
practices and abnormal conditions will produce serious threats to the public 
health, safety, and general welfare; 
(5)  Preventative action is necessary in order to prevent exactions of 
unjust, unreasonable, and oppressive rents and rental agreements; 
(6)  The transition from regulation to a normal market of free bargaining 
between landlord and tenant, while still the objective of state policy, must be 
administered with due regard for such emergency; and  
(7)  The policy expressed in this section may be administered locally 
within local governments by an agency of the local government itself. 
(b)  A local government unit may, by two-thirds (2/3) vote of its legislative body, 
adopt an ordinance or resolution to control the amount of rent charged for leasing private 
residential property, including the establishment and adjustment of maximum rents and 
rental application fees. 
(c)  Prior to adopting an ordinance or resolution pursuant to subsection (b), the 
local government unit shall: 
(1)  Make a determination as to the supply of housing accommodations 
within the local government unit, the condition of the accommodations, and the   
 
 
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need for continuing the regulation and control of residential rents within the local 
government unit; 
(2)  Establish or designate a board, commission, or agency of the local 
government unit ("local rent agency") to administer the regulation and control of 
residential rents within the local government, including making such studies and 
investigations, conducting hearings, and obtaining such information as it deems 
necessary or proper in prescribing any regulation or order under an ordinance or 
resolution adopted pursuant to subsection (b), or in administering and enforcing 
such local regulations and orders pursuant to the ordinance or resolution, and 
requiring a person who rents or offers for rent or acts as broker or agent for the 
rental of any housing accommodations to furnish any such information, to make 
and keep records and other documents, and to make reports; and 
(3)  Establish a process for a person who is aggrieved by a final 
determination of a local rent agency made pursuant to an ordinance or resolution 
to challenge the determination, which process must include written notice and 
explanation of any alleged violation of a regulation or order and an opportunity to 
request an administrative hearing and to subsequently appeal the final order of 
the local rent agency to the chancery court of the county in which the agency is 
located.   
SECTION 5.  Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 13, Chapter 23, is amended by adding 
the following as a new part: 
13-23-601.   
(a)  There is created the increased housing program to be administered by the 
Tennessee housing development agency (THDA).     
 
 
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(b)  The goal of the program is to help create more affordable housing across this 
state.   
(c)  The program must assist both developers and first-time homebuyers.  
Developers may apply for gap financing in building both single family and multi-family 
homes across the state.  First-time homebuyers of an owner-occupied primary residence 
may apply for a grant assisting in making their down payments in purchasing the 
residence or paying closing costs, or both.  The program must fund both urban and rural 
housing developments across this state.  
(d)  The program must give preference to applicants who are looking to develop 
or buy housing in communities that have been under a federally declared disaster within 
the twelve (12) months immediately preceding the date of application.   
(e)  Participants in the program must not be eligible for the Tennessee rural and 
workforce housing tax credit provided in § 13-23-134.   
(f)  The THDA may promulgate rules in accordance with the Uniform 
Administrative Procedures Act, compiled in title 4, chapter 5, to implement the increased 
housing program.   
(g)  The THDA shall provide an annual report beginning January 1, 2026, to the 
governor, the speakers of the house of representatives and the senate, the chair of the 
finance, ways, and means committee of the senate, and the chair of the committee 
having jurisdiction over the budget in the house of representatives detailing how many 
awards have been made to both developers and to first-time homebuyers, how many 
additional housing units have been built, along with other program information deemed 
relevant by the THDA. 
13-23-602.     
 
 
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(a)  There is created in the state treasury a revolving fund for the Tennessee 
housing development agency (THDA) to be designated the "increased housing revolving 
fund".  
(b)  The fund must consist of all moneys received by the THDA from 
appropriations, donations, grants, or other sources of funding.   
(c)  All monies deposited in the fund must be expended by the THDA for the 
purpose of the increased housing program as described in § 13-23-601. 
(d)  The state treasurer shall invest moneys in the fund for the benefit of the fund 
in accordance with § 9-4-603.  Interest accruing on investments and deposits of the fund 
must be credited to and remain part of the fund. 
(e)  Any unencumbered moneys and any unexpended balance of the fund 
remaining at the end of a fiscal year do not revert to the general fund, but must be 
carried forward until expended in accordance with this part.  No part of the fund shall be 
diverted to the general fund or any other public fund. 
(f)  Of the funds available, the THDA may use up to five percent (5%) of the 
funds to cover additional administrative costs to the THDA in administering the increased 
housing program. 
SECTION 6.  This act takes effect upon becoming a law, the public welfare requiring it.