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The analysis of HB2649, which revises election provisions and property tax due dates for the City of Bristol, reveals no direct conflicts of interest between the sponsor, John Crawford, and the bill's subject matter. Crawford's personal financial interests primarily revolve around his ownership of a plumbing and electrical business and a printing business, neither of which directly align with the legislative changes proposed in this bill. The bill focuses on local governance and election law, areas that do not intersect with Crawford's business operations in plumbing, electrical services, or printing. Therefore, it is unlikely that he would gain financially from the passage of this legislation.
Unlike federal analysis based on campaign donations, state analysis examines legislators' personal financial interests — their jobs, businesses, and investments.
| Type | Description | Industry | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Occupation | Business Owner | — | AI-researched |
| Employer | Owner of Plumbing and Electrical Business | — | TN Legislature bio |
| Business Owner | Owner of Plumbing and Electrical Business | — | AI-researched |
| Employer | ABLE PRINTERS | — | TN Ethics Commission |
| Asset | PLAQUES ETC. | — | TN Ethics Commission |
Items marked "AI-researched" are generated from public sources but have not been independently verified. Verified data is sourced from official legislature websites and disclosure filings.
Source: LegiScan roll call vote data.
About This Analysis
This summary was generated using AI from the bill's official text and metadata. Data sourced from LegiScan and the Tennessee General Assembly. Conflict analysis examines the sponsor's personal financial interests for potential overlaps with the bill's subject matter.
TN HB2649