TN SB0656

School Buses

Introduced Senate Joseph Hensley (R)
Plain English Summary

AI summary is being generated. Check back soon for a plain-language breakdown of this bill.

Supporters Say

Positive media analysis is being generated.

Critics Say

Critical media analysis is being generated.

Conflict of Interest Analysis Personal Interests
1/10
Risk Level
Low
Policy Area
Transportation and Public Works
Industry Overlap
0%
Personal Conflicts
0 found

The bill SB0656 proposes to extend the operational lifespan of conventional and Class D school buses from 200,000 miles to 230,000 miles. The sponsor, Joseph Hensley, has personal financial interests primarily in the healthcare sector as a physician and business owner of Hensley Medical Clinic. There are no direct overlaps between his personal financial interests and the transportation-related subject matter of the bill. His role as a board member of the Tennessee Medical Association also does not intersect with the legislative focus on motor vehicles and school transportation.

Sponsor's Personal Financial Interests

Unlike federal analysis based on campaign donations, state analysis examines legislators' personal financial interests — their jobs, businesses, and investments.

Type Description Industry Source
Occupation Physician Health Professionals AI-researched
Employer Maury Regional Medical Center AI-researched
Business Owner Owner of Hensley Medical Clinic TN Legislature bio
Board Member Board Member of the Tennessee Medical Association TN Legislature bio

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.

TheBillRoom is free and independent. No ads, no subscriptions, no political funding. If this analysis was useful, reader support keeps it running.
Support Us

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.