AI summary is being generated. Check back soon for a plain-language breakdown of this bill.
Positive media analysis is being generated.
Critical media analysis is being generated.
Sara Kyle, the sponsor of SB1205, has personal financial interests primarily in the legal field as a self-employed attorney and has no documented business interests directly related to menstrual hygiene products or sales and use tax exemptions. The bill aims to exempt menstrual hygiene products from sales tax, which does not appear to create a direct financial benefit for her as an attorney or through her other financial interests, such as the Dickson Financial Corporation or First Tennessee Bank. Additionally, there are no indications that her spouse's previous role as a state representative would create a conflict in this context. Therefore, the risk of a conflict of interest is minimal.
Unlike federal analysis based on campaign donations, state analysis examines legislators' personal financial interests — their jobs, businesses, and investments.
| Type | Description | Industry | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Occupation | Attorney | Lawyers/Law Firms | AI-researched |
| Employer | Self-employed Attorney | Lawyers/Law Firms | TN Legislature bio |
| Spouse Employer | Husband is Mike Stewart, former Tennessee State Representative | — | AI-researched |
| Employer | STATE OF TENNESSEE | Government | TN Ethics Commission |
| Asset | DICKSON FINANCIAL CORPORATION; PEERY ENTERPRISES; BSB PARTNERSHIP | — | TN Ethics Commission |
| Asset | FIRST TENNESSEE BANK | — | TN Ethics Commission |
| Asset | Leadership PAC: YELLOW ROSE PAC | — | 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.
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 SB1205