Bill That Would Prohibit Adults From Smoking In Cars With Children Dies
In Senate
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- A bill that would
have barred adults in Tennessee from smoking in a vehicle with children
appears dead for the year after lawmakers voiced concerns that it gave
the government too much power over citizen freedoms.
The measure failed to clear the Senate Wednesday.
The bill was sponsored by Knoxville Republican Sen. Richard Briggs. It
would have made it an offense to smoke in a vehicle with children under
the age of 14, regardless of whether the windows in the car were rolled
down.
Briggs cited the dangers of smoke to children in a confined space as
small as a vehicle. But some lawmakers questioned whether it was too
much of an overreach. Sparta Republican Sen. Paul Bailey said lawmakers
couldn't legislate the morality of Tennesseans.
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