The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed important legislation to repeal the state’s Certificate…
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CFIF Thanks Legislative Champions of Certificate of Need (CON) Reform in Tennessee

The Tennessee General Assembly recently passed important legislation to repeal the state’s Certificate of Need (CON) requirements for acute care hospitals and other critical healthcare services. Pending Governor Bill Lee’s signature, the bill paves the way for more choices and better-quality care for patients across the state.

CON laws compel hospitals and other healthcare providers to demonstrate a “need” for and to receive special government permission to build new facilities and offer certain new healthcare services. Not only is that approval process governed by a government board unaccountable to voters, but incumbent providers also get a say in whether new facilities are permitted to open or new services can be offered by competitors in their geographic footprint.

Simply…[more]

April 23, 2026 • 10:49 AM
The Midterms in Prospect: The Senate (Part 4)
By Troy Senik
Thursday, October 02 2014
Over the past month, this column has presented analysis of this year’s U.S. Senate races by region. Part One looked at contests in the West. Part Two examined races in the Midwest. Last week’s installment considered races in the South where Democrats are in trouble. In this final installment, we’ll examine Southern races where Republicans are endangered, as well as the sole competitive race in the Northeast. As I noted in last week’s installment, the conventional wisdom about the South now being solidly Republican is mostly true, but elides the full complexity of politics…
 
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Notable Quote   
 
"Some Gen Zers -- ages 14 to 29 -- are ditching social media in pursuit of better mental health, Axios' Rebecca Falconer reports.It's part of a wider digital detox movement away from screens and toward analog options. Research suggests that social media use is waning -- and that more people are embracing app-blocking products and 'dumbphones' that lack social media apps."Read the entire article here…[more]
 
 
— Mike Allen, Axios
 
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