New State Airport Bosses Bail On Nashville Lawsuit Battle

The power struggle over who really runs Nashville’s airports tilted toward the state this week, as the state-appointed Metro Nashville Airport Authority board voted to pull the authority out of a lawsuit challenging a state-driven takeover of the board. The decision came at the new commission’s first meeting after a recent law reconstituting the body took effect July 1, shifting who officially represents BNA and John C. Tune Airport in court and marking a major reset in the tug-of-war between city and state control.

As reported by the Nashville Post, the six-member board, all appointed by state leaders, voted at a July 6 special meeting to withdraw the authority from the pending litigation. The Post also noted that a court has put a temporary stay in place through July 27. Metro officials say that is not the end of the legal line for the city, since Metro’s separate federal lawsuit will keep moving forward as its lawyers ask a judge to block the new board from taking operational control for now.

Who the State Put in Charge

According to a release from the Metropolitan Nashville Airport Authority, the six new commissioners are Lt. Gen. Dennis D. Cavin (U.S. Army, ret.), John Cheadle Jr., Tony Giarratana, Jimmy Granbery, Bobby Joslin and Deputy Governor Stuart McWhorter. The appointments were made by Gov. Bill Lee, Lt. Gov. Randy McNally and House Speaker Cameron Sexton under Public Chapter No. 978, which restructured the authority effective July 1, according to that release.

Legal Fight and What Comes Next

City leaders took the dispute to federal court in June, arguing that the new law violates federal aviation rules and improperly targets Metro. Axios has detailed the city’s filing and the history of previous attempts to shift control of the airport board. The mayor’s office contends that federal law does not allow a change in the airport “sponsor” without the consent of the existing board, and it has asked a judge to stop the state from enforcing the law while the case plays out. How quickly the court moves will now dictate whether the new state-appointed board can make further operational moves, or whether a judge steps in to keep things as they were while both sides argue it out.

What This Means Locally

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