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The Tennessee state Capitol in Nashville is shown on Jan. 8, 2020. AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File Proposed legislation that would clarify Tennessee divorce law to consider animal welfare in pet custody disputes failed Tuesday in a subcommittee of the Tennessee House. My constituents and divorce attorneys I ve spoken to have found pet custo [url=https://www.adidascampus.com.de]adidas campus herren[/url] dy challenging in proceedings, and there needs to be more state guidance on how to approach this matter so pets are treated less like property and more like family, House Bill 467 sponsor Rep. Caleb Hemmer, D-Nashville, said Tuesday before the state House Children Family Affairs Subcommittee.The Senate version of the legislation, Senate Bill 568, unanimously passed the state Senate on March 13.Tim Shrum, Hemmer s constituent who inspired the bill, told lawmakers that while judges already have broad authority in distribution of marital property -- including pets -- the bill would provide guidance to the court and lay out a framework of different factors to consider in pet custody decisions. READ MORE: Chattanooga s McKamey Animal Center drops breed labels for dogs in its care It s not that we re asking anything new, it s just [url=https://www.adidassamba.com.de]adidas samba[/url] bringing this guidance to the attention, Shrum said.Rep. Johnny Garrett, R-Goodlettsville, said judges already have 15-17 factors to consider when distributing marital property. One of those is [url=https://www.airforces.us]airforces[/url] deciding ... where a pet would go based upon the circumstances, he said Vvuq Chattanooga Mayor Tim Kelly, an independent, drops by Democratic National Convention
Pisgah High School science and robotics teacher Gus Hembree observes as juniors Noah Venable, Austin Tidwell and Silena Moss watch their robot cruise the hallway using programming the group just installed. PISGAH, Ala. - There s a new robotics class at Pisgah High School in Jackson County, Ala., where education is sprouting wheels and whirring along the halls.Junior LaShauna McBride didn t even know she was in the fledgling robotics class until she got her schedule; now she s considering a technical career. Once I got into it, I liked it, and I think it ll help me a lot in the future, said LaShauna, 16, who was working with her project teammates Friday to program one of the small robots the school got for the class. Yesterday we had to program it so that when it [url=https://www.stanleymugs.us]stanley cup[/url] hits something, it automatically backs up, she said. That s pretty hard. Science and robotics teacher Gus Hembree says he doesn t help too much because his technically savvy students learn better if they t [url=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx]stanley cup[/url] rack down most of the information they need on their own. The class is 100 percent student-centered, he said. The kids are in charge of the class. They have deadlines on things they have to be able to do, but as far as how they get through that process [it s] up to them. It s all about problem solving and dive [url=https://www.stanleymugs.ca]stanley ca[/url] rgent thinking, he said.Hembree said the robotics class got started after Principal Mark Guffey asked him if he d like to teach a robotics/engineering course. That led the school to enter Northeast Al