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Flooding reported in Sevier County

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www.youtube.com – WKRN News 2 – 2024-09-03 11:59:29

SUMMARY: Heavy damage occurred in Gatlinburg due to flash flooding over the weekend, with areas in Sevier County still assessing the destruction. Strong storms dumped several inches of rain, affecting businesses in the Smoky Mountains Arts and Crafts Village, where an estimated four to five inches of mud inundated stores. Business owners report varying levels of impact, with some needing complete renovations while others require minor fixes like drywall replacement and mold removal. Clean-up efforts are ongoing, with caution tape around damaged areas and power washing in progress. For continuous updates, visit wkrn.com.

Flooding reported in Sevier County

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Sen. Marsha Blackburn Announces Run for Tennessee Governor – The Tennessee Tribune

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tntribune.com – Tribune Staff – 2025-08-06 17:09:00

SUMMARY: Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) launched her 2026 campaign for Tennessee governor, setting up a Republican primary contest with U.S. Representative John Rose. Blackburn, currently serving her second Senate term, was reelected in 2024 with a strong margin. She made history as Tennessee’s first female U.S. senator and aims to become the state’s first female governor, succeeding term-limited Governor Bill Lee. Blackburn’s long political career includes service in the U.S. House and Tennessee state senate. Her campaign emphasizes conservative values, constitutional honor, pro-life stances, energy and job growth, and stricter immigration enforcement, pledging to make Tennessee a conservative leader.

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SKETCH: Movie Brings Drawings To Life

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www.youtube.com – WKRN News 2 – 2025-08-06 15:49:34

SUMMARY: The movie *Sketch* centers on a father and daughter whose child’s drawings come to life in wild, inventive ways. Written and directed by Seth Worley, inspired by his own children’s expressive, sometimes intense artwork, the film explores themes of grief, as the daughter processes her mother’s death through art. Filmed entirely in Nashville, *Sketch* is an original family comedy with heartfelt moments and some scares, rated PG. Despite initial struggles to get it made in Hollywood, the team produced it scrappily in Nashville. It premiered at Toronto Film Festival, earned a 100% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and received strong audience and critical acclaim.

SKETCH follows a young girl whose sketchbook brings her drawings to life—chaotic, unpredictable, and dangerously real. As her town unravels, a gripping family journey unfolds that touches on grief, reconciliation, and the powerful bond between fathers and daughters.

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Nashville mayor’s office queries Boring Company about tunnel plan

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tennesseelookout.com – Sam Stockard – 2025-08-06 12:59:00


The Tennessee Building Commission approved a no-cost lease for Elon Musk’s Boring Company to use a state-owned parking lot near the Capitol to start tunneling for the proposed “Music City Loop,” connecting downtown Nashville to the airport. Metro Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell’s office sent the company over 60 questions, mainly about emergency response, safety permitting, construction impacts, tunnel design, and integration with city transportation plans. Concerns include emergency vehicle access, radio coverage, ventilation, flood mitigation, and how to prevent pedestrian or unhoused access. The project’s cost, ownership, liability, and coordination with existing infrastructure remain unclear. The state secured a credit line as a project backup.

by Sam Stockard, Tennessee Lookout
August 6, 2025

The Metro Nashville mayor’s office is asking a litany of questions about the proposed “Music City Loop,” focusing primarily on emergency service responses and the impact on city transportation plans.

Mayor Freddie O’Connell’s office sent the list of inquiries dealing with planning and permitting, construction and maintenance phases to the Boring Company, according to information released to Metro Council members Tuesday by Director of Legislative Affairs Dave Rosenberg.

“We are aware of the state’s conversations with the Boring Company, and we have a number of operational questions to understand the potential impacts on Metro and Nashvillians,” O’Connell said in a statement to the Lookout. 

The letter went to the company before Gov. Bill Lee and Boring Company President and CEO Steve Davis unveiled plans last week to build a tunnel from downtown Nashville to Nashville International Airport where they gave few details about the project. The state will make a long-term lease agreement for right of way underneath state highways in return for Boring constructing the project, according to a state senator.

An email from Rosenberg says O’Connell and staff first heard “informal chatter” last spring about Boring considering building a tunnel on the East Bank but, similarly to other ideas that come to the mayor, it came and went without “follow-up or signs of a serious proposal.”

Rosenberg said the most information O’Connell’s administration received about the tunnel plan came at last week’s announcement at the airport. 

Lee said after the event that he and O’Connell meet regularly to discuss issues and have had “really productive conversations” about the tunnel project.

Lawmaker: State will lease underground property for tunnel

Still, the mayor’s office posed more than 60 questions to Boring, mainly about emergency responses and permitting throughout the life of the project.

The letter asks questions about the estimated cost, ownership, liability, maintenance and insurance, as well as whether the expense of planning, design and construction would be borne completely by the Boring Company. Officials declined to give a projected price for the project.

The mayor’s office points out existing storm and sewer tunnels at Lafayette and Lewis streets and Lafayette and 7th Avenue South are 50 feet and 38 feet below the ground and could conflict with the tunnel. He also says the proposed tunnel route and depth along Lafayette and Murfreesboro Road could conflict with a future sewer tunnel.

O’Connell’s letter asks how emergency vehicle access to the tunnel would be maintained during and after construction. It points out Las Vegas has a contract with the Boring Company for the city fire department to operate all-terrain vehicles inside a 2.2-mile tunnel there to transport rescue equipment to the scene of incidents.

The mayor’s office letter also points out differences between the Nashville Fire Department and State Fire Marshal’s Office in permitting such a project for safety, plan review and inspections. It adds that since Nashville Fire Department would provide emergency response, it would make sense for the agency to have authority over life safety permitting requirements. 

“It is important to review the applicable jurisdiction and code requirements to ensure proper compliance,” the mayor office’s letter states.

O’Connell’s letter asks about the location for emergency access points and whether tunnels will be built with wireless repeaters or radio frequency extenders for 911 calls. In addition, it raises the question of ventilation for smoke and gas in case a vehicle battery ignites in the tunnel.

The tunnel is expected to have Tesla vehicles owned by Elon Musk, who also owns the Boring Company, to ferry riders back and forth from downtown Nashville to the airport and possibly other points, such as the Music City Center and locations along Broadway.

The mayor’s office asks how the tunnel will mesh with a transportation center to be built at the airport in the next two to three years to increase the bus volume for WeGo Public Transit. He also questions how tunnel planning will coordinate with a Murfreesboro Road All Access Corridor included in a new transportation improvement plan.

O’Connell’s letter says the Las Vegas loop prohibits pedestrians in the “incredibly-narrow” tunnel with signs and a plastic bar and asks how Nashville can make sure pedestrians don’t enter the tunnel. The letter says the Vegas tunnel has only 3 inches between vehicle doors and the wall.

It also raises questions about unhoused people finding their way into the tunnel and how that would be handled.

Other questions focus on whether potential land leases and sales at the airport would have to go through the Metro Council and whether Boring would pay franchise fees to the state or the airport.

“Who will operate the tunnel? Does their financial pro forma show a surplus/profit? If not, who covers the deficit?” the mayor’s office letter asks. 

State officials last week approved a no-cost lease for a state-owned parking lot near the Capitol where tunneling is supposed to begin. General Services Commissioner Jeff Holmes said the state pulled a line of credit on Boring in case it can’t finish the project or operate it.

Other basic questions ask what an environmental review will entail and whether community input will be allowed in design and construction phases, in addition to which entity will review construction plans for the road and utilities and who will be responsible for moving utilities to make way for the tunnel.

The letter says the Las Vegas tunnel isn’t built to drain flooding and rainwater and that 8 inches of water shuts down operations. “How will rainfall/floodwater be mitigated in an area like Nashville, prone to flooding?”

Nashville Mayor’s questions for Boring Company

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.

The post Nashville mayor’s office queries Boring Company about tunnel plan appeared first on tennesseelookout.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This article presents a straightforward report on the interaction between local and state officials regarding Elon Musk’s Boring Company tunnel project in Nashville. It carefully outlines concerns from the mayor’s office about safety, emergency response, and planning coordination without taking a partisan stance. The language is neutral and focuses on factual questions and procedural oversight, showing no evident ideological framing or bias. Both the state government and local authorities are given balanced attention, reflecting a centrist approach focused on governance and public accountability rather than political ideology.

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