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Tennessee program makes progress on EV chargers while frozen federal projects languish

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tennesseelookout.com – Cassandra Stephenson – 2025-06-03 05:00:00


Tennessee completed a 400-mile loop of electric vehicle (EV) chargers connecting Nashville, Knoxville, Cookeville, and Chattanooga in May, exceeding its goal with chargers every 34 miles. This was achieved through the state’s \$24 million Fast Charge TN program funded by Volkswagen settlement funds, TVA revenues, and grants. However, a federally funded program, the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program (NEVI), which would add chargers on major interstates, has been halted since February by the Trump administration’s pause on federal EV funding. Tennessee has not joined legal challenges against this freeze. Meanwhile, most state representatives support reducing federal EV tax credits, complicating Tennessee’s EV progress.

by Cassandra Stephenson, Tennessee Lookout
June 3, 2025

Tennessee closed a loop of electric vehicle chargers connecting Nashville, Knoxville, Cookeville and Chattanooga in May, marking a significant milestone in the state’s push to support EV adoption.

Meanwhile, a federally funded program intended to round out Tennessee’s EV charging network — particularly on the state’s major interstates and U.S. 64 — has been halted since February at the instruction of President Donald Trump’s administration.

Tennessee’s Fast Charge TN program aims to position an EV charger every 50 miles along Tennessee interstates and highways. In the roughly 400-mile loop closed in May with the installation of chargers in the small town of Athens, EV drivers can now access chargers every 34 miles.

The state’s $24 million program is funded separately through funds from the Volkswagen Diesel Settlement Environmental Mitigation Trust, electricity revenues from TVA and cost share from grant recipients. 

Some U.S. Republicans are pushing to keep energy tax credits. Tennessee lawmakers aren’t among them.

The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation’s Office of Energy Programs released a Notice of Intent for the Fast Charge program’s second round in February and expects to solicit projects for 13 gap areas throughout the state “in the coming months.”

Fast Charge TN’s federally backed counterpart remains at a standstill.

The National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program (NEVI) allocated up to $5 billion to support EV charger installation along “Alternative Fuel Corridors” across the nation. Tennessee was set to receive $88 million over a 5-year period to complete a plan created by the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT).

Upon taking office, Trump issued an executive order to pause the disbursement of federal grant money for programs supporting electric vehicles and clean energy initiatives under the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

The U.S. Federal Highway Administration officially suspended NEVI funding in February, despite having already approved states’ program plans.

TDOT awarded $21 million in NEVI funds to 10 applicants in January 2024 to install 30 new charging locations, but none of those contracts have been executed as the pause remains in effect, according to TDOT Community Relations Director Beth Emmons.

Sixteen states, Washington D.C. and multiple environmental and clean energy groups sued the U.S. Department of Transportation and Federal Highway Administration in a Washington federal court in May, arguing the federal agencies had no authority to freeze funds already appropriated by Congress. The Executive Branch, the suit contends, cannot “override or suspend this process based on changing policy priorities.”

EVs in Tennessee: Uncertainty abounds as Trump targets Biden-era electric vehicle funding

Tennessee is not one of the plaintiffs.

Gov. Bill Lee and Tennessee’s Congressional representatives have largely been mum on the tension between the state’s work to grow the EV industry and the Trump administration’s efforts to retract federal support.

Tennessee has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into incentives and grants to entice EV-related businesses to locate their manufacturing plants in the state. Lee and the state’s economic development department have celebrated the hundreds of jobs promised by EV enterprises since 2017, many in rural areas. 

All but one of Tennessee’s representatives in the U.S. House voted in favor of an amended version of Trump’s budget reconciliation bill — which would eliminate electric vehicle tax credits for consumers and create new annual taxes for EV and hybrid owners — in May. Lee also celebrated the bill’s passage in the House, and did not respond to a request for comment regarding the potential impact to Tennessee’s EV industry.

The bill must pass in the U.S. Senate to become law.

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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 Tennessee program makes progress on EV chargers while frozen federal projects languish 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: Center-Left

This content presents a generally factual and policy-focused overview of Tennessee’s electric vehicle infrastructure development, highlighting the state’s efforts alongside the halted federal funding under the Trump administration. It tends to frame the federal pause on EV funding negatively and notes the lack of support among Tennessee Republicans for energy tax credits, indicating a subtle critique of conservative policies while emphasizing environmental and clean energy initiatives. The reporting appears to lean slightly left by focusing on the importance of continued EV infrastructure investment and the challenges posed by the former administration, but it remains balanced without overt partisan language.

News from the South - Tennessee News Feed

With victims on his mind, this Tennessee man shows up to voice support for executions

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wpln.org – Tasha A.F. Lemley – 2025-08-07 04:00:00

SUMMARY: Rick Laude has attended about 10 executions at Tennessee’s Riverbend Maximum Security Institution since 2009, supporting the death penalty largely due to his personal trauma and sympathy for victims’ families. Nearly killed by his stepmother as a child, Laude relates deeply to victims of violent crime, especially children. Known for his distinctive cowboy hat with a rattlesnake, he has been vocal and sometimes provocative at executions, yet also advocates for civil dialogue between pro- and anti-death penalty groups. Despite supporting executions, Laude acknowledges flaws in the system and the occasional wrongful execution, urging fairness for victims’ families.

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News from the South - Tennessee News Feed

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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News from the South - Tennessee News Feed

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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