Skip to content

SURVEY: Right-to-Work Effort Top Priority for Small Business in 2021

SURVEY: Right-to-Work Effort Top Priority for Small Business in 2021

January 25, 2021

SURVEY: Right-to-Work Effort Top Priority for Small Business in 2021

State members of the National Federation of Independent Business strongly support a right-to-work constitutional amendment, according to NFIB’s annual survey. 

Seventy-three percent of NFIB members support a resolution that would allow Tennesseans to vote to place our existing right-to-work law in the state constitution, while 14 percent oppose and 13 percent are undecided. Tennessee’s right-to-work law, which has been in place since 1947, ensures a worker’s employment is not conditional on paying union dues. The legislature must pass a resolution by a two-thirds vote in both chambers for the initiative to be placed on the 2022 ballot for voters to consider.

In other survey results:

  • Eighty percent believe any employee who tests positive for COVID-19 should not be presumptively compensated by workers’ compensation, while 12 percent support and eight percent are undecided.
  • Fifty-three percent support the state’s workers’ compensation agency being allowed to issue subpoenas when employers are suspected of intentionally avoided paying premiums, while 26 percent are opposed and 21 percent are undecided.
  • Forty-five percent support the state being able to issue stop-work orders if employers do not obtain workers’ compensation coverage after a five-day grace period, while 35 percent oppose and 20 percent are undecided.

Tennessee is a very attractive state to own and operate a small business, and we must continue to promote sensible policies that help them grow and create jobs,” said Jim Brown, NFIB state director. “Right-to-work laws are under attack at the national and state levels, so it’s very important that Tennessee enshrines this fundamental right into our state Constitution.”

Brown said NFIB will continue to work with state leaders this year to help small businesses survive the pandemic. The 112th Tennessee General Assembly started Jan. 12.

Get to know NFIB

NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.

Receive our newsletter and email notification
Knowledge is power. Let us help you stay informed with breaking legislative news, regulatory updates, business tips, and more.

Related Articles

Tennesseee State Capitol
April 15, 2025
NFIB: Tennessee’s High Ranking in Economic Outlook a Win for…
“Tennessee is open for business.”
Read More
April 15, 2025
NFIB Report Shows Impact of Potential Tax Hike on TN Small Busi…
The 20% Small Business Deduction will expire at the end of 2025 unless Cong…
Read More
Small Business Owner Calculates Taxes Finance Expensive Inventory Inflation Cost
April 15, 2025
How a Potential Small Business Tax Hike Will Impact Minnesota
NFIB Releases Report Detailing Benefits of 20% Small Business Tax Deduction…
Read More
Rhode Island capitol building
April 14, 2025
Rhode Island Capitol Update
NFIB State Director Christopher Carlozzi testified before the House Committ…
Read More

© 2001 - 2025 National Federation of Independent Business. All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Accessibility