Tennessee
Baby formula shortage bills: How Tennessee representatives voted
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WATE) — Two congressional payments geared toward combatting the infant method scarcity made their means by the Home of Representatives in Washington, D.C. and Tennessee’s congressional representatives every voted on the payments this week. Each payments subsequent head to the Senate.
All 9 Tennessee Congressional representatives voted to approve the Entry to Child Formulation Act. Two of 9 voted in favor of the Toddler Formulation Supplemental Appropriations Act. Scroll down for particulars on each payments and a breakdown of every vote.
H.R. 7790 – Toddler Formulation Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2022
All seven of Tennessee’s Republican congressional representatives voted “nay” on the Toddler Formulation Supplemental Appropriations Act yesterday and people who signify the second and third congressional districts of the state, Rep. Tim Burchett and Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, provided their the explanation why.
H.R. 7790, which handed the Home of Representatives Wednesday in a 231 to 192 vote, is a supplemental appropriations invoice offering $28 million in emergency funding to provide the U.S. Meals and Drug Administration. The invoice was launched within the Home on Might 17.
“Simply two months in the past, the FDA obtained a $102 million improve in its funds, together with $11 million particularly for maternal and toddler well being and diet. Democrats’ show-vote final evening is the worst of DC, the place Congress throws cash at an issue as a substitute of resolving the problems that precipitated the disaster within the first place. Since February, Biden’s FDA has identified of the infant method disaster and has refused to resolve the regulatory and bureaucratic causes of this disaster. The FDA must create and implement a plan to get American-made method again on retailer cabinets. It doesn’t want thousands and thousands extra in pointless spending.”
– Congressman Chuck Fleischmann
“There’s 28 million {dollars} within the invoice, however, I imagine 23 million of it was for administrative prices and salaries,” Burchett stated in a video he tweeted on Thursday relating to the invoice. “So, mainly, what the Democratic management did was use a invoice, title it one thing that’s coping with individuals which are genuinely hurting and simply use it for example to extend pay on the FDA. That should disgust you, I don’t care if you happen to’re Democrat or Republican – utilizing an actual tragedy. It did nothing to place extra method on the cabinets, it simply did extra to rent bureaucrats and create extra of an influence construction right here in Washington. They misname these payments on objective and actually, the Left simply eats it up they usually throw it again at us. However in actuality, it’s simply not true. Now we have fact in sentencing legal guidelines in Tennessee, and we should have fact in laws.”
The Home Committee on Appropriations shared the next info in a press launch on the invoice:
“This invoice gives FDA with the sources to strengthen and improve the variety of FDA inspection workers, present sources for personnel engaged on method points, assist the company cease fraudulent child method from coming into {the marketplace}, and enhance information assortment on the toddler method market.”
— Home Committee on Appropriations
Tennessee’s different congressional representatives voted on H.R. 7790 by the next:
- Rep. Steve Cohen (D) – Yay
- Rep. Jim Cooper (D) – Yay
- Rep. Scott DesJarlais (R) – Nay
- Rep. Mark Inexperienced (R) – Nay
- Rep. Diana Harshbarger (R) – Nay
- Rep. David Kustoff (R) – Nay
- Rep. John Rose (R) – Nay
H.R. 7791 – To amend the Baby Diet Act of 1966 to determine waiver authority to deal with sure emergencies, disasters, and provide chain disruptions, and for different functions
All 9 of Tennessee’s congressional representatives – seven Republicans and two Democrats – voted “yay” Wednesday on the Entry to Child Formulation Act, which amended the Baby Diet Act of 1966, on a movement to droop the foundations and cross the invoice agreed to by the yays and nays. The movement was additionally launched within the Home on Might 17.
The Entry to Child Formulation Act handed the Home on Wednesday with 414 “yay” votes. The invoice goals to permit low-income households extra flexibility in what merchandise they will purchase utilizing their Ladies, Infants and Kids or WIC advantages.
A reality sheet from the Home Committee on Training and Labor states the Entry to Child Formulation Act “will grant the U.S. Division of Agriculture (USDA) the authority to waive sure necessities in order that weak households can proceed buying secure toddler method with their WIC advantages throughout extenuating circumstances, comparable to a public well being emergency or provide chain disruption. The invoice may also be certain that WIC individuals are higher protected throughout a product recall.”
Tennessee
Tennessee college basketball is final undefeated team this season under coach Rick Barnes
Tennessee basketball is the final undefeated team in Division I men’s college basketball this season.
The No. 1 Vols moved to 14-0 with a 76-52 win against Arkansas on Saturday, while Florida and Oklahoma lost in their SEC openers.
No. 5 Florida fell 106-100 to No. 11 Kentucky at Rupp Arena for its first loss after a 13-0 start. No. 10 Oklahoma tumbled 107-79 to No. 6 Alabama at Coleman Coliseum after the Sooners also started 13-0.
Drake (12-1), which entered 2025 without a loss, was beaten by UIC 74-70 on Jan. 1.
The Vols (14-0, 1-0 SEC) play at Florida (13-1, 0-1) on Tuesday (7 p.m. ET, ESPN2/ESPNU).
Tennessee’s start is tied for the best in program history. The 1922-23 Vols also opened 14-0 in a 17-game season.
UT has been ranked No. 1 for four straight weeks, which is tied for the longest streak in program history. It likely will hold the top spot Monday for a record fifth week. The Vols also were ranked No. 1 for four weeks in the 2018-19 season.
UT was ranked No. 12 in the preseason coaches poll, and moved up to No. 9 after starting the season 2-0 with wins against Gardner-Webb and at Louisville. It stayed No. 9 after going 4-0.
Tennessee rolled through the Baha Mar Championship with wins against Virginia and Baylor to reach 6-0 and rise to No. 6. It hopped to No. 3 after beating UT Martin before ascending to No. 1.
Mike Wilson covers University of Tennessee athletics. Email him at michael.wilson@knoxnews.com and follow him on X @ByMikeWilson or Bluesky @bymikewilson.bsky.social. If you enjoy Mike’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that will allow you access to all of it.
Tennessee
Inside Igor Milicic Jr’s 18-rebound game for No. 1 Tennessee basketball vs Arkansas
John Calipari’s first observation about this Tennessee basketball team compared to last year’s is the Vols are a year older.
The second was about “the transfer in.”
The Arkansas coach was talking about Igor Milicic Jr., which was readily apparent as Calipari detailed what that unnamed transfer did Saturday. He stretches the floor for Tennessee. He helps the Vols.
He had double-digit rebounds, the key facet of Calipari’s description as Milicic had the best rebounding performance by a player in coach Rick Barnes’ decade at Tennessee.
“Igor was spectacular,” Barnes said.
Milicic grabbed 18 rebounds with six offensive boards and 13 points as No. 1 Tennessee (14-0, 1-0 SEC) pounded Arkansas (11-3, 0-1) on Saturday at Food City Center. It was his career best and the best by a Vol under Barnes.
Igor Milicic explains his 18 rebounds for Tennessee vs Arkansas
Milicic provided a simplified explanation for his rebounding success. His teammates block out and clear the way for him.
“I just need to go jump and get it,” Milicic said. “It’s not that hard, honestly.”
Milicic made it look that easy against Arkansas. The 6-foot-10 forward had nine rebounds before halftime, notched his 10th rebound 33 seconds into the second half, and kept going.
The Charlotte transfer is the fourth Vol in the past 20 years to have at least 18 rebounds in a game.
Milicic preached consistency as a key to being a good rebounder. You have to keep crashing the boards even when you are tired. You have to accept contact.
Barnes credited Milicic for his anticipation skills, quickness and good hands. He added more credit to his effort. He got that overall against Arkansas as Tennessee outrebounded Arkansas 51-29 with 24 offensive rebounds.
Milicic was the tone-setter because he makes it a priority, guard Zakai Zeigler said.
“Even if he is not shooting the ball well, I can count on him to go get 10 rebounds or go get five O-boards,” Zeigler said. “It is just really impressive he does it day in and day out.”
Why rebounding is fun to Igor Milicic Jr.
Tennessee knew Milicic was a good rebounder coming from Charlotte, where he averaged 8.5 rebounds last season.
His offensive rebounding has impressed. The Vols play faster than Charlotte, which means more rebounding opportunities. They also put more of an emphasis on offensive rebounding than Charlotte, which Milicic has enjoyed.
“It just another opportunity to score,” Milicic said. “It is all of us. We get extra opportunities to score and it shows with the shooting that we have here. It is really fun — and of course sometimes you get a putback, right?”
Milicic is averaging 8.9 rebounds after his 18-rebound game. The only other Vol to average that many in a season in the past 20 years is Jarnell Stokes, who had 9.6 per game in 2012-13 and 10.6 in 2013-14.
The Croatian has three straight games with at least 10 rebounds. He has double-digit rebounds in four of the past five games and six of the past eight. He had nine in one of those games.
He rocketed past those impressive games with his best one yet Saturday. That prompted Calipari’s attention and an understatement when he stated Milicic is “pretty good.”
A more fitting description is the compliment that followed: Milicic is doing what Calipari wishes his players would do. He’s an all-out rebounder and he’s one of the best at it.
Mike Wilson covers University of Tennessee athletics. Email him at michael.wilson@knoxnews.com and follow him on X @ByMikeWilson or Bluesky @bymikewilson.bsky.social. If you enjoy Mike’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that will allow you access to all of it.
Tennessee
No. 1 Tennessee vs. No. 23 Arkansas: Game information, lineups, notes
No. 1 Tennessee vs. No. 23 Arkansas: Game information, lineups, notes
Tennessee emerged from its non-conference slate unbeaten and has topped the major polls for four-straight weeks.
Now, the No. 1 Vols (13-0) begin their biggest challenge: SEC play.
TALK ABOUT IT IN THE ROCKY TOP FORUM
Tennessee opens league action against No. 23 Arkansas (11-2) at Thompson-Boling Arena at Food City Center on Saturday (1 p.m. ET, ESPN) in the first of back-to-back games against ranked teams and one with a number of intriguing storylines.
The Razorbacks, winners of four-straight, are led by a familiar face in John Calipari, who is in his first season after leaving Kentucky where he went up against the Vols in several notable games in the previous 15 years. Saturday also marks the return of former Vols forward Jonas Aidoo, now on the visitors side.
Aidoo will be facing a few of his former teammates, but Tennessee’s impressive start has been helped by the addition of two transfers of their own in starting guard Chaz Lanier and forward Igor Milicic Jr.
Lanier leads the Vols in scoring with 19.6 points per game and has scored 20-plus in six of 13 games, while Milicic is the team’s top rebounder, pulling down 8.2 per game.
The staples of Tennessee’s roster that were key in winning the league one year ago will again be key in its success in an SEC that has 10 teams ranked in the polls and 13 projected to reach the NCAA Tournament.
That includes the league’s assists leader in Zakai Zeigler and one of its most stingy defenders in Jahmai Mashack. And the bench, tested after the loss of JP Estrella to a season-ending injury and the abrupt exit for Cam Carr, has at least two proven options in Jordan Gainey and Cade Phillips.
How all of their contributions translate to what has proven to be the best conference in college basketball after a month and a half will soon be determined.
Here is everything you need to know about Tennessee’s SEC opener.
GAME INFORMATION
Who: No. 23 Arkansas (11-2) at No. 1 Tennessee (13-0)
When: Saturday, Jan. 4 | 1 p.m. ET
Where: Food City Center | Knoxville
TV: ESPN (Karl Ravech, play-by-play; Jimmy Dykes, analyst)
Radio: Vol Network (Bob Kesling, play-by-play; Bert Bertelkamp, analyst)
Series: 49th meeting all-time (Tennessee leads, 26-22)
KenPom: Tennessee 76, Arkansas 64
PROJECTED LINEUPS
NUMBERS EDGE
POINTS PER GAME
Arkansas 82.5
Tennessee 80.1
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Arkansas 51.5%
Tennessee 48.9%
THREE-POINT PERCENTAGE
Arkansas 36.8%
Tennessee 35.5%
MORE FROM VOLREPORT: Three thoughts ahead of Tennessee basketball’s SEC opener vs. Arkansas
ASSISTS
Tennessee 16.8
Arkansas 16.8
REBOUNDS
Tennessee 38.9
Arkansas 36.2
BLOCKS
Arkansas 5.7
Tennessee 5.5
PREGAME NOTES
— Rick Barnes and John Calipari are meeting again as two of the winningest active head coaches in college basketball. Calipari is No. 1 among Division I coaches with 824 victories while Barnes is second with 819. Barnes is 13-12 vs. Calipari in head-to-head match ups.
— Tennessee will look to continue its success as the No. 1 team in the Associated Press Top 25 poll. The Vols are 13-2 all-time as the top-ranked team in the poll, and 12-1 under Rick Barnes, including a five-game win streak since jumping to No. 1 four weeks ago.
MORE FROM VOLREPORT: Rick Barnes assesses Tennessee basketball ahead of SEC play
— Tennessee and Arkansas’ non-conference schedule included three common opponents. The Vols went 3-0 vs. Baylor, Illinois and Miami, winning by an average margin of victory 10.0 points while the Razorbacks went 1-2 against those teams, beating Miami and losing to Baylor and Illinois at neutral sites.
— Arkansas guard Johnell Davis was listed as “probable” on the initial SEC availability report on Friday night. Davis hasn’t played since Dec. 14, sidelined by a wrist injury. Davis began his career at Florida Atlantic. He scored 15 points against Tennessee in the Sweet 16 in 2023. He is averaging 9.2 points with the Razorbacks.
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