House bills

HB1 (Alexander) — Provides appropriations to support the state government for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2001.

HB3 (Dillree) — Provides for education funding for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2001.

HB4 (Hansen) — Repeals obsolete public works programs from the Great Depression.

HB5 (Bowman) — Mandates that law enforcement officers notify serious habitual offenders (SHO) and their legal guardians when a SHO is enrolled in a tracking program.

HB7 (Harper) — Repeals, reenacts and rewrites provisions relating to redevelopment agencies.

HB9 (Pace) — Repeals obsolete and lapsed bonding authorizations.

HB10 (Styler) — Repeals obsolete and lapsed sections of the State Institutions Title.

HB11 (Holladay) — Repeals obsolete and lapsed sections of code that deal with state loan commissioners.

HB12 (Arent) — Provides for the safe relinquishment of an unwanted newborn.

HB13 (Tyler) — Defines special damages in the Judicial Code and clarifies the circumstances under which they can be recovered.

HB14 (Hatch) — Requires certification for people who inspect, maintain or conduct percolation or soils tests for underground wastewater disposal systems.

HB15 (Dillree) — Amends laws concerning bicycles.

HB16 (Siddoway) — Allows government services to be provided electronically.

HB17 (Siddoway) — Facilitates the electronic delivery of government services by the state engineer.

HB18 (G. Cox) — Establishes the Interstate Compact for Adult Offender Supervision for Utah and provides for its implementation.

HB19 (Hansen) — Modifies the fees title.

HB20 (Pace) — Consolidates the state symbols code into one section.

HB21 (Barrus) — Modifies provisions concerning mailing reports and payments.

HB22 (Bowman) — Requires lifetime registration and relocation notification of certain sex offenders.

HB23 (Hendrickson) — Repeals the Bedding, Upholstered Furniture and Quilted Clothing Advisory Committee.

HB24 (Styler) — Repeals the Dairy Advisory Board.

HB25 (Shurtliff) — Creates a civil stalking injunction and provides for its usage.

HB26 (Allen) — Creates the Crime Victims Restitution Act.

HB27 (Siddoway) — Allows the electronic delivery of government services by governmental agencies.

HB28 (Bigelow) — Creates the Independent Entities Code with definitions.

HB29 (Holladay) — Addresses the municipal primary canvass process, tied votes, and the power of the Legislature to modify initiatives, among other things.

HB30 (Gowans) — Modifies motor vehicle, public safety and transportation provisions.

HB31 (Beck) — Requires the executive branch and judicial branch to report to the Child Welfare Oversight panel regarding their compliance with time limits for the permanency process for foster children.

HB32 (Allen) — Excludes cities, towns and counties as third party providers from the requirements of unauthorized charges to a public utility account.

HB33 (Throckmorton) — Allows for exceptions to the statutory time limits for permanently placing foster children.

HB35 (Goodfellow) — Expands the Utah Technology Infrastructure Innovation Program to allow grants for cross-agency technology innovation projects.

HB36 (Bigelow) — Modifies the Utah State Retirement Act.

HB37 (Ure) — Reauthorizes all state agency administrative rules, with a few exceptions.

HB38 (Garn) — Increases the value of the state guarantee for voted and board leeways for the state system of public education from .0075 times the value of the prior year's weighted pupil unit to .008044.

HB40 (Stephens) — Funds textbooks and supplies with $23.9 million.

HB41 (Bryson) — Sets state standard for the fire code, and requires the state fire marshal to add prevention education to his duties.

HB42 (Bigelow) — Funds classroom supplies for teachers with $5 million.

HB44 (Lockhart) — Requires the insurance commissioner to prepare an annual evaluation of the state's health insurance industry.

HB49 (Bowman) — Changes motor vehicle frame height requirements.

HB51 (Siddoway) — Corrects and updates references to federal legislation, amends the duties of the Office of Child Care and repeals the Workforce Reentry Program.

HB52 (Siddoway) — Amends provisions relating to the filing of reports, access to records and determination of benefit eligibility.

HB54 (Styler) — Allows the Wildlife Board to set its own licensing fees (subject to legislative approval).

HB56 (Arent) — Grants authority to the director of the Division of Securities to designate investigators as special function officers.

HB58 (Morgan) — Allows parents and students to opt out of the school uniform policies.

HB59 (Garn) — Exempts the Workers' Compensation Fund from the Open and Public Meetings Act.

HB60 (Goodfellow) — Eliminates the salary cap for Justice County judges and changes who appoints the judges in council-manager municipalities.

HB61 (G. Cox) — Changes the medical examiner's duties when recovering and examining bodies.

HB62 (Adair) — Increases the funding set aside for building improvements from .9 percent to 1.1 percent.

HB63 (Goodfellow) — Gives off-road vehicles new registration stickers for each annual registration.

HB64 (Siddoway) — Gives tuition waivers to wards of the state for in-state colleges, universities and technical colleges and programs.

HB65 (Seitz) — Amends the definition of unprofessional conduct.

HB68 (Gowans) — Allows annual leave to be converted to a deferred compensation plan.

HB69 (Beck) — Appropriates $70,000 for sexual violence prevention programs

HB71 (Urquhart) — Appropriates $100,000 to counties and cities for land use planning.

HB72 (Bryson) — Increases the penalties for uniform securities cases when they involve money from home equity or retirement accounts.

HB73 (Buffmire) — Amends the Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing Act to place mental health professionals who are undergoing clinical training under the supervision of DOPL.

HB74 (G. Cox) — Provides that wrongful appropriation of or unauthorized control of a motor vehicle is a lesser included offense of theft.

HB75 (Buffmire) — Modifies the Navajo Revitalization Fund Act and the Revenue and Taxation Code.

HB76 (Bush) — Repeals the sunset provision of the Multistate Highway Transportation Agreement.

HB77 (Tyler) — Appropriates $225,000 from the General Fund for fiscal year 2001-02 only, to the Department of Community and Economic Development for the Utah Science Center Authority for the development of a state science center, partially conditioned on matching funds.

HB78 (Johnson) — Exempts schools from collecting sales tax for certain school-sponsored events.

HB79 (McCartney) — Restates the federal standard for the definition of a person with a disability.

HB81 (Saunders) — Clarifies who is required to be trained and the responsibilities of persons related to the training to Alcoholic Beverage Code and the Human Services Code.

HB83 (Harper) — Requires the Division of Child and Family Services to maintain a separate database system for unsubstantiated reports of child abuse and reports of child abuse that are without merit.

HB84 (Adair) — Gives $360,000 to the Division of Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired.

HB85 (Hendrickson) — Requires school buses to comply with certain safety standards.

HB86 (Bennion) — Creates a task force to comprehensively study Utah's tax code.

HB87 (Dillree) — Gives $250,000 to the Utah Botanical Center.

HB88 (Beshear) — Authorizes government employees to ensure that other government entities classify personal information about them as "private."

HB89 (Pace) — Appropriates $100,000 for rural pharmacy programs.

HB90 (Holdaway) — Modifies certain restrictions on municipal and county ordinances relating to residential facilities for persons with a disability.

HB91 (Becker) — Amends the geographical jurisdiction of the State Capitol Preservation Board.

HB92 (Biskupski) — Allows for special license plates for contributors to spay and neuter programs.

HB98 (Johnson) — Provides an income tax credit to certain businesses in enterprise zones.

HB99 (Morgan) — Changes the Reading Skills Development Center into a clinic with reading specialists.

HB104 (Allen) — Expands the Mental Health Therapist Grant and Scholarship Program to include people in training.

HB105 (Allen) — Allows for the licensing of nail technicians and estheticians (skin care workers).

HB106 (Garn) — Provides for the appointment of alternate members to the Utah Motor Vehicle Franchise Advisory Board and changes the term of board members.

HB107 (Allen) — Increases the money in the Tourism Marketing Performance Fund.

HB108 (Buttars) — Changes the requirements for posting of boundaries of cooperative wildlife management units.

HB109 (Swallow) — Modifies the insurance code by recodifying the Utah Life and Disability Insurance Guaranty Association Act.

HB110 (Buffmire) — Allows certain entities to act as an emergency food agency and claim sales tax refunds.

HB111 (Parker) — Gives $40,000 to help prevent contamination of water by animal waste.

HB112 (Lockhart) — Creates a procedure for courts to use to determine whether a suit is a retaliatory lawsuit for participation in the government process.

HB113 (Bigelow) — Makes it a crime to surreptitiously give someone a deleterious or alcoholic substance.

HB114 (Adair) — Modifies the Mortgage Lending and Servicing Act and the Utah Residential Mortgage Practices Act.

HB115 (Hendrickson) — Increases fees for waste tire recycling.

HB116 (G. Cox) — Adds requirements to govern judges who are up for a retention election.

HB117 (Hatch) — Requires a court-ordered warrant to take a child into protective custody except in special circumstances.

HB118 (Young) — Allows counties to distribute money from the Mineral Lease Account to school districts.

HB122 (Ure) — Restricts the use of administrative traffic checkpoints.

HB124 (Philpot) — Requires notice of an appeal of the ballot title or impartial analysis to opponents of voter measures.

HB125 (Alexander) — Repeals the eight-hour workday requirements for smelters, mines and related industries.

HB126 (Bradshaw) — Exempts from sales tax meals sold as part of a meal plan to higher education students.

HB128 (Ferry) — Gives $2,741,000 for the purchase of the Box Elder county Education Center Complex.

HB130 (Beck) — Exempts certain domestic workers from the Workers' Compensation provisions.

HB131 (Winn) — Mandates that libraries restrict access to pornography for minors.

HB132 (Becker) — Encourages state agencies to develop and implement alternative dispute resolution procedures.

HB133 (Philpot) — Establishes Bill of Rights and Constitution Days.

HB134 (Alexander) — Defines a new state accounting fund type within governmental funds, and clarifies the definitions of enterprise and trust funds.

HB135 (Bryson) — Defines terms and clarifies Utah law on child pornography.

HB136 (Holladay) — Clarifies revenue and taxation evasion penalties and offenses.

HB139 (Harper) — Modifies the Utah Municipal Code relating to cities and towns.

HB143 (Siddoway) — Allows people with disabilities to vote by secret ballot.

HB144 (Buttars) — Modifies the Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands and enacts the Utah Forest Practices Act.

HB145 (Morgan) — Sets a goal of having 90 percent or more of all third graders reading on or above grade level by the end of the third grade by 2006; requires reporting and planning to achieve reading goals.

HB148 (Tyler) — Authorizes the courts to order a family unity conference under the authority of the Division of Child and Family Services in an abuse or neglect action.

HB149 (Curtis) — Limits the authority of municipalities to own and operate cable television and public telecommunications facilities.

HB151 (Bennion) — Modifies the Olene Walker Housing Trust Fund board and the distribution of money from the fund.

HB155 (Dillree) — Establishes an annexation procedure for counties of the second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth classes that is different from counties of the first class.

HB157 (S. Clark) — Makes it a crime if "Void in Utah" is not printed on an written or printed advertisement or solicitation for participation in a lottery.

HB158 (Curtis) — Modifies the Revenue and Tax Code to provide that interest on certain debts in other states is subject to individual state income taxation.

HB162 (Ure) — Modifies the Motor Fuel Marketing Act.

HB165 (McCartney) — Appropriates $200,000 to the Home Energy Assistance Target Program to help with utility market volatility.

HB168 (Fife) — Establishes notification and treatment requirements of students who are injured or become ill at school.

HB169 (Anderson) — Allows special district boards to change the name of the special district.

HB170 (Throckmorton) — Authorizes the DCFS to report individuals to the appropriate licensing authority in certain cases of medicating a minor.

HB172 (D. Cox) — Appropriates $40,000 for testing of Johne's disease in domestic livestock.

HB173 (Bowman) — Changes the requirement that members of a special district board be qualified electors of the special service district.

HB174 (Allen) — Requires that music, visual art, dance or theater instruction takes place in public schools.

HB179 (Bennion) — Prohibits political action committees from deducting voluntary union dues from government employees' paychecks.

HB181 (Bourdeaux) — Creates the offense and penalty for soliciting a minor over the Internet.

HB184 (Ure) — Repeals HB320.

HB185 (Pace) — Repeals the mammography quality assurance committee.

HB189 (Johnson) — Prohibits the federal government from acquiring land in the state from any state agency without the approval of the Legislature.

HB190 (Lockhart) — Allows vintage car owners to use license plates from their vehicles' original years.

HB191 (Styler) — Appropriates $129,200 from the Liquor Control Fund for fiscal year 2001-02 to provide a one-time adjustment in the amounts paid certain package agencies.

HB194 (Johnson) — Renames a section of a state highway route in Monroe.

HB195 (Garn) — Clarifies legislative oversight of service fees assessed by the Department of Health.

HB196 (Tyler) — Requires court-ordered supervised probation for certain DUI offenders.

HB197 (Bryson) — Increases the number of tuition waivers offered to higher education students at Dixie State College, Utah Valley State College and Salt Lake Community College.

HB200 (Tyler) — Excludes DUI offenders whose offense involves drugs other than alcohol from ignition interlock restrictions and requires providers to cover cost of the ignition interlock for indigent offenders.

HB201 (Tyler) — Expands time from six to 10 years in counting previous DUI convictions.

HB202 (Dillree) — Provides for a "5-1-1" traveler information services by the Department of Transportation.

HB204 (Harper) — Appropriates $1 million to the Olene Walker Housing Trust Fund.

HB205 (Adair) — Reinstates the Employers' Reinsurance Fund Special Assessment until Jan. 1, 2005.

HB206 (Hatch) — Expands the maximum amount of unappropriated surplus a county may retain in its General Fund.

HB207 (Adair) — Address the Labor Commission's responsibility to regulate mining activities.

HB208 (Lockhart) — Deletes references to the Health Policy Commission in the Health Code and Insurance Code.

HB209 (Parker) — Clarifies the penalties for some driver license violations.

HB211 (Harper) — Grants tuition waivers to teachers for certain courses taken at higher education institutions.

HB212 (Harper) — Appropriates $1 million to the Office of Museum Services.

HB213 (Johnson) — Allows youth in custody of the Division of Youth Corrections to fish without a license.

HB214 (Hogue) — Amends considerations to be used in prioritizing the Corridor Preservation Revolving Loan Fund monies.

HB215 (Hendrickson) — Removes provisions in the Criminal Code so that the offense is specified as a third-degree felony in all forgery circumstances.

HB216 (Dillree) — Appropriates $500,000 to an advanced readers at risk program in public schools.

HB218 (Harper) — Amends rule making provisions for approach roads and driveways on state highways.

HB220 (Bryson) — Includes as a burglary offense the entering of a building with intent to commit a sexual offense.

HB221 (Hogue) — Allows for an attorney's lien on work performed, clarifies circumstances, applications and enforcement of an attorney's lien.

HB224 (Throckmorton) — Amends provisions related to court orders placing a minor into the custody of the Division of Child and Family Services on grounds other than abuse or neglect.

HB226 (Styler) — Requires hunters born after 1965 to take a hunter education course before getting a permit.

HB227 (Styler) — Exempts some types of hunting from requirements of wearing hunter orange gear.

HB228 (Pace) — Amends the penalty provisions for unlawful conduct in the Utah Construction Trades Licensing Act.

HB230 (Bowman) — Provides a specific definition of "daylight" regarding search warrants.

HB231 (D. Clark) — Requires political parties to fill vacancies for presidential elector, and eliminates a requirement to invite presidential electors to appear at the Utah State Capitol the day before they cast their votes.

HB232 (Throckmorton) — Establishes criteria for certification as a child welfare social service worker and certified child welfare social worker.

HB233 (Adair) — Modifies the Utah Property and Casualty Guaranty Association Act.

HB234 (Goodfellow) — Clarifies that law enforcement officers do not have to prosecute cases against violators.

HB235 (Ray) — Requires the State Board of Education to publish on the Internet each Utah school district's annual financial report and teachers' salaries report.

HB237 (Bowman) — Requires that sex offenders living in the state but convicted in another state, and offenders in a state mental hospital register in Utah's sex offender database.

HB238 (Bourdeaux) — Increases the sentences of people who commit crimes while using body armor and using a dangerous weapon.

HB239 (Anderson) — Clarifies when child support is to be paid if the state takes custody of a minor.

HB240 (Way) — Modifies the Criminal Code regarding kidnapping offenses.

HB241 (Daniels) — Clarifies that the Utah Supreme Court and Court of Appeals have jurisdiction to hear appeals involving a charge of a first-degree felony or capital felony.

HB242 (Curtis) — Repeals obsolete language in the Sales and Use Tax Act, and modifies the act.

HB243 (D. Cox) — Appropriates $9,000 for renovation and reconstruction at Camp Floyd-Stage Coach Inn State Park.

HB244 (Hatch) — Changes the focus of the Electric Deregulation and Customer Choice task force to include studying energy conservation efforts for Utah.

HB245 (Stephens) — Allows reverse auctions to award contracts.

HB246 (Pace) — Appropriates $75,000 to the Substitute Teaching Institute.

HB247 (Dayton) — Provides a cross reference to the wrongful lien statute for guidance in correcting a wrongful lien or judgment lien.

HB250 (Daniels) — Amends Criminal Code for obstruction of justice.

HB251 (Throckmorton) — Appropriates $50,000 to the National Guard for tuition scholarships.

HB254 (Bennion) — Amends the requirements for an insurance company to inform custodial parents of insurance available through a noncustodial parent's employer.

HB257 (Throckmorton) — Requires DCFS to follow the same investigative requirements for pre-removal and post-removal investigations of child abuse or neglect.

HB258 (Daniels) — Amends sentencing provisions in the Criminal Code for imprisonment and life imprisonment without parole, and clarifies that capital offenses are capital felonies.

HB259 (Arent) — Defines a charitable sales promotion and requires the filing of a notice before a promotion is conducted.

HB261 (Curtis) — Exempts a scrap recycler of natural gas, electricity, heat, coal, fuel oil or other fuels from sales and use taxes.

HB263 (Garn) — Permits de novo branching in Utah under limited circumstances under the Financial Institutions Code.

HB265 (Snow) — Adjust fees paid by certain electrical cooperatives and amends definitions.

HB267 (Throckmorton) — Establishes a public education task force to study state mandates to education and to audit the State Office of Education.

HB269 (Throckmorton) — Gives the juvenile court exclusive original jurisdiction in adoption proceedings.

HB271 (Adair) — Modifies the Real Estate Appraiser Licensing and Certification Act and the Property Tax Act.

HB273 (Garn) — Sets aside $20 million in a savings account for public education in anticipation of enrollment growth.

HB281 (Siddoway) — Allows tax deductible donations to be made to applied technology education centers.

HB287 (Harper) — Modifies the allocation of a portion of the additional public transit tax; creates the Public Transportation System Tax Highway Fund, a special revenue fund, and restricts its use.

HB289 (Bush) — Allows clean fuel special license plates to travel in lanes designated for high occupancy.

HB295 (Urquhart) — Allows proxy voting for corporations to be conducted by electronic transmission.

HB297 (Hatch) — Increases the size of a telephone company that is allowed to follow an abbreviated rate increase process.

HB305 (Hatch) — Modifies provisions of the Utah Code pertaining to judgment liens.

HB306 (Bennion) — Appropriates $9,500 for the University of Utah College of Nursing to provide for the training and certification of 20 sexual assault nurse examiners.

HB307 (Hatch) — Designates the Department of Transportation as the state spaceport authority and grants the department regulatory authority over the spaceports.

HB310 (Bradshaw) — Modifies provisions governing Utah Boards and Commissions.

HB313 (Tyler) — Addresses property tax exemptions, abatements, and other tax relief.

HB314 (Throckmorton) — Establishes criteria for declaring certain elections ballots invalid.

HB315 (Ure) — Allows the executive director of the Department of Transportation to designate highways as statewide public safety interest highways.

HB316 (Ure) — Allows for an exemption from the Procurement Code when a purchases is used in the Olympics.

HB318 (S. Clark) — Prescribes procedures for the suspension of privileges conferred by a license, permit or certificate of registration issued by the Division of Wildlife Resources.

HB322 (Adair) — Creates a specific offense of commercial terrorism.

HB323 (Bowman) — Addresses double taxation when both the county and city impose a hospital tax.

HB325 (Bennion) — Restricts number of residential structures that can be built on private property for noncommercial, nonpublic use.

HB331 (Holdaway) — Designates that the State Emergency Medical Services Committee shall report annually to the Law Enforcement Criminal Justice Interim Committee.

HB335 (Garn) — Provides for the recording of a notice of release of lien and substitution of alternate security.

HB337 (Curtis) — Requires the Legislature pass a non-binding resolution regarding a proposed contract between the Department of Corrections and a county government to house inmates in county facilities not currently under construction or in existence.

HB338 (Hatch) — Appropriates $300,000 to Utah's Blue Ribbon Fisheries.

HB340 (Hogue) — Provides establishment of a plan for education compensation for law enforcement officers and correctional officers.

HB349 (Jones) — Allows for the appointment of a conservator for a person who is disabled even though there may be a valid power of attorney in force.

HB353 (Ray) — Amends DUI penalty provisions to allow suspension of driver's license of up to two years.

HB354 (Winn) — Addresses property tax exemptions, abatements, and other tax relief.

HB356 (Snow) — Eliminates double inspections of hospital X-ray equipment.

HB360 (Daniels) — Allows the attorney general to establish satellite offices for Children's Justice Centers.

HB365 (Hatch) — Establishes an educational enrichment program for hearing and visually impaired students.

HB369 (Alexander) — Allows counties to develop and implement systems to let people vote electronically.

HB370 (Alexander) — Imposes regulations, fees and taxes that apply to the reprocessing, treatment, or disposal of certain types of radioactive waste.

HB373 (Way) — Modifies the duties of the pornography ombudsman, requiring her to create a program to combat Internet pornography.

HB376 (Donnelson) — Allows out-of-state concealed weapons permit holders to carry their weapons up to 60 consecutive days within Utah, after which they must obtain a Utah permit.

HB378 (Fife) — Appropriates $50,000 to the Division of Parks and Recreation to develop and coordinate a program for a statewide trail system.

HB379 (Buffmire) — Modifies the Condominium Ownership Act.

HB384 (Ure) — Modifies the duties of the medical examiner during the 2002 Winter Games.

HB386 (Bigelow) — Authorizes the Utah Housing Finance Agency as a public corporation.

HB388 (Johnson) — Increases the maximum level of the Wildland Fire Suppression Fund and decreases the cost to counties to initiate participation in the fund.

House concurrent resolutions:

HCR1 (Styler) — Designates Jan. 27, 2002, as a Day of Remembrance for people affected by the Cold War nuclear testing.

HCR3 (Snow) — Supports Flaming Gorge and Glen Canyon Dam, and urges the government to protect them.

HCR4 (Bennion) — Designates April 11, 2001, as International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers Day.

HCR5 (Shurtliff) — Urges the U.S. Department of Health to study the effects of fallout from the Nevada Test Site.

HCR8 (Becker) — Urges state and local government to participate in the Nature-Safe Utah Initiative to help Utah communities to become disaster resistant.

HCR10 (Litvack) — Urges the U.S. Congress to make the preservation of federally subsidized, project-based low income housing a top priority.

HCR11 (Peterson) — Urges U.S. Congress to appropriate the necessary funds to fight cricket and grasshopper infestations in Utah.

House joint resolutions:

HJR1 (Bennion) — Allows legislators to contract with the state using any method authorized by the Utah Procurement Code.

HJR2 (Ferrin) — Urges U.S. Congress to consider alternatives to the Social Security System.

HJR3 (Garn) — Approves the appointment of Michael E. Christensen as the director of the Office of Legislative Research and General Counsel.

HJR5 (Harper) — Establishes Mason's Manual as the House's reference for parliamentary procedure.

HJR6 (Saunders) — Urges U.S. Congress to require national uniform election poll closings.

HJR7 (Dillree) — Fixes the compensation for legislative in-session employees for 2001.

HJR10 (Philpot) — Recognizes Bill of Rights Day on Dec. 15, 2001.

HJR11 (Thompson) — Urges the Judicial Council to provide Utah's judges with training in parental rights.

HJR13 (Murray) — Recognizes Ogden City's sesquicentennial.

HJR14 (Hatch) — Supports Beaver, Cache, Emery and Millard counties' expansion of their correctional facility capacity by contracting with the Utah Department of Corrections.

HJR15 (Fife) — Rescinds the call for a Constitutional Convention.

HJR16 (Garn) — Directs the Legislative Management Committee to assign items of study to appropriate interim committees.

HJR17 (Harper) — Revises joint rules to set out the order and sources governing legislative procedure.

HJR18 (D. Clark) — Urges U.S. Congress to support and work to pass the tax relief plan introduced by President George W. Bush.

House resolutions:

HR1 (Hatch) — Modifies House rules relating to long titles.

HR2 (Harper) — Prohibits bills placed on the third reading calendar from being read and considered for one day, except during the last three days of the session.

HR3 (Dayton) — Suggests a House member make an oral declaration of any conflicts of interest before speaking on the floor of the House.

HR5 (Pace) — Urges places of public accommodation to more fully comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act to ensure that persons who are hard or hearing receive the assistance required by the act.

HR7 (Harper) — Revises House rules to outline the process of re-referring bills to committee.

HR8 (Young) — Urges the U.S. Congress to appropriate $48 million in construction funds as part of the Indian Health Services budget.

Senate bills:

SB1 (Blackham) — Provides appropriations for operating state government in the current fiscal year ending June 30, 2001.

SB2 (Evans) — Authorizes issuance of state of Utah general obligation bonds and bond anticipation notes by the State Bonding Commission for capital facilities, buildings, and related facilities.

SB3 (Blackham) — Appropriates money for fiscal impact bills passed in the 2001 session.

SB4 (Julander) — Prohibits intimacy with a person in custody.

SB5 (Spencer) — Repeals an obsolete and lapsed appropriation in the Disaster Relief section.

SB6 (Peterson) — Repeals statutes from the 1933 Utah recodification.

SB7 (Steele) — Expands the scope of materials reviewed by the State Instructional Materials Commission (formerly the State Textbook Commission).

SB8 (Dmitrich) — Delays the repeal on the Utah steam coal tax credit until after 2007.

SB9 (Evans) — Repeals obsolete and lapsed construction authorizations.

SB10 (Peterson) — Reauthorizes some state entities that would have sunset before the 2002 legislative session.

SB11 (Steele) — Allows for electronic reporting and filing in the Motor Vehicle Code and Public Safety Code.

SB12 (Knudson) — Amends the membership and certain duties of the Traffic Management Committee.

SB13 (Spencer) — Modifies the Judicial Code with technical changes.

SB14 (Spencer) — Repeals some obsolete and duplicative requirements for public construction work.

SB15 (Evans) — Repeals certain obsolete language relating to the commissioners of deeds.

SB16 (Steele) — Provides for a comprehensive policy on teacher quality.

SB17 (Knudson) — Amends highway project bid limits.

SB18 (Spencer) — Repeals the statutory definition of law.

SB19 (Davis) — Provides an application process for distribution of dairy products and allows ice cream cabinets and milk coolers to be loaned or sold to a retailer.

SB20 (Hellewell) — Amends the reporting requirements for the Science Center Authority.

SB21 (Steele) — Clarifies certain terms in the Information Technology Act.

SB22 (Dmitrich) — Allows a reduction of motor and special fuel taxes if the motor or special fuel is taxed by the Navajo Nation.

SB23 (Gladwell) — Rewrites and standardizes annexation and dissolution provisions for specified special districts and for local districts.

SB24 (Valentine) — Amends an addition to federal taxable income in the Individual Income Tax Act for certain lump sum distributions and requires an addition to federal taxable income for certain amounts of a child's income.

SB25 (Suazo) — Creates the Utah Professional Athletic Commission to regulate boxing and unarmed combat.

SB26 (Knudson) — Amends certain state highway routes throughout the Wasatch Front.

SB28 (Stephenson) — Addresses issues related to the Utah Performance Assessment System for Students (U-PASS).

SB29 (R. Allen) — Changes the sunset date for the Families, Agencies and Communities Together for Children and Youth at Risk Act from July 1, 2001, to July 1, 2006.

SB30 (Steele) — Requires employers who file an IRS electronic Form W-2 to file electronically with the State Tax Commission.

SB31 (Knudson) — Alleviates the Department of Health from its responsibility to establish area health education centers.

SB32 (Blackham) — Modifies committee membership and duties relating to in-depth budget reviews.

SB34 (Hillyard) — Exempts certain level of income from state income tax.

SB35 (Waddoups) — Increases the state appropriation for the capital outlay foundation program from $28,358,000 to $38,358,000.

SB36 (Valentine) — Adjusts income tax brackets to provide for an $18 million tax cut.

SB38 (Hellewell) — Amends a highway authority's ability to impose restrictions on highway use.

SB39 (Buttars) — Authorizes counties and cities to use resources for private, nonprofit entities.

SB40 (Eastman) — Imposes penalties for using certain untaxed diesel fuel.

SB41 (Hellewell) — Further defines the Utah Coordinate Systems of 1927 and 1983.

SB44 (Spencer) — Modifies the fee paid by certain financial institutions under the Financial Institutions Code.

SB46 (Hickman) — Exempts peace officers operating a voice stress analyzer within the scope of their employment from the Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing Act.

SB47 (Peterson) — Modifies ballot requirements for regular general elections and municipal general elections.

SB48 (Hale) — Limits passengers whom certain newly licensed drivers can have in their cars.

SB49 (Valentine) — Provides for a partial tax refund or credit for air carriers who buy aviation fuel at the Salt Lake City International Airport.

SB50 (Walker) — Changes how life insurance benefits are exempted from the judicial process.

SB52 (Steele) — Adds railroad-highway violations as grounds for disqualifying a commercial driver license and amends certain at-grade railroad-highway crossing provisions.

SB53 (Waddoups) — Modifies provisions relating to trust deeds.

SB56 (Hale) — Expands the felony driving while intoxicated violations.

SB57 (Stephenson) — Encourages schools to offer instruction in Mandarin Chinese.

SB58 (Knudson) — Repeals the Nursing Facility Assessment Act and appropriates $1.3 million to the nursing facilities account at the University of Utah Health Science Center.

SB59 (Julander) — Defines the practice of genetic counseling and requires a license to practice genetic counseling within Utah.

SB60 (Hillyard) — Enacts the Uniform Athlete Agents Act to regulate athlete agents.

SB61 (Hillyard) — Establishes an Engineering and Computer Science Initiative within the state system of higher education and the Public Education Job Enhancement Program.

SB64 (Spencer) — Modifies the Termination of Parental Rights Act and the Adoption Act.

SB65 (Steele) — Authorizes bonding to construct the Soldier Hollow Golf Course.

SB66 (Blackham) — Modifies the Agriculture Code by authorizing the Soil Conservation Commission to make grants to owners or operators of animal feeding operations to improve manure management or control runoff.

SB68 (Mayne) — Allows local governments to require supervision and security for residential substance abuse facilities located within a certain distance of a school.

SB69 (Blackham) — Establishes a health care provider claims practice in the Insurance Code.

SB70 (Stephenson) — Requires school district representatives on the taxing agency committee to report their votes in support of tax increment financing.

SB71 (Walker) — Gives a one-time $1,000 tax credit for families adopting special needs children.

SB74 (Hillyard) — Authorizes certain delegates to enter into multistate discussions regarding a Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement.

SB75 (Wright) — Provides local schools to use instructional materials for health, hygiene, physiology, and prevention of communicable diseases curricula consistent with state law and board rules emphasizing abstinence before marriage and fidelity after marriage.

SB76 (Bramble) — Extends the time period for appealing a real property value assessment by the county.

SB80 (Gladwell) — Modifies provisions relating to counties.

SB81 (Spencer) — Prohibits the placement of high-level nuclear waste or greater than class C radioactive waste within the exterior borders of the stateand also provides for substantial fees and taxes on the high-level nuclear waste.

SB83 (Blackham) — Permits a small employer purchasing alliance to limit reimbursement to providers on the panel of contracting insurers under specific circumstances.

SB84 (Evans) — Modifies the Utah Sports Authority Act and the State Olympic Coordination Act.

SB85 (Evans) — Allows an elected sheriff to retire within the Public Safety Retirement System and continue in the office with a retirement exclusion.

SB86 (Hillyard) — Modifies the Election Code.

SB87 (Waddoups) — Exempts collectors of antique, curio or relic firearms from licensing requirements.

SB88 (Wright) — Allows rental car agencies to report a car stolen after 72 hours.

SB89 (Knudson) — Extends the state park access highway for Hyrum State Park.

SB90 (Davis) — Allows counties to use public funds to decorate veterans' graves and memorials.

SB95 (Mayne) — Permits the state insurance commission to appoint a designee to serve on the Workers' Compensation Advisory Council.

SB96 (Mayne) — Amends the provisions related to people applying for medical waiver in relation to an intrastate commercial driving privilege.

SB97 (Hillyard) — Describes the types of special needs adoption services available to adoptive parents and the eligibility for those services.

SB98 (R. Allen) — Expands exceptions to the definition of subdivision for certain unmanned telecommunications and similar facilities.

SB99 (Waddoups) — Makes technical corrections to Utah Code and repeals the Utah Sesquicentennial Coordinating Council.

SB100 (Poulton) — Addresses issues relating to the insurance business in general, health insurance, life insurance and property insurance.

SB101 (D. Allen) — Prohibits people from aiming laser pointers at anyone driving or at a law enforcement officer.

SB102 (Gladwell) — Allows schools to hold back middle school students who do not complete the exit requirements before advancing to high school.

SB104 (Hale) — Reduces the amount of clinical experience required to qualify as a marriage and family therapist supervisor.

SB105 (Knudson) — Changes the requirements for settlement agreements involving the Utah Department of Transportation.

SB106 (Hillyard) — Establishes a method for creating and perfecting security interests for governmental obligations.

SB108 (Mayne) — Requires applicants for a new vehicle registration to show a valid driver license.

SB109 (Hale) — Establishes notification requirements for emergency personnel and funeral homes in the deaths of organ donors, and provides for other provisions related to organ donation and recovery.

SB110 (Hillyard) — Allows for the expanded authority of magistrates during the 2002 Winter Games.

SB111 (Buttars) — Authorizes DCFS to contract with independent child protective services investigators.

SB112 (Knudson) — Appropriates $75,000 to the State Board of Education to purchase assistive technology devices and services.

SB113 (Evans) — Modifies the Oil and Gas Severance Tax in relation to lands recently conveyed to the Ute Tribe by the federal government.

SB114 (Dmitrich) — Provides an exemption from state sales and use tax on public accommodations and services taxed by the Navajo Nation.

SB115 (Wright) — Requires any student who has been expelled from school for a firearm, explosive, or flammable material violation to meet with the school district superintendent to modify expulsion.

SB117 (Hillyard) — Modifies provisions relating to guardians ad litem.

SB118 (Hillyard) — Adopts the Emergency Management Assistance Compact to join the coalition providing for mutual aid and resources to member states.

SB119 (Hillyard) — Places all appeals from informal administrative hearings for substantiation of abuse within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.

SB120 (Evans) — Appropriates $195,000 for distance doctorate education programs.

SB121 (Knudson) — Creates the Access to Health Care and Coverage task force.

SB122 (Waddoups) — Limits underinsured motorist insurance coverage subrogation and clarifies the conditions for making an uninsured motorist claim.

SB123 (Dmitrich) — Appropriates $160,000 to the Department of Community and Economic Development for distribution to the seven associations of government.

SB125 (Eastman) — Repeals the authority of the director of the Division of Aging and Adult Services to act as a court-appointed trustee, receiver, custodian or guardian over a disabled or elder adult.

SB126 (Valentine) — Modifies section of the Insurance Code on timely payment of insurance claims.

SB127 (Spencer) — Provides procedures for actions against bail bond surety companies for failure to pay bail bond forfeitures.

SB128 (Spencer) — Clarifies circumstances under which a person or the prosecutor may appeal and provides for trial de novo in the district court.

SB129 (Waddoups) — Increases the limit on the recovery of noneconomic damages in malpractice actions against health care providers.

SB130 (Hickman) — Provides restrictions on and notice requirements for certain agreements that may be entered into regarding R.S. 2477 rights-of-way.

SB132 (Wright) — Provides a limited exemption from licensing under the Veterinary Practice Act and expands practice for chiropractic physicians, physical therapists, and massage therapists in treatment of animals.

SB134 (Spencer) — Allows procedure to object to a protective order recommended by a commissioner and have the matter heard by a judge.

SB135 (Poulton) — Requires that specific information from the application for a driver's license or identification card be forwarded to the Selective Service System for registration as required by federal law.

SB136 (Hillyard) — Requires that a parenting plan be provided by parents requesting joint custody of minor children.

SB138 (Stephenson) — Sets the state minimum wage as consistent with the federal minimum wage and prohibits cities, counties and towns from using a different minimum wage.

SB139 (Hillyard) — Modifies the Utah Revised Nonprofit Corporation Act.

SB141 (Spencer) — Deletes unconstitutional language from Criminal Code regarding telephone harassment.

SB145 (Walker) — Modifies the number and term of members of a metropolitan water district board of trustees.

SB146 (R. Allen) — Provides specific penalties for performing marriages without authority or a valid license and provides a penalty for performing an unlawful marriage and for a parent or guardian who allows a minor child to be married in violation of the law.

SB147 (Spencer) — Allows noncustodial parents to pick up 3- to 5-year-old children from daycare for a specified evening visitation.

SB149 (R. Allen) — Adds the chair of the Utah Prosecutorial Assistants Association as a voting member of the Utah Prosecution Council.

SB151 (Hillyard) — Corrects cross-references in the Uniform Commercial Code — Secured Transactions.

SB152 (Waddoups) — Includes as county expenses for certain counties inmate medical expenses that are provided at the request of a county sheriff.

SB153 (Wright) — Authorizes DCFS to place a child in an emergency kinship placement rather than shelter care prior to a shelter hearing.

SB154 (Gladwell) — Requires those contract with a county or municipality for legal defense or defense resources to represent the indigent, unless there is a compelling reason to assign representation to a non-contracting party.

SB156 (Hickman) — Amends certain length limitations for oversize permits.

SB158 (Buttars) — Prohibits municipalities and counties from rejecting development plans solely because they include manufactured homes.

SB159 (Stephenson) — Defines public associations and subjects them to the Government Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA).

SB165 (Hellewell) — Changes "visitation" to "parent-time" in Utah Code, as it applies to the right of noncustodial parents to spend time with their children.

SB166 (Eastman) — Modifies the Mobile Home Park Residency Act, the Motor Vehicle Act and GRAMA.

SB167 (Poulton) — Modifies the Mechanics' Lien Code and the Utah Construction Trades Licensing Act.

SB168 (Blackham) — Requires counties of the first class to provide detective investigative services in their unincorporated areas.

SB169 (Stephenson) — Amends the Utah Charter Schools Act.

SB170 (Valentine) — Repeals the Utah Limited Liability Company Act and replaces it with the Utah Revised Limited Liability Company Act.

SB171 (Valentine) — Authorizes an additional retirement benefit to certain retirees.

SB172 (Hillyard) — Provides for post-conviction DNA testing and provides for procedures to declare a convicted person innocent.

SB174 (Bramble) — Provides a sales and use tax exemption for semiconductor fabricating or processing materials.

SB175 (Blackham) — Amends the population density which qualifies as a rural designation for rural health care purposes.

SB176 (Poulton) — Provides a salary increase for certain state officers and employees.

SB179 (Mayne) — Exempts American Indian tribes and tribal units from the Federal Unemployment Tax Act.

SB182 (Gladwell) — Addresses issues of providing school employee information regarding state coverage of liability.

SB187 (Evans) — Prohibits state agencies from spending money on lobbyists.

SB197 (Gladwell) — Repeals peer review, quality review, quality assurance and quality improvement programs in the Occupations and Professions Code.

SB198 (Spencer) — Requires the Department of Environmental Quality to include, in its efforts to prevent siting of a nuclear waste facility within the state, study of economic development on Native American reservation lands within the state, and provide a plan based on this study.

SB202 (Hale) — Permits disclosure of information in certain circumstances, particularly those related to motor fuel and aviation fuel taxation.

SB204 (Eastman) — Repeals the licensure requirement for alarm response runners.

SB206 (Poulton) — Provides for a task force to study the implementation and process of fluoridating water and allows counties and cities to move ahead with fluoridation before task force reports its findings.

SB208 (Blackham) — Adds an exception for waiver of immunity for injury caused by negligent act or omission of employee when transporting injured persons to where medical assistance can be rendered or an ambulance is available.

SB210 (Walker) — Mandates that higher education institutions advertise and hold public hearings before raising tuition.

SB211 (Davis) — Provides that ordination by Internet is not valid in Utah for performing marriage ceremonies.

SB213 (Bramble) — Addresses the definition of telephone corporations for purposes of sales and use taxes.

SB217 (Dmitrich) — Appropriates $100,000 to Division of Community Development for construction of battered women's shelter in San Juan County.

SB222 (Hellewell) — Requires a peace officer, case worker or school to inform a custodial and noncustodial parent when a minor is taken into custody, suspended or expelled from school.

SB224 (Wright) — Allows companies who strike telecommunications cables while digging to continue digging after notifying the cable company.

SB225 (Suazo) — Appropriates $50,000 for Memory Grove projects.

SB226 (Jenkins) — Requires that a copy of an application to object to an assessment of property by the State Tax Commission be provided to certain persons.

SB232 (Valentine) — Requires that parking fees at state-owned court facilities by approved by the Legislature before implementation.

SB234 (Hillyard) — Allows a city or town to impose a tax for the support of recreational and zoological facilities and botanical, cultural, and zoological organizations.

SB237 (Valentine) — Establishes a process for notice and a public hearing on the issuance of revenue bonds payable from excise tax revenues and requires the question of whether or not to issue the bonds to be submitted to a vote of the people upon receipt of a petition signed by 20 percent of the registered voters.

SB238 (Davis) — Changes the annual reporting period for the Comprehensive Health Insurance Pool Act from a calendar year to a fiscal year.

SB241 (Davis) — Includes, for a first-class county, the providing, operating, and maintaining of jails among the services that special service districts are authorized to provide.

SB245 (Dmitrich) — Modifies the Commerce and Trade Code.

SB253 (Poulton) — Directs the governor to form a committee to study the use of land and facilities at the Utah State Fairpark.

SB254 (Hillyard) — Modifies the Residence Lien Restriction and Lien Recovery Fund Act and related provisions of the Utah Construction Trades Licensing Act.

SB256 (Knudson) — Allows the Department of Transportation to acquire rights-of-way for public transit projects.

SB263 (Davis) — Expands a county executive's duties to include signing deeds that convey county property.

SB276 (Evans) — Enacts the Olympic Law Enforcement and Public Safety Worker's compensation Act.

Senate concurrent resolutions:

SCR3 (Knudson) — Approves the legal settlement reached between the Utah Department of Transportation and Envirotech Corporation, now known as EVT Holdings, Incorporated.

SCR4 (Stephenson) — Urges a statue of Marriner S. Eccles be erected in the Capitol.

SCR5 (Hickman) — Honors the Utah Shakespearean Festival for its high caliber of theatre and for winning a Tony Award.

SCR6 (Dmitrich) — Urges Utah's communities, businesses, educators, service clubs, and interfaith organizations to raise public awareness and education regarding organ and tissue donation to save lives.

Senate joint resolutions:

SJR1 (Blackham) — Modifies the process for addressing certain appropriation requests and revises appropriation subcommittee responsibilities.

SJR2 (Blackham) — Establishes certain responsibilities for the Executive Appropriations Committee and appropriation subcommittees relating to in-depth budget reviews.

SJR4 (Waddoups) — Renames appropriations subcommittees to accurately reflect their jurisdiction.

SJR5 (Mansell) — Recognizes 30 years of contributions of Richard V. Strong to the Legislature.

SJR6 (Mayne) — Recognizes March 16, 2001, as Liberty Day in Utah.

SJR8 (R. Allen) — Urges owners of rental properties in communities near 2002 Olympic Winter Games venues to limit rental increases, not evict tenants in the months preceding the games, and allow renters to renew long-term leases.

SJR10 (Jenkins) — Recognizes Peery's Egyptian Theater in Ogden City for its restoration efforts and its distinctive place in Utah film history.

SJR11 (Valentine) — Encourages the Utah Tax Review Commission to study and develop a plan to minimize taxes and remove tax burdens on persons using developing technologies.

SJR13 (Gladwell) — Urges that film production companies be granted incentives to do business in Utah, including filming on state property free of charge except for actual costs.

Senate resolutions:

SR1 (Waddoups) — Modifies Senate rules relating to long titles.

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SR2 (Waddoups) — Establishes Mason's Manual of Legislative Procedure as the Senate reference for parliamentary procedure.

SR5 (Blackham) — Recognizes Jell-O as Utah's official snack.

SR6 (Waddoups) — Revises Senate rules to outline the process of re-referring bills to committee.


Compiled by Kersten Swinyard

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