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Committee advances multiple bills on labeling, delivery, workers' comp, records access and licensing

February 19, 2025 | 2025 Utah Legislature, Utah Legislature, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah


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Committee advances multiple bills on labeling, delivery, workers' comp, records access and licensing
The Utah Senate Business, Labor and Technology Committee took action on several agenda items that drew limited debate and passed or advanced unanimously.

HB 138 — Food Labeling Amendments (Representative Walter): The bill requires disclosure when cultivated meat products or plant- or insect-based substitutes are sold in place of conventional beef, chicken, pork, fish and seafood. Sponsor said the measure seeks accurate labeling "so consumers know whether they're buying a substitute instead of the real thing." The Utah Farm Bureau Federation and the Utah Wool Growers Association testified in favor. The committee voted to favorably recommend HB 138; the transcript records the motion passing unanimously (4–0).

HB 134 — Food Cart / Electric Bicycle Clarification (Representative David Provo): The bill amends existing statute to clarify that electric-assisted bicycles may pull food carts for delivery, updating code drafted before e-bikes were in wide use. Bike Utah testified in support. Committee recommended HB 134 favorably (5–0); sponsors agreed to follow up on precise definitions for e-bike classes.

HB 111 — Workers' Compensation Amendments (Representative Loubay): The bill narrows an earlier 2014 change so that a statutory worker-classification rule meant for self-administered care for people with disabilities does not get applied broadly to unrelated businesses. Sponsor said the change would restore the original narrow intent and leave determinations about employment status to the Labor Commission in standard cases. Committee voted favorably (5–0).

HB 222 (Substitute 1) — Access to Accident Information (Representative Stoddard): The substitute tightens reporting and disclosure language so victims and engaged attorneys can obtain collision reports, DUI reports, witness statements, photos and other evidence while preserving protections for witnesses and personal data redaction. Insurance-industry and plaintiffs' attorney representatives supported improved transparency. The committee favorably recommended the substitute (6–0).

HB 114 — Architects Licensing Act Amendments (Representative Lee): The bill clarifies that non-licensed building or home designers may use the word "architecture" in business materials without subjecting themselves to civil penalties for unauthorized practice, resolving disputes between home designers and licensed architects. The Utah Home Builders Association supported the measure. The committee recommended HB 114 favorably (6–0).

Votes at a glance: The committee recorded unanimous favorable recommendations for HB 138 (4–0), HB 134 (5–0), HB 111 (5–0), HB 222 Sub. 1 (6–0) and HB 114 (6–0). Those items will move forward for further floor scheduling and any subsequent action.

Ending: Sponsors said they will continue to refine technical language where needed and pursue floor time; stakeholders should monitor upcoming substitute language and committee reports for implementation details.

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