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Utah House debates tighter public‑health reporting for biothreats; adds governor sign‑off and two‑year sunset
Summary
Lawmakers debated second-substitute HB231, which would require mandatory reporting for specified bioterrorism and epidemic threats, authorize limited information sharing with emergency services, and includes a two‑year sunset. An amendment adding gubernatorial concurrence for public‑health emergencies was adopted; final passage not recorded in the excerpt.
Representative Cheryl Allen pressed the case for second‑substitute House Bill 231 on the House floor on Jan. 28, saying the measure would strengthen early reporting and data‑sharing during public‑health threats while protecting personal privacy.
Allen told colleagues the bill clarifies when reporting is mandatory and when it remains voluntary, raises the legal standard for sanctions to willful failure to file, and authorizes the Department of Health to share trend information with law‑enforcement and the new Division of Emergency Services and Homeland Security during investigations. “This bill recognizes the value of early reporting and…
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