Committee backs bill letting principals choose long‑term substitutes
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Summary
The House Education Committee recommended Senate Bill 52 favorably, removing an automatic preference for licensed teachers for long‑term substitute positions and giving principals more hiring discretion; the measure passed the committee 10‑1.
Senator Fillmore told the House Education Standing Committee that Senate Bill 52 would “respect the principal’s judgment” by deleting statutory language that required long‑term substitute positions be filled by licensed teachers when one was available. The sponsor said the change would allow principals to appoint a retired teacher or a familiar paraprofessional if the principal judges them a better fit for a given classroom.
The committee heard clarifying questions focused on licensure and the state’s discipline processes. Representative Grant McPherson asked whether the bill affects the Utah Professional Practices Advisory Commission (UPAC); the sponsor replied the bill does not change UPAC’s authority to suspend or revoke licenses and only removes the automatic legal preference for licensed applicants.
Representative Nicholeen Peck moved the committee recommendation, arguing the bill helps districts facing substitute shortages. The committee approved the recommendation by voice vote with one recorded 'no.' Chair announced the committee result as 10‑1. The committee’s action was procedural; the bill now proceeds to the next floor consideration.
