House passes HB 44 expanding school guardian options, panic-alert requirement routed to 911
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HB 44, a package of school safety and guardian-program changes, passed the House after extended debate. The bill expands LEA flexibility to use 'special function officers,' moves some stipend administration to USBE and directs panic-alert devices to send alerts directly to 911; implementation and funding details were discussed on the floor.
The Utah House passed HB 44 on Feb. 26 after extended floor debate over school safety provisions that expand local flexibility and standardize emergency tools. Sponsor Representative Wilcox said the bill is "primarily about flexibility and providing additional flexibility for our local education agencies," arguing it allows districts to choose options that meet local needs while expanding training and minimum standards.
Key provisions: HB 44 (sixth substitute) authorizes LEAs to use "special function officers" — a lower‑cost option sometimes staffed by retired law enforcement serving in limited roles — as an alternative to full‑time school resource officers. It moves stipend distribution for certain safety stipends to the Utah State Board of Education (USBE), authorizes emergency panic‑alert devices (which the sponsor said will route directly to 911), and permits LEAs to adopt local policies for guardian breaks with reasonable exemptions.
Sponsor comments and funding: Representative Wilcox told the House the panic‑alert devices have already been funded through prior appropriations and a request‑for‑applications (RFA) process managed by USBE is underway. "We funded this already, and we've expanded that funding for this exact purpose," Wilcox said, adding the RFA awards had been issued though contracts had not yet been signed.
Questions and answers: Members asked for clarification on the special function officers, funding, and whether panic alerts go to the front office or directly to 911. Wilcox said special function officers typically work under local law enforcement supervision and are often former officers; she told members the panic alerts are designed to go straight to 911 so help arrives as quickly as possible.
Concerns and safeguards: Lawmakers pressed on training, liability and local control. Wilcox said the bill makes training available, allows LEAs to supplement stipends, and does not change funding sources in statute. The sponsor emphasized the measure is grounded in recommendations from the state education advisory board and school safety implementation partners.
Outcome and next steps: The House concluded debate and passed HB 44; the transcript available for this floor period contains a garbled rendering of the final roll call (the transcript notes six abstentions and an unreadable count of 'Yes' votes). The bill will be transmitted to the Senate for further consideration.
