Utah Senate passes a broad slate of bills on Day 37, sending measures back to the House
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On Feb. 27 the Utah Senate approved a range of bills — including child welfare revisions, water and critical infrastructure measures, and local land-use updates — sending passed measures back to the House or moving them forward for further consideration.
The Utah Senate on Feb. 27, 2026, approved a wide-ranging set of bills affecting child welfare, water rights, critical infrastructure and local land‑use reform, moving multiple measures back to the House for further action.
Senators passed First Substitute House Bill 105, described by Sen. Harper as a clarification to allow a parent who has demonstrably changed behavior to petition for visitation after a permanent‑custody order. Sen. Harper moved the first substitute and the Senate recorded 28 yeas, 0 nays and 9 absent; President Adams announced the bill will be signed and returned to the House for the Speaker’s signature.
The chamber also acted on water and infrastructure legislation. Second Substitute House Bill 187, which Sen. Ibsen said addresses concerns tied to the Colorado River Compact, passed by roll call (20 yeas, 1 nay, 8 absent). Third Substitute House Bill 165, directing the Utah Cyber Center to develop guidance on foreign adversarial threats and to authorize voluntary security assessments for critical infrastructure, passed 20–0 with nine absent.
Senators approved bills on a range of other issues: agricultural and food amendments (House Bill 369), expansion of environmental judicial review tied to mining permits (House Bill 419), nursing facility certification extensions (House Bill 343), adoption amendments (Fourth Substitute House Bill 51), and reforms for the Office of Homeless Services (House Bill 308). Several bills were 'circled' or substituted to await fiscal notes (for example, Fourth Substitute House Bill 71 was substituted and circled so staff can reconcile a fiscal impact).
On procedural and finance matters, the Senate approved transportation amendments (Second Substitute Senate Bill 242) that include clarifications on commuter‑rail funding and FrontRunner operations and passed first substitute Senate Bill 2‑17 to ease direct‑to‑consumer local food sales. Several bills the Senate passed will be returned to the House for the Speaker’s signature or for further consideration.
Senators opened and closed the session with formalities: a prayer by Millie Barr of the Bountiful City Council and announcements about committee meetings. The Senate recessed until 2 p.m.
Votes and next steps: Most passed bills were recorded as passed by roll call in the Senate and will proceed to the House or be returned to the House for signatures, depending on each bill’s status. The official text and final fiscal notes for circled bills will determine the timing of future floor action.
