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Rep Mike Winder Cautiously Optimistic About Sponsoring A Bill To Use Ranked-Choice Voting In Statewide Elections
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AM News Brief: Opioid Legislation, Wind Farms & Voracious Grasshoppers
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SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, (May 5, 2021) – On Wednesday, a Utah law went into effect that requires police to get a warrant before accessing data transmitted through an electronic communication service. The new law will not only increase privacy protections in Utah; it will also hinder the expansion of the federal surveillance state.
Rep. Craig Hall (R-West Valley City) introduced House Bill 87 (HB87) on Jan 19. The law prohibits law enforcement agencies from accessing electronic information or data transmitted through a provider of an electronic communication service. In practice, this tightens up the existing law to ensure police must get a warrant before accessing communication service provider networks in order to intercept data.
Utah bans conversion therapy on LGBTQ children as rule goes into effect
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Deseret News
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Scott G Winterton, Deseret News
SALT LAKE CITY Guns once again were a contentious issue on Capitol Hill during the Legislature’s 45-day session that ended March 5, and after several tries through the years, lawmakers succeeded in ending the permit requirement for carrying a concealed weapon in Utah.
HB60 lets any Utah resident who is 21 years or older and can legally possess a firearm to carry their weapon concealed without needing a permit. It received final legislative approval in early February, and Gov. Spencer Cox signed the bill Feb. 15.
During debate on the issue, bill sponsor Rep. Walt Brooks, R-St. George, was skeptical there could be reconciliation between the two sides.