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Senate approves micro‑school zoning bill after debate over alcohol proximity and oversight

February 06, 2024 | 2024 Utah Legislature, Utah Legislature, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah


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Senate approves micro‑school zoning bill after debate over alcohol proximity and oversight
The Utah Senate advanced second substitute Senate Bill 13 on day 22, a bill that defines and provides zoning guidance for "micro schools" — small, often private or home‑based educational enterprises that seek to operate in commercial or residential spaces.

Senator Fillmore, the bill sponsor, said the measure clarifies a gap in state law and provides cities with a regulatory framework for micro schools. He told colleagues the bill allows micro schools to be treated as an approved use in commercial or residential zones, regulated under class B occupancy when in commercial property, and explicitly excludes micro schools from counting as "community centers" for purposes of alcohol‑proximity laws. "We're defining it in a careful way that has...the input of cities, counties, fire marshals," Fillmore said.

Floor debate was wide‑ranging. Senator Riebe and others questioned whether micro schools would be held to the same safety and proximity standards as public schools; Fillmore answered that commercial micro schools would undergo city inspections and class B occupancy rules. Senator Reid expressed concern that carving out micro schools could create a "loophole" that weakens protections designed to keep children distant from alcohol or tobacco sales. Senator Kennedy, who said his family homeschools, supported the bill and praised the sponsor’s effort to balance regulation and burden on small providers.

Sponsor responses included specifics: a maximum of 16 students in a home‑based micro school and up to 100 in a commercial property. The Senate read the bill for a third time and approved second substitute SB 13 by roll call, 21 yea, 6 nay, 2 absent.

Supporters described the bill as providing clarity and a light regulatory touch for small providers; opponents said the state should not create exceptions that reduce uniform protections for children.

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