The Utah House adopted a force‑substitute to H.B.395 on Feb. 21 that revises impaired‑driving statutes, enhances certain sentencing considerations and expands access to monitoring programs.
Representative Eliason, presenting the substitute, described the bill as a response to rising DUI incidents and recounted the death of a 13‑year‑old, Eli Mitchell, to illustrate the human cost of impaired driving. Eliason said the bill aims to tighten rules for wrong‑way driving, permit courts to consider out‑of‑state DUI history for enhancements, and expand fee waivers so indigent defendants can participate in 24/7 monitoring programs that allow continued employment while meeting court conditions.
The substitute also clarifies how interlock periods are measured (from installation rather than from the court order), asks the Sentencing Commission to evaluate relevant sentencing guidelines, and provides for pretrial detention in certain multiple‑DUI scenarios when prior adjudication is pending.
Multiple members spoke in support and recounted local incidents and constituent appeals; sponsors said the changes are aimed at reducing fatalities and helping individuals with alcohol‑use disorders access treatment programs. The House passed the substitute by unanimous recorded vote (70–0 recorded on the floor) and returned the bill to the Senate for consideration.