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Committee cleans up election notices and filing rules; sponsor’s HB479 on voter‑ID opt‑in not taken up

March 03, 2026 | 2026 Utah Legislature, Utah Legislature, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah


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Committee cleans up election notices and filing rules; sponsor’s HB479 on voter‑ID opt‑in not taken up
The Senate Government Operations Committee moved a package of election-law cleanup items and procedural clarifications forward and adopted a technical amendment to House Bill 361.

Representative Shepherd described HB361 as a consolidation of notice and filing requirements intended to make clerks’ administrative tasks simpler and more consistent. Ryan Cowley, director of elections in the lieutenant governor’s office, emphasized the bill aligns deadlines, consolidates certification steps after conventions, standardizes removal of deceased voters (within five days of notice) and prohibits placement of an individual clerk’s name on official envelope material to avoid the appearance of electioneering.

County clerks and municipal election officials praised the cleanup and said it will reduce administrative errors when building ballots and publishing notices. Ricky Hatch, county clerk for Weber County, said clerks ‘‘fully support’’ the bill’s cleanup and the provisions to avoid name‑by‑name election mailings.

Representative Burton had opened the meeting earlier presenting third substitute House Bill 479 (election-code modifications), arguing for additional ID‑based return options and citing voter‑roll anomalies from late 2024. However, the committee later voted to move the agenda and did not take further action on HB479 at this hearing; the sponsor said the bill was being held in committee for further consideration.

What to watch: HB361’s statutory language will be used to develop administrative rules and guidance; HB479 may return in a future meeting if sponsors pursue additional hearings and stakeholder work.

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