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Inside Utah’s Legislative Session: Key Takeaways for the Legal Community

By Kim Cordova
President of the Utah State Bar

As Utah’s most recent legislative session concluded, the legal community is left with a mix of progress, concern, and ongoing responsibility. While a comprehensive analysis will unfold through upcoming CLEs and deeper reviews, this overview highlights several major developments, emerging trends, and what they mean for attorneys, clients, and the judiciary.

A Strong Showing from the Legal Community

Before diving into policy, it’s worth emphasizing the extraordinary engagement from Utah lawyers this session. Attorneys across the state showed up — testifying, writing letters, making calls, and collaborating with advocacy groups. These efforts were not symbolic; they materially influenced legislation.

Many of the bills that ultimately passed were significantly altered from their original drafts. That change reflects the impact of informed advocacy and underscores a critical point: participation works.


Major Legislative Highlights

Expansion of the Supreme Court and Appellate Courts (SB 134)

One of the most visible outcomes was the expansion of Utah’s appellate judiciary. The legislature approved:

  • Additional Supreme Court justices
  • Two new appellate court judges
  • New district judges in key regions

While these additions address real capacity needs, they come with substantial costs—over $4.5 million one-time and nearly $2.8 million ongoing annually.

However, a central concern remains: funding did not extend to essential support infrastructure such as judicial assistants, law clerks, and courtroom capacity. Since most Utahns interact with the justice system at the district and juvenile court levels, this imbalance may create operational strain.


District Court Constitutional Panel (HB 392)

Originally introduced as a “constitutional court,” this bill evolved into a three-judge district court panel responsible for hearing challenges to state statutes.

Key changes during the legislative process included:

  • Adjustments to panel structure and eligibility
  • Clarification of who may bring challenges
  • Limiting participation to specific government entities

Despite these revisions, the bill introduces new procedural complexity and carries ongoing costs. A related contingency bill (HB 366) ensures a fallback structure if HB 392 is invalidated, further increasing financial commitments.


Judicial Transparency Reform (HB 540)

Framed as a transparency measure, this bill initially proposed live-streaming all court proceedings statewide. That raised significant concerns around:

  • Privacy in family and criminal matters
  • Protection of sensitive information
  • Practical courtroom implications

Following extensive feedback, the final version scaled back dramatically. Instead, it focuses on:

  • Expanding public access to audio recordings
  • Implementing post-employment disclosure requirements for judges

While still impactful, the revised bill reflects a more balanced approach between transparency and privacy.

RELATED: Legislative and Public Policy Activity


Emerging Trends from the Session

Beyond individual bills, several broader patterns defined this legislative cycle:

Accelerated Legislative Timelines

Many bills were introduced late and moved rapidly through committees and votes, limiting meaningful stakeholder input. This compressed timeline reduces opportunities for thoughtful analysis and increases the risk of unintended consequences.

Narrative Pressure on the Judiciary

A recurring theme was the portrayal of the judiciary as lacking accountability or transparency. This framing influenced multiple proposals, including those targeting judicial selection and retention.

However, many of the proposed “solutions” risk undermining the very principles they aim to strengthen, particularly judicial independence and rigorous vetting processes.


Bills That Didn’t Pass, but Matter

Several late-session proposals failed but remain important signals:

  • Changes to judicial retention elections
  • Alterations to judicial nominating commissions

These proposals raised constitutional concerns and highlighted tension between political influence and judicial independence. Utah’s current system — featuring thorough vetting and performance-based evaluation—remains a national model, but continued scrutiny is likely.

RELATED: Utah State Bar Position on Package of Bills Affecting Utah Courts


The Bigger Question: What Kind of Judiciary Do We Want?

At the core of this session is a fundamental question for the legal community:

  • How should judges be selected?
  • What defines accountability?
  • How do we preserve independence while maintaining public trust?

These are not abstract issues — they directly shape client outcomes, legal practice, and the rule of law.


The Work Continues: Why the Interim Matters

Although the legislative session has ended, the process has not. The interim period offers a critical opportunity:

  • Engage with legislators without time pressure
  • Contribute to developing policy early
  • Shape proposals before they solidify

For attorneys, this is often the most effective window to influence outcomes.


Final Thoughts

This session demonstrated both the power of legal advocacy and the fragility of institutional balance. While meaningful progress was made, significant challenges remain — particularly around funding priorities, legislative process, and public perception of the judiciary.

The call to action is clear: stay engaged, stay informed, and continue participating.

Because as this session proved, when lawyers show up, the system responds.

Source: Video transcript remarks by Kim Cordova, Utah State Bar President


The video below is from the virtual CLE called, “The Insiders’ View & Summary of the 2026 Legislative Session – What Passed & The Effect on Your Practice.” The session was April 1, 2026, and featured the Bar’s lobbyists, Frank Pignanelli, Steve Styler and Jacey Skinner. Distinguished speakers are Sen. Brady Brammer, Sen. Todd Weiler, Sen. Kirk Cullimore, Sen. Dan McCay, Rep. Grant Miller, Rep. Anthony Loubet, Rep. David Shallenberger, and Rep. Keven Stratton.

** Disclaimer – viewing this video on demand does not count as CLE credit unless previously authorized by the Utah State Bar. **

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