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Current as of January 01, 2025 | Updated by Findlaw Staff
In conducting a sunrise review or a periodic review, unless otherwise directed in accordance with Subsection 13-1b-203(3), the office shall consider the following criteria:
(1) whether the regulation of the occupation is necessary to address a present, recognizable, and significant harm to the health, safety, or financial welfare of the public;
(2) for any harm to the health, safety, or financial welfare of the public, the harm's:
(a) severity;
(b) probability; and
(c) permanence;
(3) the extent to which the proposed or existing regulation of the occupation protects against or diminishes the harm described in Subsection (1);
(4) whether the proposed or existing regulation of the occupation:
(a) affects the supply of qualified practitioners;
(b) creates barriers to:
(i) service that are not in the public financial welfare or interest; or
(ii) entry into the occupation or related occupations;
(c) imposes new costs on existing practitioners;
(d) affects:
(i) license reciprocity with other jurisdictions; or
(ii) mobility of practitioners; or
(e) if the occupation involves a health care provider, impacts the health care provider's ability to obtain payment of benefits for the health care provider's treatment of an illness, injury, or health care condition under an insurance contract subject to Section 31A-22-618;
(5) if the review involves licensing, the potential alternative pathways for a person to obtain a license;
(6) the costs to the state of regulating the occupation;
(7) whether the proposed or existing administering agency has sufficient expertise and resources;
(8) the regulation of the occupation in other jurisdictions;
(9) the scope of the proposed or existing regulation, including:
(a) whether the occupation is clearly distinguishable from an already regulated occupation; and
(b) potential for regulating only certain occupational activities;
(10) the potentially less burdensome alternatives to the proposed or existing regulation and the effect of implementing an alternative method of regulation on:
(a) the health, safety, or financial welfare of the public;
(b) the occupation; and
(c) practitioners of the occupation; and
(11) any other criteria the office adopts, including criteria suggested in a stakeholder survey.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - Utah Code Title 13. Commerce and Trade § 13-1b-302. Review criteria - last updated January 01, 2025 | https://codes.findlaw.com/ut/title-13-commerce-and-trade/ut-code-sect-13-1b-302/
FindLaw Codes may not reflect the most recent version of the law in your jurisdiction. Please verify the status of the code you are researching with the state legislature before relying on it for your legal needs.
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