- United States
- Utah
- Letter
Oppose HB204: Religious Exemptions Threaten Professional Standards
To: Rep. Dailey-Provost
From: A constituent in Salt Lake City, UT
February 7
I urge you to oppose HB204, which would require public colleges and universities to provide alternative assignments when coursework conflicts with a student's religious beliefs or conscience objections. While the bill includes language about preventing fundamental alterations to courses, it creates serious risks for professional education and licensure requirements that will ultimately harm Utah students and the communities they serve.
Brianne Kramer, chapter president of the American Federation of Teachers Utah College Council at Southern Utah University, identified a critical flaw in this legislation. Students in healthcare, behavioral health, education, finance, accounting, and legal professions must meet specific state licensure and national accreditation requirements. If students can opt out of required material based on conscience objections, they may not be able to meet these licensure standards. A mental health counseling student who objects to learning how to counsel married couples because they don't believe in marriage illustrates this problem. How can such a student ethically serve future patients with diverse needs?
Gabe Byars, an occupational therapy professor at Salt Lake Community College, correctly noted that exempting students from assignments that challenge their beliefs decreases viewpoint diversity and fails to expose students to the challenging perspectives they will inevitably encounter in professional practice. Higher education exists precisely to broaden students' understanding and prepare them for complex real-world situations.
The bill's vague standard for what constitutes a fundamental alteration leaves institutions vulnerable to litigation while creating administrative chaos. Each accommodation request would require evaluation by a third party to determine if it affects a student's ability to master course material. This process will burden faculty and administrators while opening the door to endless disputes about what qualifies as essential.
Many protections mentioned in HB204 already exist under current Utah law, including institutional neutrality provisions. This legislation is an unnecessary solution seeking a problem, one that will compromise educational quality and professional standards. I ask you to vote no on HB204.