Utah Is Making It Easier for Foreign and Out-of-State Professionals To Get Licensed and Get to Work
Other states would do well to enact similar reforms.

More than one in six workers in Utah needs to get a permission slip from the government before he can do his job—a burden that falls especially hard on immigrants. Last month, Republican Gov. Spencer Cox signed a bill into law that will help break down the barriers that keep foreign and out-of-state professionals from working in Utah.
Senate Bill 35 lets nine state departments issue licenses to foreign professionals who can prove they have the requisite skills and experience to perform their jobs. The bill also applies to workers from other states who aren't licensed in Utah. The Institute for Justice (I.J.) has found that "the average license for low- and moderate-income jobs in Utah takes 130 days of education and experience. And those required classes can be very expensive."
Still, as I.J. notes, "Utah has been a pioneer for overhauling occupational licensing in recent years," a trend that S.B. 35 fits. In 2020, Utah moved to recognize out-of-state workers' licenses. S.B. 35 builds on that in a significant way: Now, if a foreign or out-of-state worker comes to Utah without a license, he can receive a license provided his education and experience are sufficiently similar to Utah's licensing requirements.
Ben Shelton, a public policy associate at the Utah-based Libertas Institute whose work primarily focuses on occupational licensing reform, calls the legislation "significant and potentially groundbreaking." Building on previous state efforts to deregulate occupational licensing, Shelton notes that S.B. 35 "massively expands universal licensing recognition in Utah." It "also enacts compacts that will help increase the mobility of licensed professionals" and should help ensure that "crucial roles in the labor market" are filled, he explains.
S.B. 35 will also cut down on so-called brain waste—when immigrants are forced to take jobs below their pay grades due to difficult licensing processes. "Research shows that strict occupational licensing laws can unnecessarily limit employment options for highly skilled immigrants," says Meagan Forbes, I.J.'s director of legislation and senior legislative counsel. "Under some state licensing laws, licensing boards can arbitrarily block qualified immigrants from working in their chosen field simply because their education, training, and experience are from outside the United States."
A 2019 paper by the Utah-based Center for Growth and Opportunity (CGO) found that "immigrants are around 30–35 percent less likely than otherwise similar natives to have an occupational license." This is because "some occupations require that workers must be a US citizen," "many exams are provided only in English," and schooling and experience completed in one's home country might not transfer to the U.S., discouraging immigrants from retraining.
"Even for trades where the argument for licensing is stronger than, say, cosmetology, immigrants face huge barriers," adds CGO Research Manager Josh Smith, whose work focuses on U.S. immigration policy. What's more, there's little reason to believe that these barriers are resulting in better service for Utahns. Research by I.J. has debunked that common claim, and a study by Stanford University economist Brad Larsen found that consumers value things like prices and reviews over someone's license status. "The political economy story of licensing is well-known," Smith explains. "Protections against competition instead of for consumers."
Barriers that prevent immigrants from working ultimately amount to forgone economic growth. The work force simply isn't as productive. Critical jobs go unfilled, which protects incumbents and prevents competition-driven price decreases in certain industries.
But policy analysts are optimistic that S.B. 35 will build on past reforms to help solve those problems. "Consumers and immigrants are going to benefit from Utah building the runway to get qualified people into licensed trades," says Smith. Forbes notes that S.B. 35 will provide "employers with much-needed access to an expanded labor pool," a point that Shelton echoes. He says the reform "will help to drive innovation, create new jobs, and foster economic growth in Utah."
Occupational licensing reform is a surefire way to get more people working in more optimal ways. Other states would do well to follow Utah's example.
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Breaking, Alec Baldwin charges dropped.
More good news, I'll finally find out what happens in the end.
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From the linked article:
This is all very reasonable. So immigrants from what countries, and what professions will be helped the most by this?
Wait a second:
Help me commenters who are smarter than I. So if you’re an immigrant and you DON’T have a license in a particular field from your country of origin, but you have “education and experience” which is “substantively similar to the state’s licensing requirements for a specific profession” you can get a license.
Is that option not offered for native born people too? Or is this ONLY for immigrants?
This was the part I meant to quote:
o That the jurisdiction that previously issued the person’s license had licensing requirements that were substantively similar to those in Utah
If you're a native born person with experience it's probably because you have a license in another state.
Fair.
"The second option is for individuals who did not previously hold an occupational license but whose education and experience are substantively similar to the state’s licensing requirements for a specific profession."
Simple answer for you... Other nations (or states) may be MORE ENLIGHTENED (more pro-freedom) than your (and-or my) state or nation!!! They may not require a license AT ALL!!!
Case in point, the USA is the ONLY nation upon the ENTIRE PLANET EARTH which requires a PRESCRIPTION before you buy a cheap plastic flute to blow upon!!! So in North Korea there was NO doctor's license provided for doctors specializing in giving us permission to blow upon a CHEAP PLASTIC FLUTE, fer Chrissakes!!! This is an "escape clause" here for cheap-plastic-flute-prescribers from other nations, if ye will...
Frankly, IMHO, a graduate of the 1st grade should be allowed to grant me such permissions, butt I guess that I'm chopped liver, around here...
To find precise details on what NOT to do, to avoid the flute police, please see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/DONT_DO_THIS/ … This has been a pubic service, courtesy of the Church of SQRLS!
Who wants to move to Utah?
I'll think about it, if they entice me with 500 gallons of free whiskey, and 20 pair of magic underwear!
I hear combining the two results in a nasty allergic reaction.
Immigrants, because there's no space for them in Martha's Vineyard.
There IS room for them, though, on Uranus!!!
https://reason.com/2022/09/27/for-florida-gov-ron-desantis-political-stunts-are-more-important-than-substance/ and
https://reason.com/2022/09/21/are-ron-desantis-migrant-flights-legal/
Ass POTUS, DeSatan will be forcing USA taxpayers to trick and ferry billions upon brazilians of sub-Brazilians from Brazil to Botswana, and to deport illegal sub-Martians from Mars to Uranus! Ass long ass the illegal Martians SUFFER-SUFFER-SUFFER, red-meat-hungry socons and troglodytes will be DELIGHTED to spend those extra tax dollars! Butt I for one think that illegal Martians are intelligent beings, too, and hope that they will NOT suffer on Uranus, from too many foul odors, etc.!
DeSatan… SPEAKS to me! Get Thee behind me, DeSatan!
Scienfoology Song… GAWD = Government Almighty’s Wrath Delivers
DeSatan loves me, This I know,
For DeSatan tells me so,
Little ones to GAWD belong,
We are weak, but GAWD is strong!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
DeSatan loves me, yes indeed,
Makes the illegal sub-humans bleed,
Protects me for geeks and freaks,
I LOVE to pay taxes, till my wallet squeaks!
PUNISH Disney, I’ll PAY for their pains,
Ass long ass DeSatan Blesses our gains!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
DeSatan expels the low-lifes to Venus,
Moves them ANYWHERE, with His Penis!
His Penis throbs with His Righteousness,
Take no heed, He says, of His Frighteousness!
ALL must be PUNISHED, they say!
So never, EVER be or say gay!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
Our USA taxes must PAY The Way, He may say,
To EXPORT the illegal Mars aliens, every day!
To Pluto, Jupiter, or Uranus, they must ALL go!
Oh, the places that the low-lifes will go, you must know!
The taxes we shall pay? Through the money, we must BLOW!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
(If we did NOT do-doo, doo-doo-doo, ALL of this, then that them thar illegal Mars aliens WILL show up on OUR doors, in the formerly pure USA!!! We MUST keep them AWAY, far away, out in the Deep Dark Yonder!)
#MeInTheAss’CauseI’maGullibleLowBrowBlowHardConTard
#BeenTrumpledUnderfootForFarTooLong
I hope they make it easier for the Chinese government to open police stations.
Yes, this! Chinese government police have native-lands-of-origins experiences, so they need NO stinkin' BADGE (or license), dammit!!!
Ass long ass they support ALL IS FOR THE "TEAM-R" HIVE, authoritarians and totalitarians everywhere will be on board with shit, Comrade!!!! Heil Der TrumptatorShit, Comrade!!!
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Of course, “freedom” as defined by the current crop of Rethuglicans only pertains to *economic* freedom. But a woman in Utah loses freedom over her own body at a certain point in her pregnancy, and then that baby is subject to the whims of reich-wing legislators, most of whom probably haven’t had sex in decades.
I, personally, am keeping an eye on Reason's immigration articles.
In the past they have endorsed OPEN BORDERS.
Open borders (freedom of immigration) when imposed on a society of private property NECESSARILY legalizes trespassing - which NO libertarian concept would support,
Bugs Bunny would say about you, "What a MAROON".