As posted to social media, it appears that Utah Senator John Johnson, working with Libertas, is moving to remove licensing for four professions, among them, court reporting.
Our sources say this is on the radar in Utah and that it’s been tabled for the next legislative session.
P.S.
As I admitted on social media, I’ve been on both sides of the licensing argument. As a young New York reporter I thought licensure was necessary because the rates were awful. As a still-young New York reporter, I just think, well, what’s the harm? They want to transform how we do things, cool. Stick me in a senior role and let someone else worry about the transcript. But then I feel guilty because I’ve just joined the “pull the ladder up behind me” crowd.
Of course the end goal would be perfection enough to do away with human oversight.
But we’re a long way off. We’ve learned that in the best of conditions with the best recording equipment money can buy it can be hard to accurately capture a moment in time. But “good enough” is also a threat to stenographer seats. I think we’re kidding ourselves to think otherwise. And make no mistake that it’s good enough. It’s outperformed me. I’ve outperformed it. Does it get better every day? Some seem to think so. But for those tense moments where something cannot be captured correctly, do you trust its judgment?
That’s what the market’s answering every day and a big part of why we’re still here in 2026.
