General Assembly Governor's Bill No. 7050 January Session, 2017 LCO No. 3789 *03789__________* Referred to Committee on FINANCE, REVENUE AND BONDING Introduced by: REP. ARESIMOWICZ, 30th Dist. REP. RITTER M., 1st Dist. SEN. LOONEY, 11th Dist. SEN. DUFF, 25th Dist. General Assembly Governor's Bill No. 7050 January Session, 2017 LCO No. 3789 *03789__________* Referred to Committee on FINANCE, REVENUE AND BONDING Introduced by: REP. ARESIMOWICZ, 30th Dist. REP. RITTER M., 1st Dist. SEN. LOONEY, 11th Dist. SEN. DUFF, 25th Dist. AN ACT CONCERNING ENHANCEMENTS TO MUNICIPAL FINANCE AND ACCOUNTABILITY. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Assembly convened: Section 1. Section 7-560 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Whenever used in subsection (a) of section 7-394b, [and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and sections 12, 15 and 18 to 23, inclusive, of this act, the following definitions shall apply: (1) "Attorney General" means the Attorney General of the state of Connecticut. (2) "Certified municipality" means a municipality that has been certified as a tier I or tier II municipality by the secretary. (3) "Chief executive officer" means the officer described in section 7-193. (4) "Debt service payment fund" means the fund into which the proceeds of the property tax intercept procedure are deposited and from which debt service on all outstanding general obligations of a municipality which have a term of more than one year and additionally all outstanding general obligations which the municipality determines are to be supported by the tax intercept procedure shall be paid as provided in subsection (a) of section 7-394b and sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. (5) "Debt service payment fund requirement" means an amount at least equal to the aggregate amount of principal, sinking fund installments, if any, and interest during the then current fiscal year as the same become due and payable on all outstanding general obligations of the municipality which have a term of more than one year and additionally all outstanding general obligations which the municipality determines are to be supported by the tax intercept procedure. (6) "Deficit" means with respect to the general fund of any municipality, any cumulative excess of expenditures, encumbrances, or other uses of funds for any fiscal year and all prior fiscal years over revenues of the municipality for such period and the prior year's undesignated fund balance, as reflected in the most recent audited financial statements of such municipality. For purposes of determining such excess, revenues shall not include the proceeds of tax anticipation notes and expenditures shall not include any principal payment of tax anticipation notes. (7) "Deficit obligation" means any general obligation with a term of more than one year or any bond or any note issued in anticipation thereof, issued by a municipality either for the purpose of or having the effect of reducing, eliminating or preventing a general fund, special revenue fund or enterprise fund deficiency, other than any obligation issued pursuant to chapter 110. (8) "Designated tier I municipality" means a municipality designated as a tier I municipality in accordance with the provisions of section 12 of this act. (9) "Designated tier II municipality" means a municipality designated as a tier II municipality in accordance with the provisions of section 15 of this act. (10) "Designated tier III municipality" means a municipality designated as a tier III municipality in accordance with the provisions of section 18 of this act. (11) "Designated tier IV municipality" means a municipality designated as a tier IV municipality in accordance with the provisions of section 20 of this act. (12) "Equalized mill rate" means the tax rate derived from the most recent available grand levy of a municipality divided by the equalized net grand list on which such levy is based, as determined by the secretary in accordance with section 10-261a. (13) "Fund balance" means the amount that assets and deferred outflow of resources of a municipality's general fund exceeds the liabilities and deferred inflow of resources of the general fund of the municipality, as of the fiscal year ended as reflected in the municipality's most recent audited financial statements presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. (14) "Fund balance percentage" means the fund balance of the general fund of a municipality as of the fiscal year ended in the municipality's most recent audited financial statements and presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, divided by the sum of revenues of the general fund and operating transfers into the general fund for the fiscal year. [(8)] (15) "General fund deficiency" means a deficit or a projected fiscal year deficit, or both. [(9)] (16) "General obligation" means an obligation issued by a municipality and secured by the full faith and credit and taxing power of such municipality including any contingent obligation which is payable from the general fund and is subject to annual appropriation. [(10)] (17) "Maximum required capital reserve" means the maximum aggregate amount of principal, interest and other amounts due and owing during any succeeding fiscal year, excluding any sinking fund installments payable in a prior fiscal year on outstanding general obligations of a certified municipality supported by a special capital reserve fund issued pursuant to subsection (a) of section 7-394b and sections 7-568 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. [(11)] (18) "Minimum required capital reserve" means the aggregate amount of principal, sinking fund installments, interest and other amounts due and owing during the next succeeding fiscal year on outstanding general obligations of a certified municipality supported by a special capital reserve fund pursuant to subsection (a) of section 7-394b and sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. (19) "Municipal Accountability Review Board" means the Municipal Accountability Review Board established pursuant to section 19 of this act. (20) "Municipal aid" means formula grants, grants, payments in lieu of taxes, reimbursements, payments and other funding provided by the state to municipalities and used to fund municipal general fund budgets, including education budgets. [(12)] (21) "Municipal Finance Advisory Commission" means the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission established in section 7-394b. (22) "Municipal revenue increase in fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, as a per cent of revenues" means the net difference in estimated municipal revenues from state sources and new municipal taxing authority as compiled by the secretary pursuant to section 4-71b for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, as compared to the estimated municipal revenues from such sources compiled by the secretary pursuant to section 4-71b for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, divided by the sum of revenues of the general fund and operating transfers into the general fund as reported in the municipality's audited financial statements for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2016. [(13)] (23) "Municipality" means any town, city, borough, consolidated town and city, consolidated city and borough, any metropolitan district, any district, as defined in section 7-324, and any other political subdivision of the state having the power to levy taxes and to issue bonds, notes or other obligations. [(14)] (24) "Obligation" means any bond, bond anticipation note, tax anticipation note or other interim funding obligation, certificate of participation, security, financing lease, installment purchase agreements, capital lease, receivable or other asset sale, refinancing covered by this definition and any other transaction which constitutes debt in accordance with both municipal reporting standards in section 7-394a and the regulations prescribing municipal financial reporting adopted by the secretary. [(15)] (25) "Outstanding obligation" means any obligation with respect to which a principal or interest payment, sinking fund installment or other payment or deposit is, or will be, due in the future and for which moneys or defeasance securities have not been deposited in escrow. [(16)] (26) "Projected fiscal year deficit" means, with respect to the general fund of any municipality during any fiscal year, the excess of estimated expenditures and uses of funds for the fiscal year over estimated revenues and any cumulative undesignated general fund balance from the prior fiscal year. [(17)] (27) "Property taxes" means all taxes on real and personal property levied by the municipality in accordance with the general statutes including any interest, penalties and other related charges, and shall not mean any rent, rate, fee, special assessment or other charge based on benefit or use. [(18)] (28) "Property tax intercept procedure" means a procedure where a municipality provides for the collection and deposit in a debt service payment fund maintained with a trustee of all property taxes needed to meet the debt service payment fund requirement and which meets all the requirements of section 7-562, as amended by this act. (29) "Property tax levy" means the mill rate of the municipality multiplied by the net taxable grand list of the municipality. [(19)] (30) "Revenues" means, with respect to the general fund for any municipality for any fiscal year, property taxes and other moneys that are generally available for, accounted for and deposited in the municipality's general fund. [(20)] (31) "Secretary" means the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management. [(21)] (32) "Special capital reserve fund" means the fund established pursuant to section 7-571, as amended by this act, to secure the timely payment of principal and interest on general obligations issued by a certified municipality approved by the Treasurer pursuant to section 7-573. [(22)] (33) "State" means the state of Connecticut. [(23)] (34) "Tier I municipality" means any municipality which has applied to and been certified by the secretary as a tier I municipality. [(24)] (35) "Tier II municipality" means any municipality which has applied to and been certified by the secretary as a tier II municipality. [(25)] (36) "Treasurer" means the Treasurer of the state of Connecticut. [(26)] (37) "Trustee" means any trust company or bank having the powers of a trust company within or without the state, appointed by the municipality as trustee for the municipality's tax intercept procedure or special capital reserve fund and approved by the Treasurer, as well as any successor trust company or bank having the powers of a trust company within or without the state succeeding a prior trust company or bank as trustee, so appointed and approved. Sec. 2. Section 7-561 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Any municipality may establish a property tax intercept procedure and a debt service payment fund, as provided in sections 7-562 to 7-564, inclusive, as amended by this act. The municipal officer or body empowered to issue general obligations or to determine the details of general obligations authorized by the municipality may establish such tax intercept procedure and such debt service payment fund, may determine the details and approve the terms of all indentures and agreements and other instruments necessary or appropriate to establish and implement a tax intercept procedure and a debt service payment fund as provided in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and may bind the municipality, pursuant to any such indenture or agreement, with the requirements of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and of any ordinance or resolution authorizing the issuance of such general obligations of the municipality. Sec. 3. Section 7-562 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): (a) Any municipality which proposes to issue general obligations supported by a tax intercept procedure shall deliver to the secretary, together with the notice described in this section, documentation demonstrating that: (1) Such municipality has authorized the issuance of such obligations in accordance with the general statutes, charter, special act or home rule ordinance or the provisions of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act; (2) such municipality has established a property tax intercept procedure and a debt service payment fund with a trustee in accordance with the provisions of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act; and (3) such property tax intercept procedure shall assure that the property tax receipts transferred to the trustee and deposited in the debt service payment fund shall be in an amount at least equal to and deposited by such dates so as to satisfy the debt service payment fund requirement. (b) Each such property tax intercept procedure and debt service payment fund shall: (1) Take effect immediately upon the issuance of such obligations; (2) provide that all outstanding general obligations of the municipality which have a term of more than one year shall be supported by and paid from debt service payment fund and that property taxes collected by the tax collector of such municipality shall be deposited in such debt service payment fund as provided in subsection (a) of this section; and (3) provide that the tax intercept procedure, the debt service payment fund, any indenture or agreement establishing them, may be amended by the municipality without the consent of any holder of any obligation of the municipality if such amendment does not impair the rights of the holders and is requested by the secretary or the Treasurer. (c) Prior to the issuance of any general obligation and on or prior to the first day of each fiscal year thereafter, a municipality pursuant to its tax intercept procedure shall determine the percentage or amounts of property taxes to be deposited in such debt service payment fund, the time that such taxes shall be deposited therein and such other terms, conditions and requirements as such municipality shall determine to be in the best interest of the municipality, provided such terms, conditions and requirements shall assure that the debt service payment fund shall have money deposited therein by such dates so as to satisfy, and in amounts equal to or in excess of, the debt service payment requirement. Pursuant to the tax intercept procedure, the chief executive officer of such municipality shall certify to both the tax collector of such municipality and the trustee of the debt service payment requirement, the percentage or amount and the time for deposit of the property taxes therein and such other matters with respect to the operations of the fund as may be required by the tax intercept procedure. Such percentage, amount and time shall be sufficient to assure that the debt service payment fund shall at all times have sufficient moneys available to meet the debt service payment fund requirement. The tax collector shall, immediately upon receipt, remit such property taxes in the percentage or amount and at the time set forth in such certificate to the trustee for deposit in the debt service payment fund. Nothing shall preclude the municipality or its duly authorized officers from causing additional amounts of municipal taxes or other funds to be deposited in the fund. (d) If the percentage or amount and the time for deposit of the property taxes and such other matters with respect to the operations of the fund as may be required by the tax intercept procedure are not sufficient to meet the debt service payment fund requirement, the trustee and the chief executive officer shall notify the secretary and the Treasurer and thereafter all property taxes of such municipality shall be intercepted by the tax collector and tendered to the trustee for deposit in the debt service payment fund until the moneys deposited therein shall be at least equal to the debt service payment fund requirement. (e) Funds in the debt service payment fund shall be applied only to pay the outstanding general obligations of the municipality as and when the same shall become due, provided if at any time during any fiscal year, the moneys in the debt service payment fund exceed the debt service payment fund requirement for such fiscal year, the municipality, may instruct the trustee to, and the trustee shall, subject to any restrictions in the tax intercept procedures, pay over to such municipality the amount of such excess for use by the municipality in any manner allowed by law. (f) The trustee shall from time to time withdraw from the debt service payment fund all amounts required for the payment of debt service on all general obligations of the municipality, as the same shall become due, and shall cause the amounts so withdrawn and disbursed to the paying agents for such general obligations to be applied to such payment. (g) The debt service payment fund and all moneys or securities therein or payable thereto are hereby declared to be property of the depositing municipality devoted to essential governmental purposes and accordingly shall not be applied to any purpose other than as provided in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and shall not be subject to any order, judgment, lien, execution, attachment, set-off or counterclaim by any creditor of the municipality, except the trustee. Sec. 4. Section 7-563 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): The tax intercept procedure and the debt service payment fund shall be established pursuant to an indenture or other agreement between the municipality and the trustee. Such indenture or agreement shall include all the terms, conditions and requirements pertaining to the tax intercept procedure and the debt service payment fund in accordance with the requirements of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and the municipality shall agree to comply with all such terms, conditions and requirements for the benefit of the holders of any general obligations supported by such tax intercept procedure. Such indenture or agreement may also include covenants to pay the fees and expenses of the trustee and to indemnify the trustee from claims against the trustee, covenants of the municipality to protect and safeguard the security and rights of the holders of the obligations issued and sold subject thereto and inclusion of such covenants in the contract of the municipality with such holders and for the benefit of any holders of outstanding general obligations, provided such benefit conferred thereon shall not be deemed to restrict, preclude or otherwise impair any rights that such holders currently may assert and, without limiting said rights, such indenture or agreement shall contain covenants as to: (1) Establishment, maintenance and implementation of both the property tax intercept procedure and the debt service payment fund in a manner such that the municipality can transfer to the trustee for deposit in the debt service payment fund amounts at least equal to the debt service payment fund requirement, and the temporary investment of proceeds of such funds pending their use in accordance with [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and subject to such limitations on investment of public funds otherwise provided for by the general statutes; (2) the appointment, rights, powers and duties of the trustee including limiting or abrogating the rights of the holders of such general obligations to appoint any other trustee and vesting in the trustee all or any such rights, duties and powers; and (3) conditions which would give rise to an event of default under the terms and conditions of such general obligations and actions and remedies which the trustee may take and assert on behalf of such holders. Any requirement set forth in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, pertaining to the tax intercept procedure and debt service payment fund may be modified to the extent necessary to comply with any covenant of the municipality necessary to ensure the exclusion of interest on such obligations from gross income for federal income tax purposes. Sec. 5. Section 7-564 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): The holders of general obligations for the benefit of whom the property tax intercept procedure and debt service payment fund is established shall have, in addition to all other rights and remedies under law, the following rights and remedies subject to the terms and conditions of the applicable indenture or agreement with the trustee: (1) In the event the municipality shall fail or refuse to comply with the indenture or agreement with the trustee or shall default in any contract made with the holders of such general obligations, the holders of twenty-five per cent in aggregate principal amounts of such then outstanding obligations, by instrument or instruments filed with the trustee and proved or acknowledged to the satisfaction of the trustee may cause the trustee to take action for the purposes provided for in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. (2) Such trustee may, upon written request of the holders of twenty-five per cent in principal amount of such general obligations then outstanding, in its own name, exercise all or any of the powers of any such holders including: (A) By mandamus or other suit, action or proceeding at law or in equity, enforce all rights of the holders of such general obligations, including requiring the municipality to carry out the provisions of any contract with the holders or any indenture or agreement with the trustee and to perform its duty thereunder; (B) bring suit upon such general obligations; and (C) by action or suit in equity, enjoin any acts or things which may be unlawful or in violation of the rights of the holders of such obligations. (3) Such trustee shall have and possess all of the powers necessary or appropriate for the exercise of any functions specifically set forth in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, or incident to the general representation of the holders of such general obligations of such issue in the enforcement and protection of their rights. (4) The Superior Court shall have jurisdiction of any suit, action or proceeding by or on behalf of the holders of obligations. The venue of such suit, action or proceeding shall be the judicial district in which such municipality is located. Sec. 6. Section 7-565 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): The state does hereby pledge to and agree with the holders of any general obligations issued under [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and with those parties who may enter into contracts with a municipality pursuant to the provisions of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, that the state will not limit or alter the rights hereby vested in a municipality until such obligations, together with the interest thereon, are fully met and discharged and such contracts are fully performed on the part of the municipality, provided nothing in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, shall preclude limitation or alteration if and when adequate provision shall be made by law for the protection of the holders of such general obligations of a municipality or those entering into such contracts with a municipality. A municipality as agent for the state is authorized to include this pledge and undertaking by the state in such general obligations. Sec. 7. Section 7-568 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): (a) Except as expressly provided in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, no municipality shall issue any deficit obligation to fund a general fund deficiency. (b) Notwithstanding any charter, special act or home-rule ordinance to the contrary, any municipality which has no outstanding deficit obligation and which has not issued a deficit obligation in the past five years, is authorized and empowered to issue deficit obligations to fund a deficit, provided such municipality shall, within the time and in the manner prescribed by regulations adopted by the secretary, in consultation with the Treasurer: (1) Notify the secretary of its intent to issue such deficit obligations, (2) provide the secretary with the documentation required under [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, (3) establish a property tax intercept procedure, and (4) establish and covenant to maintain with a trustee a debt service payment fund into which the property tax receipts shall be deposited pursuant to the property tax intercept procedure in an amount at least equal to the debt service payment requirement and from which the trustee shall disburse funds to pay debt service on all general obligations of such municipality which have a term of over one year as and when the same shall become due. [The secretary shall refer to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission, pursuant to the provisions of section 7-395, any municipality which notifies the secretary that it intends to issue deficit obligations under this section.] Notwithstanding any other provisions of sections 1 to 26, inclusive, of this act, any municipality that issues a deficit obligation pursuant to this section or in the five years preceding July 1, 2017, shall be designated a tier III municipality by the secretary. Sec. 8. Section 7-569 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): No municipality, including any certified or designated municipality, shall issue any obligation for which there is a special capital reserve fund of any kind which is in any way contributed to or guaranteed by the state unless and until such obligation, and the indenture or agreement establishing such special capital reserve fund, is approved by the Treasurer. The approval of the Treasurer shall be based on documentation provided and certified by such municipality demonstrating to the Treasurer's satisfaction that (1) the secretary has determined that the municipality is a certified [the] or designated municipality, (2) the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission, in the case of a certified municipality or designated tier I municipality, or the Municipal Accountability Review Board, in the case of a designated tier II, III or IV municipality, has approved the obligation to be issued under [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, (3) the municipality is not in default on any general obligation after giving effect to an obligation approved under this section, (4) the municipality has funded or made due provision to fund the special capital reserve fund, (5) the financing is in the public interest, and (6) the secretary and the Treasurer have approved the property tax intercept procedure authorized by [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. Sec. 9. Section 7-570 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Any certified or designated municipality which has authorized the issue of its general obligations and proposed to issue and secure such general obligations by a special capital reserve fund is hereby empowered to authorize and issue additional general obligations in the manner described in this section, solely for the purposes and in such amounts as are necessary (1) to fund all or a portion of such special capital reserve fund and (2) to pay all or a portion of the costs of issuing such authorized general obligations and such additional general obligations. Such additional general obligations and the appropriation of the proceeds thereof shall be authorized by a resolution adopted by a majority of all the members of the legislative body of the municipality, which for purposes of this section shall mean the body described below, notwithstanding the provisions of any general statute, special act, charter, special act charter, home-rule ordinance, local ordinance or local law governing the authorization of bonds or other obligations of such municipality or the appropriation of the proceeds thereof, all of which provisions are hereby superseded solely for the purposes of this section, including, but not limited to, any public hearing requirement, referendum approval requirement, referendum petition requirement, or recommendation or approval by any official, board, commission, agency, town meeting, representative town meeting, board of finance or other entity. The legislative body of the municipality empowered to authorize such additional obligations shall mean (A) the board of selectmen in any town without a charter, (B) the board of selectmen, council, board of directors, board of aldermen or board of burgesses in any municipality with a charter, (C) the board of education in any regional school district, (D) the city council in any unconsolidated city, (E) the board of burgesses in any unconsolidated borough, and (F) the board of directors or similar body in any other municipality. Notwithstanding any provision of a local law, ordinance, charter, special act charter, home-rule ordinance or the provisions of any bond authorizing ordinance or resolution, a certified or designated municipality's obligations may be sold at public sale on sealed proposal, by negotiation or by private placement in such manner at such price or prices, at such time or times and on such terms or conditions as the Treasurer determines to be in the best interest of the municipality and the state. Any certified or designated municipality which issues general obligations under [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, shall transfer bond proceeds and such other funds to the special capital reserve fund in the amount necessary to cause the amount of money in the special capital reserve fund to equal the maximum required capital reserve and to maintain therein an amount equal to the maximum required capital reserve. Sec. 10. Section 7-571 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): (a) Any certified or designated municipality may establish a special capital reserve fund to secure general obligations with a term of more than one year issued pursuant to [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. The special capital reserve fund shall be established pursuant to an indenture or other agreement between the municipality and the trustee. Such indenture or agreement shall include all the terms, conditions and requirements pertaining to the special capital reserve fund in accordance with the requirements of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, any requirements imposed by the secretary or the Treasurer, and any requirements imposed by the ordinance or resolution authorizing the issuance of such general obligations, and the municipality shall agree to comply with all such terms, conditions and requirements for the benefit of the holders of any general obligations supported by such special capital reserve fund and for the benefit of the state. Such indenture or agreement may also include covenants to pay the fees and expenses of the trustee and to indemnify the trustee against claims against the trustee and any other provisions which the municipality determines are necessary or appropriate to secure general obligations. The municipal officer or body empowered to issue such general obligations or to determine the details of such general obligations authorized by the municipality may establish such capital reserve fund and may determine the details and approve the terms of all indentures and agreements and other instruments necessary or appropriate to establish and implement such special capital reserve fund as provided in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and may bind the municipality pursuant to any such indenture or agreement. (b) The special capital reserve fund shall consist of (1) bond proceeds and other moneys of the municipality available to be deposited therein and (2) any money made available therefor by the state in accordance with this section. All moneys held in the special capital reserve fund, except as hereinafter provided, shall be used to pay interest due and owing in respect of general obligations of the municipality secured by such special capital reserve fund and for the redemption and retirement of such general obligations as they mature or become due pursuant to any sinking fund redemption provisions, or for the redemption and retirement of such general obligations pursuant to any refinancing or refunding provided any such refinancing or refunding obligations are not supported by any special capital reserve fund and any amounts in such special capital reserve fund are first applied to repay to the state any amounts which the state has paid or deposited in the special capital reserve fund and which the municipality has not repaid to the state. Income and interest from the investment of moneys in the special capital reserve fund shall be retained therein to meet any deficiencies in the maximum required capital reserve. Any amounts in excess of the maximum required capital reserve may be transferred first to the state in an amount equal to the aggregate amount transferred by the state for deposit in the special capital payment fund minus the aggregate amount of all previous reimbursements to the state, second to the debt service payment fund until the moneys in the debt service reserve fund equal or exceed the debt service payment requirement, and third to the municipality. Notwithstanding any provisions of this section, no municipality shall issue an obligation secured by a special capital reserve fund unless and until there is in the special capital reserve fund moneys and investments in an aggregate amount equal to the maximum required capital reserve, after giving effect to such obligations being issued. Any municipality may appropriate and deposit bond proceeds into the special capital reserve fund to bring the amount of money and investments therein to the maximum required capital reserve. Any requirement set forth in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, pertaining to the special capital reserve fund may be modified to the extent necessary to comply with any covenant of the municipality necessary to ensure the exclusion of interest on general obligations of the municipality supported by the special capital reserve fund from gross income for federal income tax purposes. On or before December first of each year, there is deemed to be appropriated from the state General Fund such sums, if any, as shall be certified by the chief executive officer of a certified or designated municipality to the secretary, the Treasurer and the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission for a certified municipality or a designated tier I municipality, or the Municipal Accountability Review Board, for a designated tier II, III or IV municipality, as necessary to restore special capital reserve fund to an amount equal to the minimum required capital reserve, and such amounts shall be allotted and paid from the General Fund of the state to the trustee for deposit in the special capital reserve fund. Such amounts, if any, shall be repaid by the municipality to the state and credited to the General Fund as soon as possible, from any moneys available therefor. For purposes of valuation of the special capital reserve fund, securities acquired as an investment for such fund shall be valued at par, actual cost to the certified or designated municipality or market value, whichever value is lower. Sec. 11. Section 7-572 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Any municipality that desires to issue general obligations under section 7-573, as amended by this act, shall apply to the secretary for certification or designation. The secretary may certify as a [Tier] tier I municipality any municipality which applies to be certified, provided such municipality (1) has a long-term bond rating from at least one bond rating agency which is investment grade or higher, (2) is unable to secure municipal bond insurance from any bond insurance company on reasonable terms and conditions on the date the secretary certifies such municipality, and (3) otherwise meets the standards established by the secretary. Such standards shall be [adopted as regulations] established in writing by the secretary, [in consultation] after consulting with the Treasurer, [and] shall provide for a level of supervision over such municipality which the secretary deems to be sufficient to minimize the risk of a draw upon the special capital reserve fund and a transfer from the state General Fund and shall be posted on the Internet web site of the Office of Policy and Management. The secretary may recertify and decertify any municipality then certified, provided the secretary shall not automatically decertify any municipality which is able to secure bond insurance after it has been certified by the secretary. Sec. 12. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) A municipality shall be designated a tier I municipality by the secretary if any of the following conditions exist: (1) The municipality has no bond rating, or its highest bond rating is A or above, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, receives less than thirty per cent of its current fiscal year general fund budget revenues in the form of municipal aid from the state, has a positive fund balance percentage, and has a municipal revenue increase in fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, as a per cent of revenues of two per cent or more, (2) the municipality has no bond rating or its highest bond rating is A, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, receives less than thirty per cent of its current fiscal year general fund budget revenues in the form of municipal aid from the state, and had a positive fund balance percentage of less than five per cent, (3) the municipality's highest bond rating is AA or above, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, receives thirty per cent or more of its current fiscal year general fund budget revenues in the form of municipal aid from the state, has an equalized mill rate of less than thirty, has a positive fund balance percentage, and has a municipal revenue increase in fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, as a per cent of revenues of two per cent or more, or (4) the secretary, based on reports and findings of the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission, finds the fiscal condition of the municipality to warrant a designation as a tier I municipality. (b) The secretary shall refer any municipality which is designated as a tier I municipality to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission, pursuant to the provisions of section 7-395 of the general statutes. In addition to the requirements of section 7-394b of the general statutes, such municipality shall prepare and present a three-year financial plan to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission for its review and approval. Sec. 13. Section 7-573 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Any [Tier I] tier I certified municipality or designated tier I municipality that meets the eligibility requirements of subdivisions (1) to (3), inclusive, of section 7-572, as amended by this act, may issue general obligations with a term of more than one year which are supported by a special capital reserve fund, but not general obligations to fund a general fund deficiency, as provided in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. Any such [Tier] tier I municipality shall, within the time and in the manner prescribed by [regulations] written procedures adopted by the secretary, in consultation with the Treasurer: (1) Notify the secretary of its intent to issue such obligations, (2) provide the secretary with the documentation required under [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, (3) establish a property tax intercept procedure and debt service payment fund in accordance with the provisions of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and (4) comply with sections 7-569 to 7-571, inclusive, as amended by this act. The secretary shall refer to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission, pursuant to the provisions of section 7-395, any tier I certified municipality which notifies the secretary that it intends to issue obligations under this section. Sec. 14. Section 7-574 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Any municipality that desires to issue general obligations under section 7-575, as amended by this act, shall apply to the secretary for certification. The secretary may certify as a tier II municipality any municipality which applies to be certified to issue a general obligation authorized by [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, provided such municipality (1) has a long-term bond rating from at least one bond rating agency which is investment grade or higher, (2) is unable to obtain municipal bond insurance from any bond insurance company on reasonable terms and conditions on the date the secretary certifies such municipality, (3) has not issued a deficit obligation in the last five years, (4) has no deficit obligations outstanding, and (5) otherwise meets the standards established by the secretary. Such standards shall be [adopted as regulations] established in writing by the secretary, [in consultation] after consulting with the Treasurer, [and] shall provide for a level of supervision over such municipality which the secretary deems to be sufficient to minimize the risk of a draw upon the special capital reserve fund and a transfer from the state General Fund and shall be posted on the Internet web site of the Office of Policy and Management. The secretary may recertify and decertify any municipality then certified, provided the secretary shall not automatically decertify any municipality which is able to secure bond insurance after it has been certified by the secretary. Sec. 15. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) A municipality shall be designated a tier II municipality by the secretary if any of the following conditions exist: (1) The municipality has no bond rating from a bond rating agency, or, if its highest bond rating is A, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, receives thirty per cent or more of its current fiscal year general fund budget revenues in the form of municipal aid from the state, has a positive fund balance percentage of five per cent or more, has an equalized mill rate of less than thirty, and has a municipal revenue increase in fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, as a per cent of revenues of two per cent or more, (2) the municipality has no bond rating from a bond rating agency, or, if its highest bond rating is A, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, receives thirty per cent or more of its current fiscal year general fund budget revenues in the form of municipal aid from the state, has an equalized mill rate of less than thirty, and has a positive fund balance percentage of less than five per cent, (3) the municipality's highest bond rating is AA or higher, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, receives thirty per cent or more of its current fiscal year general fund budget revenues in the form of municipal aid from the state, and has an equalized mill rate of thirty or more, (4) the municipality's highest bond rating is AA or higher, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, and has a negative fund balance percentage, (5) the municipality's highest bond rating is Baa or BBB, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, has a positive fund balance percentage and an equalized mill rate of less than thirty, or (6) the secretary, based on reports and findings of the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission, finds that the fiscal condition of the municipality warrants its designation as a tier II municipality. (b) The secretary shall refer any municipality designated as a tier II municipality to the Municipal Accountability Review Board established pursuant to section 19 of this act. Said board shall have the same authority and responsibilities possessed by the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission with respect to tier II certified municipalities referred to it, including, but not limited to, requiring that such municipalities prepare and present to said board for its review and approval a three-year financial plan and monthly financial reports, in a manner prescribed by said board. In preparing and adopting its annual budgets, such municipality shall only include assumptions respecting state revenues and property tax revenues as approved by such board and such board shall approve or disapprove all obligations issued by a designated tier II municipality pursuant to section 7-575 of the general statutes, as amended by this act, and this section, provided it shall only approve such obligations which in its judgment improve the financial condition of such municipality. Sec. 16. Section 7-575 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Any tier II certified municipality or any designated tier II, III or IV municipality that meets the eligibility requirements of subdivisions (1) to (5), inclusive, of section 14 of this act, or any designated tier IV municipality that does not meet such eligibility requirements but receives approval by the Municipal Accountability Review Board pursuant subdivision (7) of subsection (a) of section 20 of this act, may issue general obligations with a term of more than one year which are supported by a special capital reserve fund, including general obligations to fund a deficit, as provided in [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act provided no municipality shall issue an obligation with a term of more than one year to fund a projected fiscal year deficit. Any such certified or designated tier II municipality shall, within the time and in the manner prescribed by [regulations adopted] written standards established by the secretary, [in consultation] after consulting with the Treasurer: (1) Notify the secretary of its intent to issue such obligations, (2) provide the secretary with the documentation required under [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, (3) establish a property tax intercept procedure and debt service payment fund in accordance with the provisions of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and (4) comply with sections 7-569 to 7-571, inclusive, as amended by this act. The secretary shall refer to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission, pursuant to the provisions of section 7-395, any certified tier II municipality which notifies the secretary that it intends to issue obligations under this section. A municipality that issues a deficit obligation pursuant to this section shall be a designated tier III municipality. Sec. 17. Section 7-576 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Each tier II certified municipality shall work with and report to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission as provided for in this section. The secretary shall refer to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission any tier II certified municipality for the purpose of improving the fiscal condition of such municipality. Such municipality shall prepare and present to the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission for its review and approval a three-year financial plan and monthly financial report in the manner prescribed by the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission. In addition, in preparing and adopting its annual budgets, such municipality shall include assumptions respecting state revenues and property tax revenues as approved by the Municipal Finance Advisory Commission. The Municipal Finance Advisory Commission shall approve or disapprove all obligations issued by a tier II certified municipality pursuant to section 7-575, as amended by this act, and this section, [inclusive,] provided it shall only approve such obligations which in its judgment improve the financial condition of such municipality. Sec. 18. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) A municipality shall be designated as a tier III municipality if any of the following conditions exist: (1) The municipality has at least one bond rating from a bond rating agency that is below investment grade, (2) the municipality has no bond rating from a bond rating agency, or, if its highest bond rating is A, Baa or BBB, provided the municipality has no rating that is not investment grade, and it has either (A) a negative fund balance percentage, or (B) an equalized mill rate that is thirty or more and it receives thirty per cent or more of its current fiscal year general fund budget revenues in the form of municipal aid from the state, or (3) the municipality issues a deficit obligation or has issued a deficit obligation in the five years preceding July 1, 2017. (b) The secretary shall refer any municipality that is a designated tier III municipality to the Municipal Accountability Review Board established pursuant to the provisions of section 19 of this act. The Municipal Accountability Review Board, with the approval of at least two-thirds of its members, may redesignate or designate a tier II municipality as a tier III municipality following a finding that the fiscal condition of the municipality warrants such a designation. Any such designation shall require the approval of the Governor. Sec. 19. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) There is established a Municipal Accountability Review Board, which shall be in the Office of Policy and Management for administrative purposes only and which shall be comprised of the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, or the secretary's designee, who shall be the chairperson of the board, the State Treasurer, or the State Treasurer's designee, who shall be the co-chairperson of the board, four members appointed by the Governor, including one of whom shall be a resident of a tier II, III, or IV municipality, one of whom shall have expertise in finance, one of whom shall be affiliated with a business located in a designated or certified tier II, III or IV municipality and one whom shall be a current or former municipal chief executive officer or municipal financial officer. If more than two municipalities are designated tier III or IV municipalities, the Governor may make additional appointments to the board provided such additional appointees shall be assigned to serve in regard to specified municipalities referred to such board. In addition, with regard to each municipality designated for referral to the board, the members of the board shall include: (1) The chief elected official of the municipality, (2) a chief executive officer of a bargaining unit representing employees of the municipality, who is jointly recommended by a majority of the chief executive officers of the administrative units of the municipality, provided such recommendation shall be made not later than thirty days after the municipality's designation as a tier II, III or IV municipality, and (3) one member to be appointed by the Governor, based upon a recommendation by the council of governments for the region in which the designated tier II, III or IV municipality is located. The members of the board shall serve without compensation, but shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred in performance of their duties. Expenses of the board related to its work with designated tier III or IV municipalities, including any staff, consultants and other expenses adopted by the board, may, following consultation with such municipalities, be charged to such municipalities by the board and may be paid from the proceeds of any deficit obligation or debt restructuring bonds. (b) Each designated tier III municipality shall work with the Municipal Accountability Review Board and report to it as provided for in this section. In addition to possessing such powers granted to such board with respect to the designated or certified tier II municipalities referred to it, the following shall apply: (1) The board shall review and comment on the municipality's annual budget prior to its adoption by the legislative body. (2) In preparing and adopting its annual budgets, the municipality shall only include assumptions respecting state revenues and property tax revenues and a mill rate as are approved by the board. (3) The board shall approve or disapprove all obligations issued by a tier III municipality that is eligible to issue bonds pursuant to the provisions of section 7-575 of the general statutes, as amended by this act, provided it shall only approve such obligations which in its judgment improve the financial condition of such municipality. (4) The board shall review and comment on proposed debt obligations of the municipality not covered by section 7-575 of the general statutes, as amended by this act, prior to their issuance. (5) The board may approve or disapprove any contract of the municipality exceeding two hundred thousand dollars. (6) With respect to any proposed collective bargaining agreement negotiated pursuant to sections 7-467 to 7-477, inclusive, of the general statutes or pursuant to section 10-153d of the general statutes, the board shall review and comment on the impact of any such agreement on the municipality's financial plan and fiscal sustainability prior to action on such proposed agreement by the municipal legislative body or legislative body of the local or regional school district, as applicable. (7) The board may review and comment on the impact of any arbitration award on the municipality's financial plan and fiscal sustainability prior to the ability of the municipal legislative body pursuant to section 7-473c of the general statutes or the legislative body of the local or regional school district pursuant to section 10-153f of the general statutes to act on such awards. (8) The board shall monitor compliance with the municipality's three-year financial plan and annual budget and recommend that the municipality make such changes as are necessary to ensure budgetary balance in such plan and budget. (9) The board shall recommend that the municipality implement measures relating to the efficiency and productivity of the municipality's operations and management as the board deems appropriate, to reduce costs and improve services so as to advance the purposes of sections 1 to 26, inclusive, of this act. (10) The board may obtain information on the financial condition and financial needs of the municipality. (11) The board, in consultation with the municipality, may retain such staff and hire consultants experienced in the field of municipal finance, municipal law, governmental operations and administration or governmental accounting as it deems necessary or desirable for accomplishing its purposes. (12) The board shall establish such written procedures as the board deems necessary to carry out its responsibilities and meet the purposes of sections 1 to 26, inclusive, of this act. (13) The board may impose reasonable requirements necessary for a municipality to receive any budgeted increase in any state assistance. (c) With respect to any municipality referred to the Municipal Review Accountability Board, such municipality and each of its administrative units shall supply the board with such financial reports, data, audits, statements and any other records or documentation as the board may require to exercise its powers and to perform its duties and functions. Such reports may include, but shall not be limited to, (1) proposed budgets, (2) monthly reports of the financial condition of the municipality, (3) the status of the municipality's current annual budget and progress under its financial plan for the then current fiscal year, (4) estimates of the operating results for all funds or accounts to the end of the then current fiscal year, (5) pension plan and debt projections, (6) statements and projections of general fund cash flow reserves, (7) the number of municipal employees on the municipal payroll, and (8) debt service requirements on all bonds and notes of the municipality for the following month. Sec. 20. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) The chief elected official of a tier III municipality may apply to the secretary to request designation as a designated tier IV municipality. The secretary may approve the request if the secretary determines that such designation is necessary to ensure the fiscal sustainability of the municipality and is in the best interests of the state. The Municipal Accountability Review Board, with the approval of at least two-thirds of its members, may designate a tier III municipality as a tier IV municipality based on a finding by the board that the fiscal condition of such municipality warrants such a designation. Such designation shall require the approval of the Governor. Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 7 to 16, inclusive, of this act, a municipality designated tier IV municipality pursuant to this section shall retain such designation following the issuance of a deficit obligation subsequent to such municipality's designation as a tier IV municipality. With respect to a designated tier IV municipality, the Municipal Accountability Review Board shall have the same powers and responsibilities as it has with respect to designated tier III municipalities in addition to which it shall have the following additional or superseding authority and responsibilities: (1) To review and approve or disapprove the municipality's annual budget, including, but not limited to, the general fund, other governmental funds, enterprise funds and internal service funds. No annual budget, annual tax levy or user fee for the municipality shall become operative until it has been approved by the board. If the board disapproves any annual budget, it shall adopt an interim budget and establish a tax rate and user fees. Such interim budget shall take effect at the commencement of the fiscal year and shall remain in effect until the municipality submits and the board approves a modified budget. (2) To review and approve all bond ordinances and bond resolutions of the municipality. (3) To monitor compliance with the municipality's three-year financial plan and annual budget and require that the municipality make such changes as are necessary to ensure budgetary balance in such plan and budget. (4) (A) To approve or reject all collective bargaining agreements for a new term, other than modifications, amendments or reopenings of an agreement, to be entered into by the municipality or any of its agencies or administrative units, including the board of education. If it rejects an agreement, the board shall indicate the specific provisions of the proposed agreement which caused the rejection, as well as its rationale for the rejection. The board may indicate the total cost impact or savings that are acceptable in a new agreement. Following any rejection of a proposed collective bargaining agreement, the parties to the agreement shall have ten days from the date of the board's rejection to consider the board's concerns and propose a modified agreement. After the expiration of such ten-day period, the board shall approve or reject any such modified agreement. If the parties have been unable to reach an agreement or the board rejects such modified agreement, the board shall set forth the terms of the agreement, which shall be binding upon the parties. In establishing the terms of the agreement, as well as in making a determination to reject a proposed agreement, the parties shall have an opportunity to make a presentation to the board. The board shall not be limited to consideration and inclusion in the collective bargaining agreement of matters raised or negotiated by the parties; and (B) to approve or reject all modifications, amendments or reopeners to collective bargaining agreements entered into by the municipality or any of its agencies or administrative units, including the board of education. If it rejects an amendment to an agreement, the board shall indicate the specific provisions of the proposed amendment which caused the rejection, as well as its rationale for the rejection. The board may indicate the total cost impact or savings acceptable in a new amendment. If the board rejects a proposed amendment to a collective bargaining agreement, the parties to the agreement shall have ten days from the date of the board's rejection to consider the board's concerns and put forth a modified amendment. After the expiration of such ten-day period, the board shall approve or reject any revised amendment. If the parties are unable to reach a modified amendment or the board rejects such modified amendment, the board shall set forth the terms of the new amendment, which shall be binding upon the parties. For the purposes of this subparagraph, the board shall be limited to the subject of any proposed amendment. In establishing the terms of the new agreement, as well as in making a determination to reject a proposed amendment pursuant to this subdivision, the parties shall have an opportunity to make a presentation to the board. (5) With respect to collective bargaining agreements of the municipality or any of its agencies or administrative units, including, but not limited to, the board of education that are in or are subject to binding arbitration, to serve as the binding arbitration panel. The board shall have the power to impose binding arbitration upon the parties any time after the seventy-fifth day following the commencement of negotiations or to reject any arbitration award pending potential municipal or board of education legislative action pursuant to section 7-473c or 10-153f of the general statutes. If, upon the date of a municipality's designation as a tier IV municipality, the parties are in binding arbitration, the board shall immediately replace any established binding arbitration panel. The board may reduce the time limits in the applicable provisions of the general statutes or any public or special acts governing binding arbitration by one-half. The board shall not be limited to consideration and inclusion in the collective bargaining agreement of the last best offers or the matters raised by or negotiated by the parties. (6) (A) To require its approval of proposed transfers of a municipality's appropriations in excess of fifty thousand dollars, (B) to review, approve, disapprove or modify the budget of the board of education for the municipality on a line-item basis and to require the board of education to submit to it any budget transfers, or (C) to appoint a financial manager and delegate to such manager, in writing, such powers as the board deems necessary or appropriate for the purpose of managing the financial and administrative affairs of the municipality for the period of time during which the municipality is subject to the powers of the board provided the board may override any actions taken by such manager at any time and shall not delegate the powers enumerated under subdivisions (2), (3) and (5) to (7), inclusive, and (11) to (13), inclusive, of subsection (b) of section 19 of this act, or subdivisions (1), (2) and (4) to (7), inclusive, of this section. (7) To approve and authorize the issuance of obligations under section 7-575 of the general statutes, as amended by this act, including, with regard to a designated tier IV municipality otherwise ineligible to issue such obligations, for the purposes of issuing general obligations for purposes of deficit financing, addressing pension liabilities in accordance with section 7-374c of the general statutes, debt restructuring and other purposes allowed for which municipal obligations are authorized by the general statutes. (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 7-370c of the general statutes, or any other public or special act, local law or charter, or ordinance or resolution, which limits or imposes conditions on the date of the first maturity of, or the due date of the first sinking fund payment for, or on the amount of any principal or any principal and interest installments on, or sinking fund payment deposit for, refunding bonds issued by any municipality, the board may authorize a designated tier IV municipality to issue refunding bonds for which the provisions of section 7-371 of the general statutes regarding such limitations shall not apply, regardless of whether or not such refunding bonds achieve net present value savings, as described in section 7-370c of the general statutes, with respect to the refunded bonds. The board shall only approve the issue of such refunding bonds upon a determination that, in its judgment, the issue of such bonds will improve the financial condition of such municipality. (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 7-370c or 7-371 of the general statutes, or any other public or special act, local law or charter, or ordinance or resolution, which limits or imposes conditions on the final maturity of, or the due date of the last sinking fund payment for, bonds issued by any municipality, the board may authorize a designated tier IV municipality to issue bonds for which the last installment of any series of such bonds shall mature, or the last sinking fund payment for such series of bonds shall be due, not later than thirty years from the date of issue of such bonds. The board shall only approve the issuance of such bonds upon a determination that, in its judgment, such issuance will improve the financial condition of such municipality. Sec. 21. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) A municipality designated as tier I municipality in accordance with section 12 of this act or a tier II municipality in accordance with section 15 of this act shall retain such designation, notwithstanding any positive changes in the factors leading to its current designation, for a minimum of the two fiscal years subsequent to its most current designation or until, following any such designation, (1) there have been no annual operating budgetary deficits in the general fund of the municipality for two consecutive fiscal years, (2) the municipality's bond rating has either improved or remained unchanged since its most current designation, (3) the municipality has presented and the commission or board has approved a financial plan that projects a positive unreserved fund for the three succeeding consecutive fiscal years covered by such financial plan, and (4) the municipality's audits for such consecutive fiscal years have been completed and contain no general fund deficit. Notwithstanding any other provisions of sections 1 to 26, inclusive, of this act, the municipality shall remain undesignated for purposes of a tier designation, unless circumstances would result in the municipality being designated as a tier numerically higher than its most recent designation. Sec. 22. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) A municipality designated as tier III municipality in accordance with section 18 of this act or tier IV municipality in accordance with section 20 of this act shall retain such designation, for a minimum of the three fiscal years subsequent to its most current designation notwithstanding any positive changes in the factors leading to its current designation, or until, following its most current designation: (1) There have been no annual operating budgetary deficits in the general fund of the municipality for three consecutive fiscal years, (2) the municipality's bond rating has either improved or remained unchanged since its most current designation, provided it has no bond ratings that are below investment grade, (3) the municipality has presented and the board has approved a financial plan that projects a positive unreserved fund balance for the three succeeding consecutive fiscal years covered by such financial plan, and (4) the audits for the aforementioned consecutive fiscal years have been completed and contain no general fund deficit. (b) Notwithstanding any other provisions of sections 1 to 26, inclusive, of this act, the municipality shall remain undesignated for purposes of a tier designation, unless it has an annual operating budgetary deficit in its general fund equal to one per cent or more of its most recently completed annual general fund budget or if it experiences an annual operating budgetary deficit in its general fund in consecutive years of any amount or if it has one or more bond ratings that are below investment grade. Sec. 23. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) A designated tier II, III or IV municipality shall not enact a property tax levy in its annual budget that is more than three per cent greater than the property tax levy contained in its annual budget for the prior fiscal year. The secretary shall develop such procedures and guidelines as may be needed to assist in the implementation of such property tax levy limitation. Any designated tier II, III or IV municipality may apply to the Municipal Accountability Review Board for exceptions to such property tax levy limitation. Factors to be considered by such board in approving or disapproving such exception shall include the need to address critical matters impacting the health and welfare of the citizens, funding needed to reduce a municipality's long-term obligations and the implementation of court orders or legal settlements. Sec. 24. Section 7-577 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): (a) The Attorney General may apply for a writ of mandamus on behalf of the [commission] Municipal Finance Advisory Commission or the Municipal Accountability Review Board, acting through its chairperson, requiring any official, employee or agent of the municipality to carry out and give effect to any determination of the commission authorized by [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, and any obligation by a municipality to repay to the state any amounts the state pays into a special capital reserve fund and compliance by a municipality with any agreements or indenture pertaining to a special capital reserve fund or tax intercept procedure or debt service payment fund related thereto. Each such application shall be filed in superior court for the judicial district of Hartford. (b) The superior court for the judicial district of Hartford may, by application of the secretary, the commission, the Municipal Accountability Review Board or the Attorney General, enforce, by appropriate decree or process, any provisions of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act, or any act or determination of the commission rendered pursuant to [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-579, inclusive, as amended by this act. Sec. 25. Section 7-578 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): Within one year of initial participation [in] as a certified tier I or tier II municipality, a participating municipality may develop a comprehensive economic development plan designed to increase the tax base of the municipality to a level that will allow the municipality to provide an adequate level of municipal services. The plan shall be approved by the legislative authority of the municipality. If at any time after the comprehensive economic development plan has been completed and the municipality fails to show substantial progress in meeting the goals of the plan, the state may suspend further assistance to the municipality. The secretary, in consultation with the Commissioner of Economic and Community Development, shall evaluate the comprehensive economic development plan annually. The secretary may provide qualified staff and financial assistance to the qualifying municipality for purposes of developing a comprehensive economic development plan. Sec. 26. Section 7-579 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): For the purposes of [subsection (a) of section 7-394b and] sections 7-560 to 7-578, inclusive, as amended by this act, deficit obligation, as defined in section 7-560, with respect to the town and city of New Haven, means such obligation issued on or after July 1, 1993. Sec. 27. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) Each municipality shall annually reimburse the state for a portion of the state's contributions to the teachers' retirement system made pursuant to section 10-183z of the general statutes. Such reimbursement payment shall be made not later than December thirty-first of each fiscal year. For the fiscal years ending June 30, 2018, and June 30, 2019, the amounts of such payments to be made by each municipality are as follows: T1 Reimbursement Reimbursement T2 for for T3 Fiscal Year 2018 Fiscal Year 2019 T4 Andover 431,456 445,479 T5 Ansonia 1,380,587 1,425,456 T6 Ashford 452,003 466,693 T7 Avon 2,887,735 2,981,586 T8 Barkhamsted 409,944 423,267 T9 Beacon Falls 637,285 657,997 T10 Berlin 2,441,492 2,520,840 T11 Bethany 749,833 774,202 T12 Bethel 2,332,959 2,408,780 T13 Bethlehem 304,101 313,984 T14 Bloomfield 2,009,129 2,074,426 T15 Bolton 713,027 736,200 T16 Bozrah 272,946 281,817 T17 Town of Branford 2,747,784 2,837,087 T18 Bridgeport 12,908,368 13,327,890 T19 Bridgewater 169,504 175,013 T20 Bristol 5,994,524 6,189,347 T21 Brookfield 2,119,039 2,187,907 T22 Brooklyn 767,308 792,245 T23 Burlington 1,276,359 1,317,840 T24 Canaan 172,333 177,933 T25 Canterbury 479,505 495,089 T26 Canton 1,230,338 1,270,324 T27 Chaplin 279,788 288,881 T28 Cheshire 3,508,100 3,622,113 T29 Chester 310,439 320,528 T30 Clinton 1,725,858 1,781,949 T31 Colchester 2,081,212 2,148,852 T32 Colebrook 169,448 174,955 T33 Columbia 613,199 633,128 T34 Cornwall 192,670 198,931 T35 Coventry 1,357,867 1,401,998 T36 Cromwell 1,442,833 1,489,725 T37 Danbury 7,411,220 7,652,085 T38 Darien 4,584,090 4,733,073 T39 Deep River 418,412 432,010 T40 Derby 980,928 1,012,808 T41 Durham 1,085,539 1,120,819 T42 Eastford 183,496 189,459 T43 East Granby 770,240 795,273 T44 East Haddam 1,016,006 1,049,027 T45 East Hampton 1,528,350 1,578,021 T46 East Hartford 5,716,884 5,902,683 T47 East Haven 2,282,352 2,356,528 T48 East Lyme 2,252,917 2,326,137 T49 Easton 1,298,824 1,341,036 T50 East Windsor 1,052,181 1,086,377 T51 Ellington 1,898,286 1,959,980 T52 Enfield 4,254,110 4,392,369 T53 Essex 606,580 626,294 T54 Fairfield 9,194,608 9,493,433 T55 Farmington 3,343,850 3,452,525 T56 Franklin 193,209 199,488 T57 Glastonbury 5,098,541 5,264,244 T58 Goshen 322,064 332,531 T59 Granby 1,514,998 1,564,236 T60 Greenwich 10,053,427 10,380,164 T61 Griswold 1,349,780 1,393,648 T62 Groton 3,970,190 4,099,221 T63 Guilford 2,865,342 2,958,465 T64 Haddam 1,102,026 1,137,842 T65 Hamden 4,812,509 4,968,915 T66 Hampton 175,822 181,537 T67 Hartford 17,059,239 17,613,665 T68 Hartland 192,298 198,548 T69 Harwinton 658,967 680,384 T70 Hebron 1,362,129 1,406,399 T71 Kent 309,444 319,501 T72 Killingly 1,752,218 1,809,165 T73 Killingworth 757,422 782,038 T74 Lebanon 851,915 879,603 T75 Ledyard 1,913,289 1,975,471 T76 Lisbon 429,293 443,245 T77 Litchfield 900,232 929,490 T78 Lyme 288,526 297,903 T79 Madison 2,602,739 2,687,329 T80 Manchester 5,081,279 5,246,421 T81 Mansfield 1,662,704 1,716,741 T82 Marlborough 840,959 868,290 T83 Meriden 5,842,301 6,032,176 T84 Middlebury 1,029,867 1,063,337 T85 Middlefield 551,370 569,289 T86 Middletown 3,683,211 3,802,916 T87 Milford 5,581,054 5,762,438 T88 Monroe 3,017,406 3,115,472 T89 Montville 2,039,532 2,105,817 T90 Morris 281,468 290,615 T91 Naugatuck 3,173,613 3,276,755 T92 New Britain 7,512,822 7,756,989 T93 New Canaan 4,198,553 4,335,006 T94 New Fairfield 2,069,310 2,136,562 T95 New Hartford 801,726 827,782 T96 New Haven 14,966,054 15,452,451 T97 Newington 3,457,889 3,570,271 T98 New London 2,188,925 2,260,065 T99 New Milford 3,088,270 3,188,639 T100 Newtown 3,917,100 4,044,406 T101 Norfolk 152,352 157,303 T102 North Branford 1,473,670 1,521,564 T103 North Canaan 417,493 431,062 T104 North Haven 2,494,713 2,575,792 T105 North Stonington 641,730 662,587 T106 Norwalk 9,215,371 9,514,871 T107 Norwich 3,331,735 3,440,017 T108 Old Lyme 1,062,442 1,096,971 T109 Old Saybrook 1,271,219 1,312,533 T110 Orange 1,997,989 2,062,923 T111 Oxford 1,330,435 1,373,674 T112 Plainfield 1,589,753 1,641,420 T113 Plainville 1,927,428 1,990,069 T114 Plymouth 1,236,815 1,277,012 T115 Pomfret 447,189 461,723 T116 Portland 966,127 997,526 T117 Preston 457,631 472,504 T118 Prospect 999,501 1,031,985 T119 Putnam 790,031 815,707 T120 Redding 1,740,644 1,797,215 T121 Ridgefield 4,407,654 4,550,903 T122 Rocky Hill 2,027,836 2,093,741 T123 Roxbury 307,820 317,824 T124 Salem 348,037 359,349 T125 Salisbury 389,052 401,697 T126 Scotland 222,785 230,025 T127 Seymour 1,732,618 1,788,928 T128 Sharon 309,766 319,833 T129 Shelton 3,726,462 3,847,572 T130 Sherman 389,839 402,509 T131 Simsbury 3,634,442 3,752,561 T132 Somers 1,157,222 1,194,832 T133 Southbury 2,179,715 2,250,556 T134 Southington 4,547,523 4,695,318 T135 South Windsor 3,591,178 3,707,891 T136 Sprague 283,602 292,819 T137 Stafford 1,295,535 1,337,640 T138 Stamford 14,188,331 14,649,453 T139 Sterling 294,708 304,286 T140 Stonington 1,775,660 1,833,369 T141 Stratford 5,413,087 5,589,013 T142 Suffield 1,860,799 1,921,275 T143 Thomaston 751,201 775,615 T144 Thompson 769,109 794,105 T145 Tolland 1,934,215 1,997,078 T146 Torrington 3,250,448 3,356,088 T147 Trumbull 5,476,968 5,654,970 T148 Union 84,703 87,456 T149 Vernon 2,884,556 2,978,304 T150 Voluntown 295,379 304,978 T151 Wallingford 5,230,018 5,399,994 T152 Warren 140,734 145,308 T153 Washington 423,138 436,890 T154 Waterbury 12,291,680 12,691,160 T155 Waterford 2,383,220 2,460,675 T156 Watertown 2,310,071 2,385,148 T157 Westbrook 823,917 850,695 T158 West Hartford 8,011,568 8,271,945 T159 West Haven 4,458,510 4,603,411 T160 Weston 2,355,644 2,432,202 T161 Westport 5,877,870 6,068,901 T162 Wethersfield 2,801,870 2,892,931 T163 Willington 613,739 633,686 T164 Wilton 3,998,115 4,128,054 T165 Winchester 594,612 613,937 T166 Windham 2,520,456 2,602,371 T167 Windsor 3,208,290 3,312,560 T168 Windsor Locks 1,526,083 1,575,681 T169 Wolcott 1,830,112 1,889,591 T170 Woodbridge 1,288,548 1,330,426 T171 Woodbury 1,048,371 1,082,443 T172 Woodstock 863,428 891,489 T1 Reimbursement Reimbursement T2 for for T3 Fiscal Year 2018 Fiscal Year 2019 T4 Andover 431,456 445,479 T5 Ansonia 1,380,587 1,425,456 T6 Ashford 452,003 466,693 T7 Avon 2,887,735 2,981,586 T8 Barkhamsted 409,944 423,267 T9 Beacon Falls 637,285 657,997 T10 Berlin 2,441,492 2,520,840 T11 Bethany 749,833 774,202 T12 Bethel 2,332,959 2,408,780 T13 Bethlehem 304,101 313,984 T14 Bloomfield 2,009,129 2,074,426 T15 Bolton 713,027 736,200 T16 Bozrah 272,946 281,817 T17 Town of Branford 2,747,784 2,837,087 T18 Bridgeport 12,908,368 13,327,890 T19 Bridgewater 169,504 175,013 T20 Bristol 5,994,524 6,189,347 T21 Brookfield 2,119,039 2,187,907 T22 Brooklyn 767,308 792,245 T23 Burlington 1,276,359 1,317,840 T24 Canaan 172,333 177,933 T25 Canterbury 479,505 495,089 T26 Canton 1,230,338 1,270,324 T27 Chaplin 279,788 288,881 T28 Cheshire 3,508,100 3,622,113 T29 Chester 310,439 320,528 T30 Clinton 1,725,858 1,781,949 T31 Colchester 2,081,212 2,148,852 T32 Colebrook 169,448 174,955 T33 Columbia 613,199 633,128 T34 Cornwall 192,670 198,931 T35 Coventry 1,357,867 1,401,998 T36 Cromwell 1,442,833 1,489,725 T37 Danbury 7,411,220 7,652,085 T38 Darien 4,584,090 4,733,073 T39 Deep River 418,412 432,010 T40 Derby 980,928 1,012,808 T41 Durham 1,085,539 1,120,819 T42 Eastford 183,496 189,459 T43 East Granby 770,240 795,273 T44 East Haddam 1,016,006 1,049,027 T45 East Hampton 1,528,350 1,578,021 T46 East Hartford 5,716,884 5,902,683 T47 East Haven 2,282,352 2,356,528 T48 East Lyme 2,252,917 2,326,137 T49 Easton 1,298,824 1,341,036 T50 East Windsor 1,052,181 1,086,377 T51 Ellington 1,898,286 1,959,980 T52 Enfield 4,254,110 4,392,369 T53 Essex 606,580 626,294 T54 Fairfield 9,194,608 9,493,433 T55 Farmington 3,343,850 3,452,525 T56 Franklin 193,209 199,488 T57 Glastonbury 5,098,541 5,264,244 T58 Goshen 322,064 332,531 T59 Granby 1,514,998 1,564,236 T60 Greenwich 10,053,427 10,380,164 T61 Griswold 1,349,780 1,393,648 T62 Groton 3,970,190 4,099,221 T63 Guilford 2,865,342 2,958,465 T64 Haddam 1,102,026 1,137,842 T65 Hamden 4,812,509 4,968,915 T66 Hampton 175,822 181,537 T67 Hartford 17,059,239 17,613,665 T68 Hartland 192,298 198,548 T69 Harwinton 658,967 680,384 T70 Hebron 1,362,129 1,406,399 T71 Kent 309,444 319,501 T72 Killingly 1,752,218 1,809,165 T73 Killingworth 757,422 782,038 T74 Lebanon 851,915 879,603 T75 Ledyard 1,913,289 1,975,471 T76 Lisbon 429,293 443,245 T77 Litchfield 900,232 929,490 T78 Lyme 288,526 297,903 T79 Madison 2,602,739 2,687,329 T80 Manchester 5,081,279 5,246,421 T81 Mansfield 1,662,704 1,716,741 T82 Marlborough 840,959 868,290 T83 Meriden 5,842,301 6,032,176 T84 Middlebury 1,029,867 1,063,337 T85 Middlefield 551,370 569,289 T86 Middletown 3,683,211 3,802,916 T87 Milford 5,581,054 5,762,438 T88 Monroe 3,017,406 3,115,472 T89 Montville 2,039,532 2,105,817 T90 Morris 281,468 290,615 T91 Naugatuck 3,173,613 3,276,755 T92 New Britain 7,512,822 7,756,989 T93 New Canaan 4,198,553 4,335,006 T94 New Fairfield 2,069,310 2,136,562 T95 New Hartford 801,726 827,782 T96 New Haven 14,966,054 15,452,451 T97 Newington 3,457,889 3,570,271 T98 New London 2,188,925 2,260,065 T99 New Milford 3,088,270 3,188,639 T100 Newtown 3,917,100 4,044,406 T101 Norfolk 152,352 157,303 T102 North Branford 1,473,670 1,521,564 T103 North Canaan 417,493 431,062 T104 North Haven 2,494,713 2,575,792 T105 North Stonington 641,730 662,587 T106 Norwalk 9,215,371 9,514,871 T107 Norwich 3,331,735 3,440,017 T108 Old Lyme 1,062,442 1,096,971 T109 Old Saybrook 1,271,219 1,312,533 T110 Orange 1,997,989 2,062,923 T111 Oxford 1,330,435 1,373,674 T112 Plainfield 1,589,753 1,641,420 T113 Plainville 1,927,428 1,990,069 T114 Plymouth 1,236,815 1,277,012 T115 Pomfret 447,189 461,723 T116 Portland 966,127 997,526 T117 Preston 457,631 472,504 T118 Prospect 999,501 1,031,985 T119 Putnam 790,031 815,707 T120 Redding 1,740,644 1,797,215 T121 Ridgefield 4,407,654 4,550,903 T122 Rocky Hill 2,027,836 2,093,741 T123 Roxbury 307,820 317,824 T124 Salem 348,037 359,349 T125 Salisbury 389,052 401,697 T126 Scotland 222,785 230,025 T127 Seymour 1,732,618 1,788,928 T128 Sharon 309,766 319,833 T129 Shelton 3,726,462 3,847,572 T130 Sherman 389,839 402,509 T131 Simsbury 3,634,442 3,752,561 T132 Somers 1,157,222 1,194,832 T133 Southbury 2,179,715 2,250,556 T134 Southington 4,547,523 4,695,318 T135 South Windsor 3,591,178 3,707,891 T136 Sprague 283,602 292,819 T137 Stafford 1,295,535 1,337,640 T138 Stamford 14,188,331 14,649,453 T139 Sterling 294,708 304,286 T140 Stonington 1,775,660 1,833,369 T141 Stratford 5,413,087 5,589,013 T142 Suffield 1,860,799 1,921,275 T143 Thomaston 751,201 775,615 T144 Thompson 769,109 794,105 T145 Tolland 1,934,215 1,997,078 T146 Torrington 3,250,448 3,356,088 T147 Trumbull 5,476,968 5,654,970 T148 Union 84,703 87,456 T149 Vernon 2,884,556 2,978,304 T150 Voluntown 295,379 304,978 T151 Wallingford 5,230,018 5,399,994 T152 Warren 140,734 145,308 T153 Washington 423,138 436,890 T154 Waterbury 12,291,680 12,691,160 T155 Waterford 2,383,220 2,460,675 T156 Watertown 2,310,071 2,385,148 T157 Westbrook 823,917 850,695 T158 West Hartford 8,011,568 8,271,945 T159 West Haven 4,458,510 4,603,411 T160 Weston 2,355,644 2,432,202 T161 Westport 5,877,870 6,068,901 T162 Wethersfield 2,801,870 2,892,931 T163 Willington 613,739 633,686 T164 Wilton 3,998,115 4,128,054 T165 Winchester 594,612 613,937 T166 Windham 2,520,456 2,602,371 T167 Windsor 3,208,290 3,312,560 T168 Windsor Locks 1,526,083 1,575,681 T169 Wolcott 1,830,112 1,889,591 T170 Woodbridge 1,288,548 1,330,426 T171 Woodbury 1,048,371 1,082,443 T172 Woodstock 863,428 891,489 (b) If any municipality fails to make the payment required under subsection (a) of this section for any fiscal year within thirty days after the date such payment is due, a five per cent penalty shall be assessed on the total amount of the payment due for such fiscal year. (c) Notwithstanding any provision of the general statutes, if any municipality defaults in the payment of its obligation under subsections (a) and (b) of this section, the State Treasurer shall notify the State Comptroller and the Commissioner of Administrative Services that the municipality is in default of such obligation. Upon notice of such default, the state shall withhold payment of state aid and assistance to such municipality pursuant to any statute in existence at the time the default is established up to the amount of such obligation. Sec. 28 (NEW) (Effective from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016) (a) For purposes of this section, (1) "acute care general hospital" means any such facility licensed by the Department of Public Health that is used primarily for general medical care and treatment, exclusive of any hospital used primarily for the care and treatment of special types of disease or physical or mental conditions, (2) "freestanding chronic disease hospital" means a facility licensed by said department that provides for the care and treatment of chronic diseases, excluding any such facility that has an ownership affiliation with and is operated in the same location as a chronic and convalescent nursing home, and (3) "municipality" means any town, city or borough, consolidated town and city or consolidated town and borough. (b) Any real property owned by an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital shall be subject to the property tax under chapter 203 of the general statutes. The provisions of this section regarding the taxable status of any such real property shall supersede the provisions of any section of the general statutes or any public or special act to the contrary, except for (1) the property tax exemptions specified in subdivisions (1) and (2) of section 12-81 of the general statutes, (2) any property for which a payment in lieu of taxes is made under subsection (b) of section 12-20b of the general statutes, and (3) the property tax exemption a municipality may provide by adopting an ordinance in accordance with the provisions of subsection (c) of this section. (c) (1) Any municipality in which real property, as described in section 12-64 of the general statutes, owned by any acute care general hospital, freestanding chronic disease hospital, children's hospital or psychiatric hospital is situated may, by ordinance adopted by its legislative body, or, in a municipality where the legislative body is a town meeting, by vote of the board of selectmen, provide an exemption from property tax applicable to such real property for assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016. Such property tax exemption may be applicable to all or a portion of the total assessment of such real property, as determined by the municipality. The percentage of such total real property assessment that is exempt shall be specified in the ordinance adopted pursuant to this subsection and the remaining portion of such total real property assessment, if any, shall be subject to taxation as provided in subsection (b) of this section. The ordinance may provide that real property leased to an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital is eligible for an exemption under this subsection. The ordinance shall provide that any real property acquired or leased by an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital after the first day of October shall first become exempt to the extent allowed by the municipality on the assessment date next succeeding the date of acquisition or lease. The chief executive officer of any municipality that adopts an ordinance pursuant to this subsection shall send a copy of such ordinance to the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, not later than ten business days after the date on which the municipality's legislative body votes to approve such ordinance. (2) The owner of an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital seeking an exemption adopted by ordinance pursuant to subdivision (1) of this subsection shall apply to the assessor of such municipality. Such application shall be on a form prepared for such purpose by the assessor and shall be filed not later than the first day of November following the assessment date with respect to which such exemption is claimed, except that an application for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016, may be filed not later than sixty days after the date on which an ordinance authorizing the exemption is effective. The assessor may grant an extension of not more than forty-five days to file the application upon determination that there is good cause. If the date for filing is a Saturday, Sunday or a legal holiday, the application may be filed without penalty on the following business day. (3) Failure to file an application in the form or manner or within the time period prescribed under this subsection shall constitute a waiver of the right to such exemption for the assessment year, unless the assessor grants an extension of time to file such application. If an extension of time is so allowed, the applicant shall pay a fee for late filing to the municipality in which the real property, for which such application is filed, is situated, unless such fee is waived by the assessor or board of assessors. Such fee shall be as follows: (A) If the assessed value of the real property for which such exemption application is filed is one hundred thousand dollars or less, fifty dollars; (B) if the assessed value of the real property for which such exemption application is filed is greater than one hundred thousand dollars but less than two hundred fifty thousand dollars, one hundred fifty dollars; (C) if the assessed value of the real property for which such exemption application is filed is equal to or greater than two hundred fifty thousand dollars but less than five hundred thousand dollars, two hundred fifty dollars; and (D) if the assessed value of the real property for which such exemption application is filed is equal to or greater than five hundred thousand dollars, five hundred dollars. (4) When an applicant has filed, and the assessor has approved, such application for the first time, such applicant shall file an exemption application quadrennially thereafter, subject to the provisions of this subdivision. Any owner who has submitted an application and been approved in any year for the exemption under this subsection shall be presumed to be qualified for such exemption in the three assessment years immediately following the year of initial approval, unless the following occurs: (A) There is a change to the composition of the exempt real property of the acute care general hospital, freestanding chronic disease hospital, children's hospital or psychiatric hospital, or (B) the acute care general hospital, freestanding chronic disease hospital, children's hospital or psychiatric hospital acquires, by purchase or lease, real property, whether or not such real property was tax-exempt to any extent under this subsection prior to such purchase or lease. If there is such a change or acquisition, the owner shall file a new application for the exemption under this subsection by the first day of November next succeeding the date of any change or acquisition described in this subdivision. Any such newly altered or acquired real property shall be subject to taxation until the application and approval requirements of this subsection have been complied with. (5) If the legislative body of the municipality elects, pursuant to section 12-62c of the general statutes, to defer all or any part of the amount of the increase in the assessed value of real property in the year a revaluation becomes effective and in any succeeding year in which such deferment is allowed, the portion of the taxable real property assessment of an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital for each assessment year in which such deferments are allowed, shall reflect assessments based upon such deferment. (d) (1) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 12-55 of the general statutes, the assessor or board of assessors of any municipality in which real property owned by an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital is situated and becomes taxable as of the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016, shall reflect the addition of the assessments of such taxable real property and the deduction of such assessments from the tax-exempt portion of the grand list for said assessment year. Such assessor shall send written notice of the valuation of any such taxable real property to the last-known address of the acute care general hospital, freestanding chronic disease hospital, children's hospital or psychiatric hospital that owns such real property and such hospital shall have the right to appeal such valuation during a special meeting of the board of assessment appeals, as provided in this subsection. Each notice sent pursuant to this subsection shall include: (A) The total valuation of the real property; (B) the percentage and amount of the real property assessment that is subject to taxation; and (C) information describing the manner in which an appeal may be filed with the board of assessment appeals. Each such notice shall be mailed not later than ten calendar days after the date on which the assessor adjusts the taxable and tax-exempt grand lists pursuant to this subsection. The assessor shall notify the board of assessment appeals of the supplemental addition to the taxable grand list for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016. (2) Any person, including any lessee of real property whose lease has been recorded as provided in section 47-19 of the general statutes and is bound under the terms of the lease to pay real property taxes and any person to whom title to such property has been transferred since the assessment date, claiming to be aggrieved by the actions of the assessor of such municipality regarding such valuation may appeal to the board of assessment appeals. Such appeal shall be filed, in writing, not later than thirty days after the date on which the assessor sends notice of a supplemental addition to the taxable grand list for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016. The written appeal shall include, but is not limited to, the property owner's name, the name and position of the signer, a description of the property that is the subject of the appeal, the name and mailing address of the party to be sent all correspondence from the board of assessment appeals, the reason for the appeal, the appellant's estimate of value, the signature of the property owner or a duly authorized agent of the property owner and the date of signature. (3) During the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016, the board of assessment appeals shall notify each aggrieved person who filed a written appeal in accordance with subdivision (2) of this subsection regarding the valuation of real property of the date, time and place of the appeal hearing. Such notice shall be sent not later than seven calendar days preceding the hearing date, except that the board may elect not to conduct an appeal hearing for any commercial, industrial, utility or apartment property with an assessed value greater than one million dollars. In such case, the board shall notify the appellant, in writing, that it has elected not to conduct an appeal hearing. The board shall determine all appeals for which it conducts an appeal hearing and send written notification of the final determination of such appeals to each such person not later than one week after such determination has been made. Such written notification shall include information describing the property owner's right to appeal the determination of such board in accordance with subdivision (5) of this subsection. (4) The board of assessment appeals shall not reduce the valuation or assessment of real property on the revised taxable grand list owned or leased by an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital that does not appear at a hearing before the board of assessment appeals, either in person or by such hospital's attorney or agent, and offer or consent to be sworn before the board and answer all questions touching such hospital's real property situated in the municipality. (5) Any person aggrieved by (A) the action of the board of assessment appeals with respect to the supplemental addition of real property to the assessment list for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016, under the provisions of this subsection, or (B) a decision of the board not to conduct an appeal hearing for any such real property with an assessed value greater than one million dollars, may make application, not later than two months after the date of the mailing of notice of such action, in the nature of an appeal therefrom, to the superior court for the judicial district in which such town or city is situated. All provisions of section 12-117a of the general statutes, other than the time for filing, shall be applicable to such application. The pendency of such application shall not suspend an action by the municipality to collect not more than seventy-five per cent of the tax so assessed or not more than ninety per cent of such tax with respect to any real property for which the assessed value is five hundred thousand dollars or more, and upon which such appeal is taken. (e) (1) During the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016, the tax collector shall prepare a warrant with respect to the supplemental addition of taxable real property to the grand list for said year under subsection (d) of this section and shall forward such warrant to the owner of such real property. Such tax collector shall have the same powers for the collection of the tax based on such supplemental additions to such list as for the collection of other taxes. The tax collector shall, not later than twenty days after receiving notice from the assessor of the addition of such taxable real property to the taxable grand list for said assessment year, mail or deliver to the owner of such real property a bill for the amount of taxes for which such owner is liable and shall include with such bill, using (A) an attachment, (B) an enclosure, or (C) printed matter upon the face of the bill, a statement of state aid to municipalities that shall be in the following form: "The (fiscal year) budget for the (city or town) estimates that .... Dollars will be received from the state of Connecticut for various state financed programs. Without this assistance your (fiscal year) property tax would be (insert the amount computed in accordance with subsection (b) of section 12-130 of the general statutes) mills.". (2) Such tax shall be due and payable not later than thirty days after the date on which the tax collector mailed or delivered the tax bill to the owner of such real property. Failure to send out or receive any such bill or statement shall not invalidate the tax. For purposes of this subdivision, "mail" includes to send by electronic mail, provided an individual from whom taxes are due consents, in writing, to receive a bill and statement electronically. (3) If the tax collector of a municipality in which the real property of any acute care general hospital, freestanding chronic disease hospital, children's hospital or psychiatric hospital is situated collects real property taxes for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016, in more than one installment, the tax collector shall cause payment of any tax due under this subsection to be made in the number of installments remaining in the fiscal year for all other real property taxes. If the final day for payment of any tax or any installment is a Saturday, Sunday or a legal holiday, payment may be made without interest or penalty on the following business day. (f) (1) The assessor of any town in which real property owned by an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital becomes subject to the property tax under chapter 203 of the general statutes for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016, shall separate the real property within a district, as defined in section 7-324 of the general statutes, from the other real property in the town. The assessor shall promptly notify the district clerk that the assessment of such real property has been added to the taxable portion of the grand list for said assessment year. If the legislative body of the town elects, pursuant to section 12-62c of the general statutes, to defer all or any part of the amount of the increase in the assessed value of real property in the year a revaluation becomes effective and in any succeeding year in which such deferment is allowed, such assessment furnished to the district clerk for each such year shall reflect assessments based upon such deferment. (2) The district clerk shall prepare a rate bill and deliver such bill to the treasurer of the district. The district and the treasurer shall have the same powers as towns and collectors of taxes to collect and enforce payment of such taxes. Such taxes, when laid, shall be a lien upon the real property in the same manner as town taxes and may be continued by certificates recorded in the land record office of the town and foreclosed in the same manner as liens for town taxes or enforced in accordance with any provision of the general statutes for the collection of property taxes. The assessor or board of assessment appeals shall promptly forward to the district clerk any certificate of correction or notice of any other lawful change to the grand list for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2016. The district clerk shall, not later than ten days after receiving any such certificate or notice, forward a copy of such certificate or notice to the treasurer, who shall correct accordingly the assessment of the real property for which such certificate or notice was issued and the rate bill related to such assessment. Sec. 29. Subsections (a) and (b) of section 12-18b of the general statutes are repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): (a) For purposes of this section: (1) "College and hospital property" means all real property owned by a private nonprofit institution of learning, an acute care general hospital, a freestanding chronic disease hospital or an eligible urgent care facility and described in [subsection (a) of section 12-20a] subdivisions (17) to (20), inclusive, of this subsection; (2) "District" [means any district, as defined] has the same meaning as provided in section 7-324; (3) "Qualified college and hospital property" means college and hospital property described in subparagraph [(B)] (C) of subdivision (2) of subsection (b) of this section; (4) "Qualified state, municipal or tribal property" means state, municipal or tribal property described in subparagraphs (A) to (G), inclusive, of subdivision (1) of subsection (b) of this section; (5) "Municipality" means any town, city, borough, consolidated town and city and consolidated town and borough; (6) "Select college and hospital property" means college and hospital property described in [subparagraph (A)] subparagraphs (A) and (B) of subdivision (2) of subsection (b) of this section; (7) "Select payment in lieu of taxes account" means the account established pursuant to section 12-18c; (8) "Select state property" means state property described in subparagraph (H) of subdivision (1) of subsection (b) of this section; (9) "State, municipal or tribal property" means all real property described in subsection (a) of section 12-19a; (10) "Tier one districts or municipalities" means the ten districts or municipalities with the highest percentage of tax exempt property on the list of municipalities prepared by the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management pursuant to subsection (c) of this section and having a mill rate of twenty-five mills or more; (11) "Tier two districts or municipalities" means the next twenty-five districts or municipalities after tier one districts or municipalities with the highest percentage of tax exempt property on the list of municipalities prepared by the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management pursuant to subsection (c) of this section and having a mill rate of twenty-five mills or more; (12) "Tier three districts or municipalities" means all districts and municipalities not included in tier one districts or municipalities or tier two districts or municipalities; (13) "Tier one municipalities" means the ten municipalities with the highest percentage of tax exempt property on the list of municipalities prepared by the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management pursuant to subsection (c) of this section and having a mill rate of twenty-five mills or more; (14) "Tier two municipalities" means the next twenty-five municipalities after tier one municipalities with the highest percentage of tax exempt property on the list of municipalities prepared by the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management pursuant to subsection (c) of this section and having a mill rate of twenty-five mills or more; (15) "Tier three municipalities" means all municipalities not included in tier one municipalities or tier two municipalities; [and] (16) "Mill rate" means the mill rate on real property and personal property other than motor vehicles; (17) "Private nonprofit institution of higher learning" means any such institution, as defined in subsection (a) of section 10a-34, or any independent institution of higher education, as defined in subsection (a) of section 10a-173, that is engaged primarily in education beyond the high school level, and offers courses of instruction for which college or university-level credit may be given or may be received by transfer, the property of which is exempt from property tax under any of the subdivisions of section 12-81, as amended by this act; (18) "Acute care general hospital" means any such facility licensed by the Department of Public Health that is used primarily for general medical care and treatment, exclusive of any hospital used primarily for the care and treatment of special types of disease or physical or mental conditions, the real property of which was tax exempt under any of the subdivisions of section 12-81, as amended by this act, in the assessment year commencing October 1, 2015; (19) "Freestanding chronic disease hospital" means a facility licensed by the Department of Public Health that provides for the care and treatment of chronic diseases, excluding any such facility that has an ownership affiliation and operated in the same location as a chronic and convalescent nursing home, the real property of which was tax exempt under any of the subdivisions of section 12-81, as amended by this act, in the assessment year commencing October 1, 2015; and (20) "Eligible urgent care facility" includes an urgent care facility that operates for at least twelve hours a day, had been the location of a nonprofit general hospital for at least a portion of calendar year 1996 and was eligible to receive payments in lieu of taxes for such property under section 12-20a in the fiscal year commencing July 1, 2016. (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 12-19a and 12-20a, all funds appropriated for state grants in lieu of taxes shall be payable to municipalities and districts pursuant to the provisions of this section. On or before January first, annually, the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management shall determine the amount due, as a state grant in lieu of taxes, to each municipality and district in this state wherein college and hospital property is [located] situated and to each municipality in this state wherein state, municipal or tribal property, except that which was acquired and used for highways and bridges, but not excepting property acquired and used for highway administration or maintenance purposes, is [located] situated. (1) The grant payable to any municipality for state, municipal or tribal property under the provisions of this section in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, and each fiscal year thereafter shall be equal to the total of: (A) One hundred per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid with respect to any facility designated by the Commissioner of Correction, on or before August first of each year, to be a correctional facility administered under the auspices of the Department of Correction or a juvenile detention center under direction of the Department of Children and Families that was used for incarcerative purposes during the preceding fiscal year. If a list containing the name and location of such designated facilities and information concerning their use for purposes of incarceration during the preceding fiscal year is not available from the Secretary of the State on August first of any year, the Commissioner of Correction shall, on said date, certify to the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management a list containing such information; (B) One hundred per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid with respect to that portion of the John Dempsey Hospital located at The University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington that is used as a permanent medical ward for prisoners under the custody of the Department of Correction. Nothing in this section shall be construed as designating any portion of The University of Connecticut Health Center John Dempsey Hospital as a correctional facility; (C) One hundred per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid on any land designated within the 1983 Settlement boundary and taken into trust by the federal government for the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation on or after June 8, 1999; (D) Subject to the provisions of subsection (c) of section 12-19a, sixty-five per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid with respect to the buildings and grounds comprising Connecticut Valley Hospital in Middletown; (E) With respect to any municipality in which more than fifty per cent of the property is state-owned real property, one hundred per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid with respect to such state-owned property; (F) Forty-five per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid with respect to all municipally owned airports, [;] except for the exemption applicable to such property, on the assessment list in such municipality for the assessment date two years prior to the commencement of the state fiscal year in which such grant is payable. The grant provided pursuant to this section for any municipally owned airport shall be paid to any municipality in which the airport is [located] situated, except that the grant applicable to Sikorsky Airport shall be paid one-half to the town of Stratford and one-half to the city of Bridgeport; (G) Forty-five per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid with respect to any land designated within the 1983 Settlement boundary and taken into trust by the federal government for the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation prior to June 8, 1999, or taken into trust by the federal government for the Mohegan Tribe of Indians of Connecticut, provided the real property subject to this subparagraph shall be the land only, and shall not include the assessed value of any structures, buildings or other improvements on such land; and (H) Forty-five per cent of the property taxes that would have been paid with respect to all other state-owned real property. (2) (A) (i) The grant payable to any municipality or district for college and hospital property under the provisions of this section in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, [and each fiscal year thereafter] shall be equal to the total of seventy-seven per cent of the property taxes that, except for any exemption applicable to any college and hospital property under the provisions of section 12-81, as amended by this act, would have been paid with respect to college and hospital property on the assessment list in such municipality or district for the assessment date two years prior to the commencement of the state fiscal year in which such grant is payable; [and] (ii) The grant payable to any municipality or district for college property in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter shall be equal to the total of seventy-seven per cent of the property taxes that, except for any exemption applicable to the real property of any institution of higher education under the provisions of section 12-81, as amended by this act, would have been paid with respect to college property on the assessment list in such municipality or district for the assessment date two years prior to the commencement of the state fiscal year in which such grant is payable; (B) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (A) of this subdivision, the grant payable to any municipality or district with respect to real property of an eligible urgent care facility in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, and each fiscal year thereafter shall be seventy-seven per cent; and [(B)] (C) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (A) of this subdivision, the grant payable to any municipality or district with respect to a campus of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare Systems in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, and each fiscal year thereafter shall be one hundred per cent. Sec. 30. Subdivision (1) of subsection (e) of section 12-18b of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): (e) (1) (A) For the fiscal years ending June 30, 2018, and June 30, 2019, if the total of grants payable to each municipality and district in accordance with the provisions of subsection (b) of this section [exceeds] differs from the amount appropriated for the purposes of said subsection (b) for said fiscal years: [(A)] (i) The amount of the grant payable to each municipality for state, municipal or tribal property, for which the grant calculated under this section is less than one hundred per cent of the property tax that would be due for such property except for the exemption applicable to such property, and to each municipality or district for college and hospital property shall be [reduced] adjusted proportionately, provided the percentage of the property taxes payable to a municipality or district with respect to such property shall not be lower than the percentage paid to the municipality or district for such property for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2015; and [(B)] (ii) certain municipalities and districts shall receive an additional payment in lieu of taxes grant payable from the select payment in lieu of taxes account. The total amount of the grant payment is as follows: T173 Municipality/District Grant Amount T174 Ansonia 20,543 T175 Bridgeport 3,236,058 T176 Chaplin 11,177 T177 Danbury 620,540 T178 Deep River 1,961 T179 Derby 138,841 T180 East Granby 9,904 T181 East Hartford 214,997 T182 Hamden 620,903 T183 Hartford 12,422,113 T184 Killingly 46,615 T185 Ledyard 3,012 T186 Litchfield 13,907 T187 Mansfield 2,630,447 T188 Meriden 259,564 T189 Middletown 727,324 T190 Montville 26,217 T191 New Britain 2,085,537 T192 New Haven 15,246,372 T193 New London 1,356,780 T194 Newington 176,884 T195 North Canaan 4,393 T196 Norwich 259,862 T197 Plainfield 16,116 T198 Simsbury 21,671 T199 Stafford 43,057 T200 Stamford 552,292 T201 Suffield 53,767 T202 Wallingford 61,586 T203 Waterbury 3,284,145 T204 West Hartford 211,483 T205 West Haven 339,563 T206 Windham 1,248,096 T207 Windsor 9,660 T208 Windsor Locks 32,533 T209 Borough of Danielson (Killingly) 2,232 T210 Borough of Litchfield 143 T211 Middletown: South Fire District 1,172 T212 Plainfield - Plainfield Fire District 309 T213 West Haven First Center (D1) 1,187 T214 West Haven: Allingtown FD (D3) 53,053 T215 West Haven: West Shore FD (D2) 35,065 T173 Municipality/District Grant Amount T174 Ansonia 20,543 T175 Bridgeport 3,236,058 T176 Chaplin 11,177 T177 Danbury 620,540 T178 Deep River 1,961 T179 Derby 138,841 T180 East Granby 9,904 T181 East Hartford 214,997 T182 Hamden 620,903 T183 Hartford 12,422,113 T184 Killingly 46,615 T185 Ledyard 3,012 T186 Litchfield 13,907 T187 Mansfield 2,630,447 T188 Meriden 259,564 T189 Middletown 727,324 T190 Montville 26,217 T191 New Britain 2,085,537 T192 New Haven 15,246,372 T193 New London 1,356,780 T194 Newington 176,884 T195 North Canaan 4,393 T196 Norwich 259,862 T197 Plainfield 16,116 T198 Simsbury 21,671 T199 Stafford 43,057 T200 Stamford 552,292 T201 Suffield 53,767 T202 Wallingford 61,586 T203 Waterbury 3,284,145 T204 West Hartford 211,483 T205 West Haven 339,563 T206 Windham 1,248,096 T207 Windsor 9,660 T208 Windsor Locks 32,533 T209 Borough of Danielson (Killingly) 2,232 T210 Borough of Litchfield 143 T211 Middletown: South Fire District 1,172 T212 Plainfield - Plainfield Fire District 309 T213 West Haven First Center (D1) 1,187 T214 West Haven: Allingtown FD (D3) 53,053 T215 West Haven: West Shore FD (D2) 35,065 (B) In no event shall an adjusted grant calculated under this subsection exceed one hundred per cent of the property tax that would have been due except for the exemption applicable to any property for which a grant is payable. Sec. 31. Subdivision (7) of section 12-81 of the general statutes is amended by adding subparagraph (C) as follows (Effective from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016): (NEW) (C) On and after October 1, 2016, real property owned by any acute care general hospital or freestanding chronic disease hospital, as defined in section 28 of this act, or children's hospital or psychiatric hospital shall not be considered to be property used for a charitable purpose under this section, except that nothing in this subparagraph shall be deemed to affect the charitable or tax-exempt status of any real payment for which a payment in lieu of taxes is made under subsection (b) of section 12-20b or of any personal property of a corporation as described in subparagraph (A) of this subdivision; Sec. 32. Subdivision (16) of section 12-81 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016): (16) Subject to the provisions of section 12-88, all personal property of, or held in trust for, any Connecticut hospital society or corporation or sanatorium, provided (A) no officer, member or employee thereof receives or, at any future time, shall receive any pecuniary profit from the operations thereof, except reasonable compensation for services in the conduct of its affairs, and (B) in 1967, and quadrennially thereafter, a statement shall be filed by such hospital society, corporation or sanatorium on or before the first day of November with the assessor or board of assessors of any town, consolidated town and city or consolidated town and borough, in which any of its personal property claimed to be exempt is situated. Such statement shall be filed on a form provided by such assessor or board of assessors; Sec. 33. Subdivision (58) of section 12-81 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016): (58) (A) Subject to authorization of the exemption by ordinance in any municipality, any real or personal property leased to a charitable, religious or nonprofit organization, exempt from taxation for federal income tax purposes, provided such property is used exclusively for the purposes of such charitable, religious or nonprofit organization and not otherwise exempt under this section; (B) On and after October 1, 2016, any real property leased to an acute care general hospital or a freestanding chronic disease hospital, as both terms are defined in section 28 of this act, a children's hospital or a psychiatric hospital shall not be eligible for the exemption under this subdivision, unless the municipality in which such leased real property is situated provides for such an exemption by ordinance adopted in accordance with section 28 of this act; Sec. 34. Subsection (e) of section 19a-644 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective from passage): (e) The office shall require each hospital licensed by the Department of Public Health, that is not subject to the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, to report to said office on its operations in the preceding fiscal year by filing (1) copies of the hospital's audited financial statements, [except a] and (2) a Hospital Reporting System Report 500 of twelve months' actual filing. A health system, as defined in section 19a-508c, may submit to the office one such report that includes the audited financial statements and Report 500 for each of its hospitals. Such report shall be due at the office on or before the close of business on the last business day of the fifth month following the month in which a hospital's fiscal year ends. Sec. 35. (NEW) (Effective October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017) (a) Any hospital claiming an exemption from the property tax on personal property pursuant to subdivision (7) or (16) of section 12-81 of the general statutes, as amended by this act, with respect to any taxable year shall submit a declaration of the tangible personal property, as described in sections 12-41 and 12-43 of the general statutes, and a statement in accordance with section 12-49 of the general statutes. Such declaration shall be submitted on or before October first or the extended filing date granted pursuant to section 12-42 of the general statutes, as amended by this act, as applicable, to the assessor or board of assessors of the municipality in which the hospital property claimed to be exempt is located. Commercial or financial information in any declaration filed under this section shall not be open to public inspection. The assessor or board of assessors, as applicable, shall add taxable property to any such declaration if so required by subsection (b) of section 12-53 of the general statutes. Exemptions claimed pursuant to subdivision (7) or (16) of section 12-81 of the general statutes, as amended by this act, shall be deemed waived for any assessment year in which a hospital fails to file a declaration in the manner prescribed by this section. For purposes of this section, "personal property" includes all property subject to tax pursuant to section 12-71 of the general statutes, and "hospital" means any nonprofit (1) acute care general hospital, (2) ambulatory surgical center, as defined in section 12-263i of the general statutes, (3) freestanding chronic hospital, and (4) urgent care facility that operates for at least twelve hours a day, had been the location of a nonprofit general hospital for at least a portion of calendar year 1996 and was eligible to receive payments in lieu of taxes for such property under section 12-20a of the general statutes in the fiscal year commencing July 1, 2016. "Hospital" does not include any such hospital, center or facility operated by the federal government or the state of Connecticut or any political subdivision thereof. (b) Any assessor in receipt of a declaration filed pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall determine the present true and actual value of such declared property pursuant to the requirements set forth in sections 12-63 and 12-71 of the general statutes. Such assessor shall include data concerning the assessment of tangible personal property included on a personal property declaration filed in accordance with this section, in the data provided to the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management for purposes of the report under section 12-120a of the general statutes. Sec. 36. Section 12-42 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017): The assessors may grant an extension of not more than forty-five days to file the declaration required pursuant to section 12-41 or section 35 of this act upon determination that there is good cause. If no declaration is filed, the assessors shall fill out a declaration including all property [which] that the assessors have reason to believe is owned by the person for whom such declaration is prepared, liable to taxation, at the percentage of its actual valuation, as determined by the assessors in accordance with the provisions of sections 12-63 and 12-71, from the best information they can obtain, and add thereto twenty-five per cent of such assessment. When the first day of November is a Saturday or Sunday, the declaration may be filed or postmarked on the next business day following. Sec. 37. Subparagraph (A) of subdivision (7) of section 12-81 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017): (7) (A) Subject to the provisions of sections 12-87, [and] 12-88 and section 35 of this act, the real property of, or held in trust for, a corporation organized exclusively for scientific, educational, literary, historical or charitable purposes or for two or more such purposes and used exclusively for carrying out one or more of such purposes or for the purpose of preserving open space land, as defined in section 12-107b, for any of the uses specified in said section, that is owned by any such corporation, and the personal property of, or held in trust for, any such corporation, provided (i) any officer, member or employee thereof does not receive or at any future time shall not receive any pecuniary profit from the operations thereof, except reasonable compensation for services in effecting one or more of such purposes or as proper beneficiary of its strictly charitable purposes, and (ii) in 1965, and quadrennially thereafter, a statement shall be filed on or before the first day of November with the assessor or board of assessors of any town, consolidated town and city or consolidated town and borough, in which any of its property claimed to be exempt is situated. Such statement shall be filed on a form provided by such assessor or board of assessors. The real property shall be eligible for the exemption regardless of whether it is used by another corporation organized exclusively for scientific, educational, literary, historical or charitable purposes or for two or more such purposes; Sec. 38. Subdivision (16) of section 12-81 of the general statutes, as amended by section 32 of this act, is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017): (16) Subject to the provisions of section 12-88 and section 35 of this act, all personal property of, or held in trust for, any Connecticut hospital society or corporation or sanatorium, provided (A) no officer, member or employee thereof receives or, at any future time, shall receive any pecuniary profit from the operations thereof, except reasonable compensation for services in the conduct of its affairs, and (B) in 1967, and quadrennially thereafter, a statement shall be filed by such hospital society, corporation or sanatorium on or before the first day of November with the assessor or board of assessors of any town, consolidated town and city or consolidated town and borough, in which any of its personal property claimed to be exempt is situated. Such statement shall be filed on a form provided by such assessor or board of assessors; Sec. 39. Section 12-81 of the general statutes is amended by adding subdivision (78) as follows (Effective October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017): (NEW) (78) Personal property owned or leased by a business organization whose personal property has a total assessed value of less than ten thousand dollars. Any person claiming the exemption provided under this subdivision for any assessment year shall annually, on or before the first day of November, file a written application for such exemption with the assessor or board of assessors in the town in which such personal property is located. Failure to file such an application in the manner and form provided by such assessor or board of assessors or within the time limit prescribed shall constitute a waiver of the right to the exemption for the assessment year. Sec. 40. Section 4-66l of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2017): (a) For the purposes of this section: (1) "FY 15 mill rate" means the mill rate a municipality uses during the fiscal year ending June 30, 2015; (2) "Mill rate" means, unless otherwise specified, the mill rate a municipality uses to calculate tax bills for motor vehicles; (3) "Municipality" means any town, city, consolidated town and city or consolidated town and borough. "Municipality" includes a district for the purposes of subdivision (1) of subsection (d) of this section; (4) "Municipal spending" means: T216 Municipal spending for the fiscal year prior to the current fiscal – Municipal spending for the fiscal year two years prior to the T217 T218 T219 T220 T221 year current year X 100 = Municipal spending; T222 ______________________________ T223 Municipal spending for the fiscal T224 year two years prior to the T225 current year T216 Municipal spending for the fiscal year prior to the current fiscal – Municipal spending for the fiscal year two years prior to the T217 T218 T219 T220 T221 year current year X 100 = Municipal spending; T222 ______________________________ T223 Municipal spending for the fiscal T224 year two years prior to the T225 current year (5) "Per capita distribution" means: T226 Municipal population ___________________ X Sales tax revenue = Per capita distribution; T227 T228 T229 Total state population T226 Municipal population ___________________ X Sales tax revenue = Per capita distribution; T227 T228 T229 Total state population (6) "Pro rata distribution" means: T230 Municipal weighted mill rate calculation X Sales tax revenue = Pro rata distribution; T231 T232 T233 ____________________ T234 Sum of all municipal weighted mill rate calculations combined T235 T236 T230 Municipal weighted mill rate calculation X Sales tax revenue = Pro rata distribution; T231 T232 T233 ____________________ T234 Sum of all municipal weighted mill rate calculations combined T235 T236 (7) "Regional council of governments" means any such council organized under the provisions of sections 4-124i to 4-124p, inclusive; (8) "Municipal population" means the number of persons in a municipality according to the most recent estimate of the Department of Public Health; (9) "Total state population" means the number of persons in this state according to the most recent estimate published by the Department of Public Health; (10) "Weighted mill rate" means a municipality's FY 15 mill rate divided by the average of all municipalities' FY 15 mill rate; (11) "Weighted mill rate calculation" means per capita distribution multiplied by a municipality's weighted mill rate; (12) "Sales tax revenue" means the moneys in the account remaining for distribution pursuant to subdivision (6) of subsection (b) of this section; (13) "District" means any district, as defined in section 7-324; and (14) "Secretary" means the Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management. (b) There is established an account to be known as the "municipal revenue sharing account" which shall be a separate, nonlapsing account within the General Fund. The account shall contain any moneys required by law to be deposited in the account. The secretary shall set aside and ensure availability of moneys in the account in the following order of priority and shall transfer or disburse such moneys as follows: (1) Ten million dollars for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2016, shall be transferred not later than April fifteenth for the purposes of grants under section 10-262h; (2) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, moneys sufficient to make motor vehicle property tax grants payable to municipalities pursuant to subsection (c) of this section shall be expended not later than August first annually by the secretary; (3) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, moneys sufficient to make the grants payable from the select payment in lieu of taxes grant account established pursuant to section 12-18c shall annually be transferred to the select payment in lieu of taxes account in the Office of Policy and Management; (4) For the fiscal years ending June 30, 2018, and June 30, 2019, moneys sufficient to make the municipal revenue sharing grants payable to municipalities pursuant to subdivision (2) of subsection (d) of this section shall be expended not later than October thirty-first annually by the secretary; (5) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, seven million dollars shall be expended for the purposes of the regional services grants pursuant to subsection (e) of this section to the regional councils of governments; and (6) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, and each fiscal year thereafter, moneys in the account remaining shall be expended annually by the secretary for the purposes of the municipal revenue sharing grants established pursuant to subsection (f) of this section. Any such moneys deposited in the account for municipal revenue sharing grants between October first and June thirtieth shall be distributed to municipalities on the following October first and any such moneys deposited in the account between July first and September thirtieth shall be distributed to municipalities on the following January thirty-first. Any municipality may apply to the Office of Policy and Management on or after July first for early disbursement of a portion of such grant. The Office of Policy and Management may approve such an application if it finds that early disbursement is required in order for a municipality to meet its cash flow needs. No early disbursement approved by said office may be issued later than September thirtieth. (c) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, motor vehicle property tax grants to municipalities that impose mill rates on real property and personal property other than motor vehicles greater than 32 mills or that, when combined with the mill rate of any district located within the municipality, impose mill rates greater than 32 mills, shall be made in an amount equal to the difference between the amount of property taxes levied by the municipality and any district located within the municipality on motor vehicles for the assessment year commencing October 1, 2013, and the amount such levy would have been if the mill rate on motor vehicles for said assessment year was 32 mills. Not later than fifteen calendar days after receiving a property tax grant pursuant to this section, the municipality shall disburse to any district located within the municipality the amount of any such property tax grant that is attributable to the district. (d) (1) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, each municipality shall receive a municipal revenue sharing grant, which shall be payable August 1, 2016, from the Municipal Revenue Sharing Fund established in section 4-66p. The total amount of the grant payable is as follows: T237 Municipality Grant Amount T238 Andover 66,705 T239 Ansonia 605,442 T240 Ashford 87,248 T241 Avon 374,711 T242 Barkhamsted 76,324 T243 Beacon Falls 123,341 T244 Berlin 843,048 T245 Bethany 114,329 T246 Bethel 392,605 T247 Bethlehem 42,762 T248 Bloomfield 438,458 T249 Bolton 106,449 T250 Bozrah 53,783 T251 Branford 570,402 T252 Bridgeport 14,476,283 T253 Bridgewater 15,670 T254 Bristol 1,276,119 T255 Brookfield 343,611 T256 Brooklyn 103,910 T257 Burlington 193,490 T258 Canaan 14,793 T259 Canterbury 58,684 T260 Canton 211,078 T261 Chaplin 48,563 T262 Cheshire 594,084 T263 Chester 57,736 T264 Clinton 268,611 T265 Colchester 330,363 T266 Colebrook 29,694 T267 Columbia 111,276 T268 Cornwall 11,269 T269 Coventry 252,939 T270 Cromwell 288,951 T271 Danbury 2,079,675 T272 Darien 171,485 T273 Deep River 93,525 T274 Derby 462,718 T275 Durham 150,019 T276 East Granby 106,222 T277 East Haddam 186,418 T278 East Hampton 263,149 T279 East Hartford 3,877,281 T280 East Haven 593,493 T281 East Lyme 243,736 T282 East Windsor 232,457 T283 Eastford 23,060 T284 Easton 155,216 T285 Ellington 321,722 T286 Enfield 911,974 T287 Essex 74,572 T288 Fairfield 795,318 T289 Farmington 335,287 T290 Franklin 26,309 T291 Glastonbury 754,546 T292 Goshen 30,286 T293 Granby 244,839 T294 Greenwich 366,588 T295 Griswold 243,727 T296 Groton 433,177 T297 Guilford 456,863 T298 Haddam 170,440 T299 Hamden 4,491,337 T300 Hampton 38,070 T301 Hartford 13,908,437 T302 Hartland 27,964 T303 Harwinton 113,987 T304 Hebron 208,666 T305 Kent 26,808 T306 Killingly 351,213 T307 Killingworth 85,270 T308 Lebanon 149,163 T309 Ledyard 307,619 T310 Lisbon 45,413 T311 Litchfield 169,828 T312 Lyme 21,862 T313 Madison 372,897 T314 Manchester 1,972,491 T315 Mansfield 525,280 T316 Marlborough 131,065 T317 Meriden 1,315,347 T318 Middlebury 154,299 T319 Middlefield 91,372 T320 Middletown 964,657 T321 Milford 1,880,830 T322 Monroe 404,221 T323 Montville 401,756 T324 Morris 28,110 T325 Naugatuck 2,405,660 T326 New Britain 5,781,991 T327 New Canaan 168,106 T328 New Fairfield 288,278 T329 New Hartford 140,338 T330 New Haven 2,118,290 T331 New London 750,249 T332 New Milford 565,898 T333 Newington 651,000 T334 Newtown 572,949 T335 Norfolk 20,141 T336 North Branford 292,517 T337 North Canaan 66,052 T338 North Haven 487,882 T339 North Stonington 107,832 T340 Norwalk 3,401,590 T341 Norwich 1,309,943 T342 Old Lyme 79,946 T343 Old Saybrook 101,527 T344 Orange 284,365 T345 Oxford 171,492 T346 Plainfield 310,350 T347 Plainville 363,176 T348 Plymouth 255,581 T349 Pomfret 54,257 T350 Portland 192,715 T351 Preston 58,934 T352 Prospect 197,097 T353 Putnam 76,399 T354 Redding 189,781 T355 Ridgefield 512,848 T356 Rocky Hill 405,872 T357 Roxbury 15,998 T358 Salem 85,617 T359 Salisbury 20,769 T360 Scotland 36,200 T361 Seymour 343,388 T362 Sharon 19,467 T363 Shelton 706,038 T364 Sherman 39,000 T365 Simsbury 567,460 T366 Somers 141,697 T367 South Windsor 558,715 T368 Southbury 404,731 T369 Southington 889,821 T370 Sprague 89,456 T371 Stafford 243,095 T372 Stamford 2,372,358 T373 Sterling 77,037 T374 Stonington 202,888 T375 Stratford 1,130,316 T376 Suffield 321,763 T377 Thomaston 158,888 T378 Thompson 114,582 T379 Tolland 303,971 T380 Torrington 2,435,109 T381 Trumbull 745,325 T382 Union 17,283 T383 Vernon 641,027 T384 Voluntown 33,914 T385 Wallingford 919,984 T386 Warren 11,006 T387 Washington 25,496 T388 Waterbury 13,438,542 T389 Waterford 259,091 T390 Watertown 453,012 T391 West Hartford 1,614,320 T392 West Haven 1,121,850 T393 Westbrook 80,601 T394 Weston 211,384 T395 Westport 262,402 T396 Wethersfield 940,267 T397 Willington 121,568 T398 Wilton 380,234 T399 Winchester 224,447 T400 Windham 513,847 T401 Windsor 593,921 T402 Windsor Locks 256,241 T403 Wolcott 340,859 T404 Woodbridge 247,758 T405 Woodbury 200,175 T406 Woodstock 97,708 T407 Borough of Danielson - T408 Borough of Litchfield - T409 Bloomfield, Blue Hills FD 92,961 T410 Enfield Thompsonville FD #2 354,311 T411 Manchester - Eighth Utility District 436,718 T412 Middletown - City Fire 910,442 T413 Middletown So Fire 413,961 T414 Norwich CCD 552,565 T415 Norwich TCD 62,849 T416 Simsbury FD 221,536 T417 Plainfield Fire District - T418 Windham, Special Service District #2 640,000 T419 Windham 1st Taxing District - T420 Windham First T421 West Haven First Center (D1) 1,039,843 T422 West Haven: Allingtown FD (D3) 483,505 T423 West Haven: West Shore FD (D2) 654,640 T237 Municipality Grant Amount T238 Andover 66,705 T239 Ansonia 605,442 T240 Ashford 87,248 T241 Avon 374,711 T242 Barkhamsted 76,324 T243 Beacon Falls 123,341 T244 Berlin 843,048 T245 Bethany 114,329 T246 Bethel 392,605 T247 Bethlehem 42,762 T248 Bloomfield 438,458 T249 Bolton 106,449 T250 Bozrah 53,783 T251 Branford 570,402 T252 Bridgeport 14,476,283 T253 Bridgewater 15,670 T254 Bristol 1,276,119 T255 Brookfield 343,611 T256 Brooklyn 103,910 T257 Burlington 193,490 T258 Canaan 14,793 T259 Canterbury 58,684 T260 Canton 211,078 T261 Chaplin 48,563 T262 Cheshire 594,084 T263 Chester 57,736 T264 Clinton 268,611 T265 Colchester 330,363 T266 Colebrook 29,694 T267 Columbia 111,276 T268 Cornwall 11,269 T269 Coventry 252,939 T270 Cromwell 288,951 T271 Danbury 2,079,675 T272 Darien 171,485 T273 Deep River 93,525 T274 Derby 462,718 T275 Durham 150,019 T276 East Granby 106,222 T277 East Haddam 186,418 T278 East Hampton 263,149 T279 East Hartford 3,877,281 T280 East Haven 593,493 T281 East Lyme 243,736 T282 East Windsor 232,457 T283 Eastford 23,060 T284 Easton 155,216 T285 Ellington 321,722 T286 Enfield 911,974 T287 Essex 74,572 T288 Fairfield 795,318 T289 Farmington 335,287 T290 Franklin 26,309 T291 Glastonbury 754,546 T292 Goshen 30,286 T293 Granby 244,839 T294 Greenwich 366,588 T295 Griswold 243,727 T296 Groton 433,177 T297 Guilford 456,863 T298 Haddam 170,440 T299 Hamden 4,491,337 T300 Hampton 38,070 T301 Hartford 13,908,437 T302 Hartland 27,964 T303 Harwinton 113,987 T304 Hebron 208,666 T305 Kent 26,808 T306 Killingly 351,213 T307 Killingworth 85,270 T308 Lebanon 149,163 T309 Ledyard 307,619 T310 Lisbon 45,413 T311 Litchfield 169,828 T312 Lyme 21,862 T313 Madison 372,897 T314 Manchester 1,972,491 T315 Mansfield 525,280 T316 Marlborough 131,065 T317 Meriden 1,315,347 T318 Middlebury 154,299 T319 Middlefield 91,372 T320 Middletown 964,657 T321 Milford 1,880,830 T322 Monroe 404,221 T323 Montville 401,756 T324 Morris 28,110 T325 Naugatuck 2,405,660 T326 New Britain 5,781,991 T327 New Canaan 168,106 T328 New Fairfield 288,278 T329 New Hartford 140,338 T330 New Haven 2,118,290 T331 New London 750,249 T332 New Milford 565,898 T333 Newington 651,000 T334 Newtown 572,949 T335 Norfolk 20,141 T336 North Branford 292,517 T337 North Canaan 66,052 T338 North Haven 487,882 T339 North Stonington 107,832 T340 Norwalk 3,401,590 T341 Norwich 1,309,943 T342 Old Lyme 79,946 T343 Old Saybrook 101,527 T344 Orange 284,365 T345 Oxford 171,492 T346 Plainfield 310,350 T347 Plainville 363,176 T348 Plymouth 255,581 T349 Pomfret 54,257 T350 Portland 192,715 T351 Preston 58,934 T352 Prospect 197,097 T353 Putnam 76,399 T354 Redding 189,781 T355 Ridgefield 512,848 T356 Rocky Hill 405,872 T357 Roxbury 15,998 T358 Salem 85,617 T359 Salisbury 20,769 T360 Scotland 36,200 T361 Seymour 343,388 T362 Sharon 19,467 T363 Shelton 706,038 T364 Sherman 39,000 T365 Simsbury 567,460 T366 Somers 141,697 T367 South Windsor 558,715 T368 Southbury 404,731 T369 Southington 889,821 T370 Sprague 89,456 T371 Stafford 243,095 T372 Stamford 2,372,358 T373 Sterling 77,037 T374 Stonington 202,888 T375 Stratford 1,130,316 T376 Suffield 321,763 T377 Thomaston 158,888 T378 Thompson 114,582 T379 Tolland 303,971 T380 Torrington 2,435,109 T381 Trumbull 745,325 T382 Union 17,283 T383 Vernon 641,027 T384 Voluntown 33,914 T385 Wallingford 919,984 T386 Warren 11,006 T387 Washington 25,496 T388 Waterbury 13,438,542 T389 Waterford 259,091 T390 Watertown 453,012 T391 West Hartford 1,614,320 T392 West Haven 1,121,850 T393 Westbrook 80,601 T394 Weston 211,384 T395 Westport 262,402 T396 Wethersfield 940,267 T397 Willington 121,568 T398 Wilton 380,234 T399 Winchester 224,447 T400 Windham 513,847 T401 Windsor 593,921 T402 Windsor Locks 256,241 T403 Wolcott 340,859 T404 Woodbridge 247,758 T405 Woodbury 200,175 T406 Woodstock 97,708 T407 Borough of Danielson - T408 Borough of Litchfield - T409 Bloomfield, Blue Hills FD 92,961 T410 Enfield Thompsonville FD #2 354,311 T411 Manchester - Eighth Utility District 436,718 T412 Middletown - City Fire 910,442 T413 Middletown So Fire 413,961 T414 Norwich CCD 552,565 T415 Norwich TCD 62,849 T416 Simsbury FD 221,536 T417 Plainfield Fire District - T418 Windham, Special Service District #2 640,000 T419 Windham 1st Taxing District - T420 Windham First T421 West Haven First Center (D1) 1,039,843 T422 West Haven: Allingtown FD (D3) 483,505 T423 West Haven: West Shore FD (D2) 654,640 (2) For the fiscal years ending June 30, 2018, and June 30, 2019, each municipality shall receive a municipal sharing grant payable not later than October thirty-first of each year. The total amount of the grant payable is as follows: T424 Municipality Grant Amount T425 Andover 96,020 T426 Ansonia 643,519 T427 Ashford 125,591 T428 Avon 539,387 T429 Barkhamsted 109,867 T430 Beacon Falls 177,547 T431 Berlin 1,213,548 T432 Bethany 164,574 T433 Bethel 565,146 T434 Bethlehem 61,554 T435 Bloomfield 631,150 T436 Bolton 153,231 T437 Bozrah 77,420 T438 Branford 821,080 T439 Bridgeport 9,758,441 T440 Bridgewater 22,557 T441 Bristol 1,836,944 T442 Brookfield 494,620 T443 Brooklyn 149,576 T444 Burlington 278,524 T445 Canaan 21,294 T446 Canterbury 84,475 T447 Canton 303,842 T448 Chaplin 69,906 T449 Cheshire 855,170 T450 Chester 83,109 T451 Clinton 386,660 T452 Colchester 475,551 T453 Colebrook 42,744 T454 Columbia 160,179 T455 Cornwall 16,221 T456 Coventry 364,100 T457 Cromwell 415,938 T458 Danbury 2,993,644 T459 Darien 246,849 T460 Deep River 134,627 T461 Derby 400,912 T462 Durham 215,949 T463 East Granby 152,904 T464 East Haddam 268,344 T465 East Hampton 378,798 T466 East Hartford 2,036,894 T467 East Haven 854,319 T468 East Lyme 350,852 T469 East Windsor 334,616 T470 Eastford 33,194 T471 Easton 223,430 T472 Ellington 463,112 T473 Enfield 1,312,766 T474 Essex 107,345 T475 Fairfield 1,144,842 T476 Farmington 482,637 T477 Franklin 37,871 T478 Glastonbury 1,086,151 T479 Goshen 43,596 T480 Granby 352,440 T481 Greenwich 527,695 T482 Griswold 350,840 T483 Groton 623,548 T484 Guilford 657,644 T485 Haddam 245,344 T486 Hamden 2,155,661 T487 Hampton 54,801 T488 Hartford 1,498,643 T489 Hartland 40,254 T490 Harwinton 164,081 T491 Hebron 300,369 T492 Kent 38,590 T493 Killingly 505,562 T494 Killingworth 122,744 T495 Lebanon 214,717 T496 Ledyard 442,811 T497 Lisbon 65,371 T498 Litchfield 244,464 T499 Lyme 31,470 T500 Madison 536,777 T501 Manchester 1,971,540 T502 Mansfield 756,128 T503 Marlborough 188,665 T504 Meriden 1,893,412 T505 Middlebury 222,109 T506 Middlefield 131,529 T507 Middletown 1,388,602 T508 Milford 2,707,412 T509 Monroe 581,867 T510 Montville 578,318 T511 Morris 40,463 T512 Naugatuck 1,251,980 T513 New Britain 3,131,893 T514 New Canaan 241,985 T515 New Fairfield 414,970 T516 New Hartford 202,014 T517 New Haven 114,863 T518 New London 917,228 T519 New Milford 814,597 T520 Newington 937,100 T521 Newtown 824,747 T522 Norfolk 28,993 T523 North Branford 421,072 T524 North Canaan 95,081 T525 North Haven 702,295 T526 North Stonington 155,222 T527 Norwalk 4,896,511 T528 Norwich 1,362,971 T529 Old Lyme 115,080 T530 Old Saybrook 146,146 T531 Orange 409,337 T532 Oxford 246,859 T533 Plainfield 446,742 T534 Plainville 522,783 T535 Plymouth 367,902 T536 Pomfret 78,101 T537 Portland 277,409 T538 Preston 84,835 T539 Prospect 283,717 T540 Putnam 109,975 T541 Redding 273,185 T542 Ridgefield 738,233 T543 Rocky Hill 584,244 T544 Roxbury 23,029 T545 Salem 123,244 T546 Salisbury 29,897 T547 Scotland 52,109 T548 Seymour 494,298 T549 Sharon 28,022 T550 Shelton 1,016,326 T551 Sherman 56,139 T552 Simsbury 775,368 T553 Somers 203,969 T554 South Windsor 804,258 T555 Southbury 582,601 T556 Southington 1,280,877 T557 Sprague 128,769 T558 Stafford 349,930 T559 Stamford 3,414,955 T560 Sterling 110,893 T561 Stonington 292,053 T562 Stratford 1,627,064 T563 Suffield 463,170 T564 Thomaston 228,716 T565 Thompson 164,939 T566 Tolland 437,559 T567 Torrington 1,133,394 T568 Trumbull 1,072,878 T569 Union 24,878 T570 Vernon 922,743 T571 Voluntown 48,818 T572 Wallingford 1,324,296 T573 Warren 15,842 T574 Washington 36,701 T575 Waterbury 5,595,448 T576 Waterford 372,956 T577 Watertown 652,100 T578 West Hartford 2,075,223 T579 West Haven 1,614,877 T580 Westbrook 116,023 T581 Weston 304,282 T582 Westport 377,722 T583 Wethersfield 1,353,493 T584 Willington 174,995 T585 Wilton 547,338 T586 Winchester 323,087 T587 Windham 739,671 T588 Windsor 854,935 T589 Windsor Locks 368,853 T590 Wolcott 490,659 T591 Woodbridge 274,418 T592 Woodbury 288,147 T593 Woodstock 140,648 T424 Municipality Grant Amount T425 Andover 96,020 T426 Ansonia 643,519 T427 Ashford 125,591 T428 Avon 539,387 T429 Barkhamsted 109,867 T430 Beacon Falls 177,547 T431 Berlin 1,213,548 T432 Bethany 164,574 T433 Bethel 565,146 T434 Bethlehem 61,554 T435 Bloomfield 631,150 T436 Bolton 153,231 T437 Bozrah 77,420 T438 Branford 821,080 T439 Bridgeport 9,758,441 T440 Bridgewater 22,557 T441 Bristol 1,836,944 T442 Brookfield 494,620 T443 Brooklyn 149,576 T444 Burlington 278,524 T445 Canaan 21,294 T446 Canterbury 84,475 T447 Canton 303,842 T448 Chaplin 69,906 T449 Cheshire 855,170 T450 Chester 83,109 T451 Clinton 386,660 T452 Colchester 475,551 T453 Colebrook 42,744 T454 Columbia 160,179 T455 Cornwall 16,221 T456 Coventry 364,100 T457 Cromwell 415,938 T458 Danbury 2,993,644 T459 Darien 246,849 T460 Deep River 134,627 T461 Derby 400,912 T462 Durham 215,949 T463 East Granby 152,904 T464 East Haddam 268,344 T465 East Hampton 378,798 T466 East Hartford 2,036,894 T467 East Haven 854,319 T468 East Lyme 350,852 T469 East Windsor 334,616 T470 Eastford 33,194 T471 Easton 223,430 T472 Ellington 463,112 T473 Enfield 1,312,766 T474 Essex 107,345 T475 Fairfield 1,144,842 T476 Farmington 482,637 T477 Franklin 37,871 T478 Glastonbury 1,086,151 T479 Goshen 43,596 T480 Granby 352,440 T481 Greenwich 527,695 T482 Griswold 350,840 T483 Groton 623,548 T484 Guilford 657,644 T485 Haddam 245,344 T486 Hamden 2,155,661 T487 Hampton 54,801 T488 Hartford 1,498,643 T489 Hartland 40,254 T490 Harwinton 164,081 T491 Hebron 300,369 T492 Kent 38,590 T493 Killingly 505,562 T494 Killingworth 122,744 T495 Lebanon 214,717 T496 Ledyard 442,811 T497 Lisbon 65,371 T498 Litchfield 244,464 T499 Lyme 31,470 T500 Madison 536,777 T501 Manchester 1,971,540 T502 Mansfield 756,128 T503 Marlborough 188,665 T504 Meriden 1,893,412 T505 Middlebury 222,109 T506 Middlefield 131,529 T507 Middletown 1,388,602 T508 Milford 2,707,412 T509 Monroe 581,867 T510 Montville 578,318 T511 Morris 40,463 T512 Naugatuck 1,251,980 T513 New Britain 3,131,893 T514 New Canaan 241,985 T515 New Fairfield 414,970 T516 New Hartford 202,014 T517 New Haven 114,863 T518 New London 917,228 T519 New Milford 814,597 T520 Newington 937,100 T521 Newtown 824,747 T522 Norfolk 28,993 T523 North Branford 421,072 T524 North Canaan 95,081 T525 North Haven 702,295 T526 North Stonington 155,222 T527 Norwalk 4,896,511 T528 Norwich 1,362,971 T529 Old Lyme 115,080 T530 Old Saybrook 146,146 T531 Orange 409,337 T532 Oxford 246,859 T533 Plainfield 446,742 T534 Plainville 522,783 T535 Plymouth 367,902 T536 Pomfret 78,101 T537 Portland 277,409 T538 Preston 84,835 T539 Prospect 283,717 T540 Putnam 109,975 T541 Redding 273,185 T542 Ridgefield 738,233 T543 Rocky Hill 584,244 T544 Roxbury 23,029 T545 Salem 123,244 T546 Salisbury 29,897 T547 Scotland 52,109 T548 Seymour 494,298 T549 Sharon 28,022 T550 Shelton 1,016,326 T551 Sherman 56,139 T552 Simsbury 775,368 T553 Somers 203,969 T554 South Windsor 804,258 T555 Southbury 582,601 T556 Southington 1,280,877 T557 Sprague 128,769 T558 Stafford 349,930 T559 Stamford 3,414,955 T560 Sterling 110,893 T561 Stonington 292,053 T562 Stratford 1,627,064 T563 Suffield 463,170 T564 Thomaston 228,716 T565 Thompson 164,939 T566 Tolland 437,559 T567 Torrington 1,133,394 T568 Trumbull 1,072,878 T569 Union 24,878 T570 Vernon 922,743 T571 Voluntown 48,818 T572 Wallingford 1,324,296 T573 Warren 15,842 T574 Washington 36,701 T575 Waterbury 5,595,448 T576 Waterford 372,956 T577 Watertown 652,100 T578 West Hartford 2,075,223 T579 West Haven 1,614,877 T580 Westbrook 116,023 T581 Weston 304,282 T582 Westport 377,722 T583 Wethersfield 1,353,493 T584 Willington 174,995 T585 Wilton 547,338 T586 Winchester 323,087 T587 Windham 739,671 T588 Windsor 854,935 T589 Windsor Locks 368,853 T590 Wolcott 490,659 T591 Woodbridge 274,418 T592 Woodbury 288,147 T593 Woodstock 140,648 (e) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, and each fiscal year thereafter, each regional council of governments shall receive a regional services grant, the amount of which will be based on a formula to be determined by the secretary, except that, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, thirty-five per cent of such grant moneys shall be awarded to regional councils of governments for the purpose of assisting regional education service centers in merging their human resource, finance or technology services with such services provided by municipalities within the region. For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, three million dollars shall be expended by the secretary from the Municipal Revenue Sharing Fund established in section 4-66p for the purpose of the regional services grant. No such council shall receive a grant for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, or any fiscal year thereafter, unless the secretary approves a spending plan for such grant moneys submitted by such council to the secretary on or before July 1, 2017, and annually thereafter. The regional councils of governments shall use such grants for planning purposes and to achieve efficiencies in the delivery of municipal services by regionalizing such services, including, but not limited to, region-wide consolidation of such services. Such efficiencies shall not diminish the quality of such services. A unanimous vote of the representatives of such council shall be required for approval of any expenditure from such grant. On or before October 1, 2017, and biennially thereafter, each such council shall submit a report, in accordance with section 11-4a, to the joint standing committees of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to planning and development and finance, revenue and bonding. Such report shall summarize the expenditure of such grants and provide recommendations concerning the expansion, reduction or modification of such grants. (f) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, and each fiscal year thereafter, each municipality shall receive a municipal revenue sharing grant as follows: (1) (A) A municipality having a mill rate at or above twenty-five shall receive the per capita distribution or pro rata distribution, whichever is higher for such municipality. (B) Such grants shall be increased by a percentage calculated as follows: T594 Sum of per capita distribution amount T595 for all municipalities having a mill rate T596 below twenty-five – pro rata distribution T597 amount for all municipalities T598 having a mill rate below twenty-five T599 _______________________________________ T600 Sum of all grants to municipalities T601 calculated pursuant to subparagraph (A) T602 of subdivision (1) of this subsection. T594 Sum of per capita distribution amount T595 for all municipalities having a mill rate T596 below twenty-five – pro rata distribution T597 amount for all municipalities T598 having a mill rate below twenty-five T599 _______________________________________ T600 Sum of all grants to municipalities T601 calculated pursuant to subparagraph (A) T602 of subdivision (1) of this subsection. (C) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraphs (A) and (B) of this subdivision, Hartford shall receive not more than 5.2 per cent of the municipal revenue sharing grants distributed pursuant to this subsection; Bridgeport shall receive not more than 4.5 per cent of the municipal revenue sharing grants distributed pursuant to this subsection; New Haven shall receive not more than 2.0 per cent of the municipal revenue sharing grants distributed pursuant to this subsection and Stamford shall receive not more than 2.8 per cent of the equalization grants distributed pursuant to this subsection. Any excess funds remaining after such reductions in payments to Hartford, Bridgeport, New Haven and Stamford shall be distributed to all other municipalities having a mill rate at or above twenty-five on a pro rata basis according to the payment they receive pursuant to this subdivision; and (2) A municipality having a mill rate below twenty-five shall receive the per capita distribution or pro rata distribution, whichever is less for such municipality. (3) For the purposes of this subsection, "mill rate" means the mill rate for real property and personal property other than motor vehicles. (g) Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section, a municipality may disburse any municipal revenue sharing grant funds to a district within such municipality. [(h) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (2) of this subsection, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, the amount of the grant payable to a municipality in any year in accordance with subsection (d) or (f) of this section shall be reduced if such municipality increases its adopted budget expenditures for such fiscal year above a cap equal to the amount of adopted budget expenditures authorized for the previous fiscal year by 2.5 per cent or more or the rate of inflation, whichever is greater. Such reduction shall be in an amount equal to fifty cents for every dollar expended over the cap set forth in this subsection. For the purposes of this section, (A) "municipal spending" does not include expenditures for debt service, special education, implementation of court orders or arbitration awards, expenditures associated with a major disaster or emergency declaration by the President of the United States, a disaster emergency declaration issued by the Governor pursuant to chapter 517 or any disbursement made to a district pursuant to subsection (c) or (g) of this section, budgeting for an audited deficit, nonrecurring grants, capital expenditures or payments on unfunded pension liabilities, (B) "adopted budget expenditures" includes expenditures from a municipality's general fund and expenditures from any nonbudgeted funds, and (C) "capital expenditure" means a nonrecurring capital expenditure of one hundred thousand dollars or more. Each municipality shall annually certify to the secretary, on a form prescribed by said secretary, whether such municipality has exceeded the cap set forth in this subsection and if so the amount by which the cap was exceeded. (2) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, and each fiscal year thereafter, the amount of the grant payable to a municipality in any year in accordance with subsection (d) or (f) of this section shall not be reduced in the case of a municipality whose adopted budget expenditures exceed the cap set forth in subdivision (1) of this subsection by an amount proportionate to any increase to its municipal population from the previous fiscal year, as determined by the secretary.] [(i)] (h) For the fiscal year ending June 30, 2020, and each fiscal year thereafter, the amount of the grant payable to a municipality in any year in accordance with subsection (f) of this section shall be reduced proportionately in the event that the total of such grants in such year exceeds the amount available for such grants in the municipal revenue sharing account established pursuant to subsection (b) of this section. Sec. 41. Section 12-130 of the general statutes, as amended by section 209 of public act 15-244, is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2017): (a) When any community, authorized to raise money by taxation, lays a tax, it shall appoint a collector thereof; and the selectmen of towns, and the committees of other communities, except as otherwise specially provided by law, shall make out and sign rate bills containing the proportion which each individual is to pay according to the assessment list; and any judge of the Superior Court or any justice of the peace, on their application or that of their successors in office, shall issue a warrant for the collection of any sums due on such rate bills. Each collector shall mail or hand to each individual from whom taxes are due a bill for the amount of taxes for which such individual is liable. In addition, the collector shall include with such bill, using [one of the following methods] (1) an attachment, (2) an enclosure, or (3) printed matter upon the face of the bill, a statement of [: (A) State] state aid to municipalities [which] that shall be in the following form: "The (fiscal year) budget for the (city or town) estimates that .... Dollars will be received from the state of Connecticut for various state financed programs. Without this assistance your (fiscal year) property tax would be (herein insert the amount computed in accordance with subsection (b) of this section) mills.". [; and (B) State aid reduction to municipalities that overspend, which shall be in the following form: "The state will reduce grants to your town if local spending increases by more than 2.5 per cent from the previous fiscal year."] Failure to send out or receive any such bill or statement shall not invalidate the tax. For purposes of this subsection, "mail" includes to send by electronic mail, provided an individual from whom taxes are due consents, in writing, to receive a bill and statement electronically. Prior to sending any such bill or statement by electronic mail, a community shall provide the public with the appropriate electronic mail address of the community on the community's Internet web site and shall establish procedures to ensure that any individual who consents to receive a bill or statement electronically (i) receives such bill or statement, and (ii) is provided the proper return electronic mail address of the community sending the bill or statement. (b) The mill rate to be inserted in the statement of state aid to municipalities required by subsection (a) of this section shall be computed on the total estimated revenues required to fund the estimated expenditures of the municipality exclusive of assistance received or anticipated from the state. Sec. 42. Subsection (b) of section 12-71 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017): (b) Except as otherwise provided by the general statutes, property subject to this section shall be valued at the same percentage of its then actual valuation as the assessors have determined with respect to the listing of real estate for the same year, except that any antique, rare or special interest motor vehicle, as defined in section 14-1, as amended by this act, shall be assessed at a value of not more than [five hundred] one thousand dollars. The owner of such antique, rare or special interest motor vehicle may be required by the assessors to provide reasonable documentation that such motor vehicle is an antique, rare or special interest motor vehicle, provided any motor vehicle for which special number plates have been issued pursuant to section 14-20 shall not be required to provide any such documentation. The provisions of this section shall not include money or property actually invested in merchandise or manufacturing carried on out of this state or machinery or equipment [which] that would be eligible for exemption under subdivision (72) of section 12-81 once installed and [which] that cannot begin or [which] that has not begun manufacturing, processing or fabricating; or [which] that is being used for research and development, including experimental or laboratory research and development, design or engineering directly related to manufacturing or being used for the significant servicing, overhauling or rebuilding of machinery and equipment for industrial use or the significant overhauling or rebuilding of other products on a factory basis or being used for measuring or testing or metal finishing or in the production of motion pictures, video and sound recordings. Sec. 43. Subdivision (3) of section 14-1 of the general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2017): (3) "Antique, rare or special interest motor vehicle" means a motor vehicle [twenty] thirty years old or older [which] that is being preserved because of historic interest and [which] is not altered or modified from the original manufacturer's specifications, except that a motor vehicle that was registered as an antique, rare or special interest motor vehicle in accordance with section 14-20 prior to October 1, 2017, shall be permitted to continue to be registered as an antique, rare or special interest motor vehicle; Sec. 44. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) (a) The Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management shall establish a program for municipalities to apply for approval of a plan for taxation that establishes differentiated rates of taxation for different classes of property. Different mill rates for taxable real property in each class shall not be applicable to any real property for which a grant is payable under section 12-19a, 12-20a or 12-81b of the general statutes, as amended by this act. (b) The secretary shall (1) establish application procedures and criteria for the program and post such procedures and criteria on the Office of Policy and Management's Internet web site, and (2) send a copy of such procedures and criteria to the joint standing committee of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to finance, revenue and bonding. (c) Prior to submitting a plan to the secretary, the chief elected official of a municipality shall: (1) Appoint a committee consisting of (A) a representative of the legislative body of the municipality, (B) a representative from the business community, (C) the assessor of the municipality, and (D) relevant taxpayers and stakeholders, to prepare a plan for submission to the legislative body of the municipality of the implementation of different rates of taxation among property classes. Such plan shall (i) provide a process for implementation of differentiated tax rates, (ii) designate geographic areas of the municipality where the differentiated rates shall be applied, if applicable, and (iii) identify legal and administrative issues affecting the implementation of the plan. The chief elected official, chief executive officer and tax collector of the municipality shall have an opportunity to review and comment on the plan prior to its submission to the legislative body of the municipality; and (2) Submit, after approval of the plan by the legislative body of the municipality, such plan to the secretary before October first for implementation in the following fiscal year. (d) The secretary shall not approve a plan unless the chief elected official of the municipality certifies that the plan has been developed and approved pursuant to the requirements under subsection (c) of this section. The secretary shall send a notice of approval or disapproval to the chief executive officer of the municipality and to the joint standing committee of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to finance, revenue and bonding not later than January first next following such submission. (e) No municipality shall implement differentiated tax rates in a plan approved by the secretary until the legislative body of the municipality adopts such rates by ordinance or, in a municipality where the legislative body is a town meeting, by vote of the board of selectmen. Sec. 45. (NEW) (Effective July 1, 2017) The amount of state aid, plus the sum of all property taxes paid to a municipality for real property owned by a hospital, in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2018, that exceeds the amount of actual state aid paid to the municipality in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2017, shall be excluded from municipal revenue that is considered when determining the financial capacity of a municipal employer or local board of education for arbitration awards entered on or after July 1, 2017. For the purposes of this section, "state aid" means the amount of actual state aid, if known, or the estimated amount of funds the municipality can expect to receive as calculated by the Secretary of Policy and Management pursuant to 4-71b of the general statutes. "State aid" does not include the amount of any capital expenditures of the state made on behalf of the municipality. This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following sections: Section 1 July 1, 2017 7-560 Sec. 2 July 1, 2017 7-561 Sec. 3 July 1, 2017 7-562 Sec. 4 July 1, 2017 7-563 Sec. 5 July 1, 2017 7-564 Sec. 6 July 1, 2017 7-565 Sec. 7 July 1, 2017 7-568 Sec. 8 July 1, 2017 7-569 Sec. 9 July 1, 2017 7-570 Sec. 10 July 1, 2017 7-571 Sec. 11 July 1, 2017 7-572 Sec. 12 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 13 July 1, 2017 7-573 Sec. 14 July 1, 2017 7-574 Sec. 15 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 16 July 1, 2017 7-575 Sec. 17 July 1, 2017 7-576 Sec. 18 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 19 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 20 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 21 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 22 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 23 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 24 July 1, 2017 7-577 Sec. 25 July 1, 2017 7-578 Sec. 26 July 1, 2017 7-579 Sec. 27 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 28 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 New section Sec. 29 July 1, 2017 12-18b(a) and (b) Sec. 30 July 1, 2017 12-18b(e)(1) Sec. 31 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 12-81(7) Sec. 32 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 12-81(16) Sec. 33 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 12-81(58) Sec. 34 from passage 19a-644(e) Sec. 35 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 New section Sec. 36 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-42 Sec. 37 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-81(7)(A) Sec. 38 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-81(16) Sec. 39 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-81 Sec. 40 July 1, 2017 4-66l Sec. 41 October 1, 2017 12-130 Sec. 42 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-71(b) Sec. 43 October 1, 2017 14-1(3) Sec. 44 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 45 July 1, 2017 New section This act shall take effect as follows and shall amend the following sections: Section 1 July 1, 2017 7-560 Sec. 2 July 1, 2017 7-561 Sec. 3 July 1, 2017 7-562 Sec. 4 July 1, 2017 7-563 Sec. 5 July 1, 2017 7-564 Sec. 6 July 1, 2017 7-565 Sec. 7 July 1, 2017 7-568 Sec. 8 July 1, 2017 7-569 Sec. 9 July 1, 2017 7-570 Sec. 10 July 1, 2017 7-571 Sec. 11 July 1, 2017 7-572 Sec. 12 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 13 July 1, 2017 7-573 Sec. 14 July 1, 2017 7-574 Sec. 15 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 16 July 1, 2017 7-575 Sec. 17 July 1, 2017 7-576 Sec. 18 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 19 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 20 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 21 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 22 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 23 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 24 July 1, 2017 7-577 Sec. 25 July 1, 2017 7-578 Sec. 26 July 1, 2017 7-579 Sec. 27 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 28 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 New section Sec. 29 July 1, 2017 12-18b(a) and (b) Sec. 30 July 1, 2017 12-18b(e)(1) Sec. 31 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 12-81(7) Sec. 32 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 12-81(16) Sec. 33 from passage and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2016 12-81(58) Sec. 34 from passage 19a-644(e) Sec. 35 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 New section Sec. 36 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-42 Sec. 37 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-81(7)(A) Sec. 38 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-81(16) Sec. 39 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-81 Sec. 40 July 1, 2017 4-66l Sec. 41 October 1, 2017 12-130 Sec. 42 October 1, 2017, and applicable to assessment years commencing on or after October 1, 2017 12-71(b) Sec. 43 October 1, 2017 14-1(3) Sec. 44 July 1, 2017 New section Sec. 45 July 1, 2017 New section Statement of Purpose: To implement the Governor's budget recommendations. [Proposed deletions are enclosed in brackets. Proposed additions are indicated by underline, except that when the entire text of a bill or resolution or a section of a bill or resolution is new, it is not underlined.]