Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06107 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 05/24/2021

                     
Researcher: JSB 	Page 1 	5/24/21 
 
 
 
OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 6107 (as amended by House "A")*  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE REORGANIZATION OF THE ZONING 
ENABLING ACT AND THE PROMOTION OF MUNICIPAL 
COMPLIANCE.  
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 
§§ 1, 6, 7 & 10 — AS OF RIGHT ACCESSORY APARTMENTS 
Requires municipalities that zone under CGS § 8-2 to adopt or amend regulations to allow 
ADUs as of right on the same lot as single-family homes unless they follow the bill’s opt-
out process; specifies that these units will not count toward a municipality’s base housing 
stock calculation for purposes of the Affordable Housing Land Use Appeals Procedure 
(CGS § 8-30g); modifies the definition of ADU for purposes of the appeals procedure; 
specifies the addition of an ADU on a lot does not make the sewerage system a 
“community sewerage system” 
§ 2 — APPLICATION AND TECHNICAL CONSULTANT FEE S 
Limits municipal authority to charge disproportionality higher land use application fees 
for larger residential projects; authorizes municipalities to charge technical consultant 
fees 
§§ 3 & 4 — CGS § 8-2: REORGANIZATION AND MINOR CHANGES 
Reorganizes the Zoning Enabling Act (CGS § 8-2, which applies to municipalities 
exercising zoning powers under the statutes) and makes minor, technical, and conforming 
changes 
§ 4 — CGS § 8-2: REQUIRED GOALS AND CONSIDERATIONS 
Eliminates a requirement that zoning regulations be (1) designed to prevent overcrowding 
and undue population concentration and (2) made with reasonable consideration as to the 
“character” of a district; requires regulations provide for varied housing opportunities 
and affirmatively further the purposes of the federal Fair Housing Act; requires 
regulations to be designed to protect historic, tribal, cultural, and environmental 
resources 
§§ 4 & 5 — CGS § 8-2: PROHIBITED PROVISIONS 
Prohibits regulations from (1) prohibiting cottage food operations in a residential zone or 
(2) establishing minimum floor area requirements for buildings; limits local authority to 
(1) require the provision of parking spaces or (2) place a cap on the number of dwellings 
in multifamily, middle, or mixed-use developments 
§ 4 — CGS § 8-2: OPTIONS FOR PROMOTING CONSERVATION 
Expands the energy conservation tools and renewable energy types a municipality can 
require or promote 
§ 4 — CGS § 8-2: REGULATING MOBILE MANUFACTURED HOMES  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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Prohibits regulations from imposing on mobile manufactured homes and associated lots 
conditions that are substantially different from those imposed on other residential 
developments 
§ 8 — ZONING ENFORCEMENT O FFICER CERTIFICATION 
Beginning January 1, 2023, requires all appointed ZEOs to obtain and maintain 
certification from the state’s professional ZEO association 
§ 9 — BIENNIAL TRAINING FOR CERTAIN LAND USE OFFICIALS 
Requires local planning and zoning officials to complete at least four hours of training 
biennially 
§ 11 — WATER POLLUTION CONT ROL PLANS 
Allows WPCAs to add information about sewer system capacity for certain areas to 
municipal water pollution control plans 
§ 12 — AFFORDABLE HOUSING P LANNING REQUIREMENT 
Specifies that municipalities must prepare and adopt their first plans by June 1, 2022; 
requires plans to be submitted to OPM 
§ 13 — COMMISSION ON CONNEC TICUT’S DEVELOPMENT AND 
FUTURE 
Establishes a commission within the Legislative Department to evaluate policies related to 
land use, conservation, housing affordability, and infrastructure 
BACKGROUND 
Information on the Affordable Housing Land Use Appeals Procedure and related bills 
 
*House Amendment “A” strikes the underlying bill and replaces it 
with some provisions that are similar to those in the original bill, with 
regard to certain changes to the Zoning Enabling Act and affordable 
housing planning requirement; makes other changes to the Zoning 
Enabling Act that were not in the underlying bill; and adds the 
provisions related to accessory apartments, technical consultant fees, 
zoning enforcement officer certification, biennial training for certain 
land use officials, water pollution control plans, and the Commission 
on Connecticut’s Development and Future.  
§§ 1, 6, 7 & 10 — AS OF RIGHT ACCESSOR Y APARTMENTS 
Requires municipalities that zone under CGS § 8-2 to adopt or amend regulations to 
allow ADUs as of right on the same lot as single-family homes unless they follow the bill’s 
opt-out process; specifies that these units will not count toward a municipality’s base 
housing stock calculation for purposes of the Affordable Housing Land Use Appeals 
Procedure (CGS § 8-30g); modifies the definition of ADU for purposes of the appeals 
procedure; specifies the addition of an ADU on a lot does not make the sewerage system a 
“community sewerage system” 
Definitions  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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Under the bill, an “accessory apartment” (also referred to as an 
accessory dwelling unit or “ADU”) means a separate dwelling unit 
that (1) is located on the same lot as a principal dwelling unit of greater 
square footage; (2) has cooking facilities; and (3) complies with or is 
otherwise exempt from any applicable building code, fire code, and 
health and safety regulations. 
The bill specifies that “as of right” means able to be approved 
without requiring a public hearing; a variance, special permit, or 
special exception; or other discretionary zoning action, other than a 
determination that a site plan conforms with applicable zoning 
regulations. 
Regulation Adoption Requirement  
The bill requires municipalities that exercise powers under CGS § 8-
2 (the Zoning Enabling Act) to adopt regulations (1) allowing one ADU 
as of right on each lot that contains a single-family dwelling and (2) 
designating other areas where ADUs are allowed. But bill also creates 
an opt-out process, as described below. 
The bill specifies that municipalities cannot require as of right ADUs 
sharing a lot with a single-family home to be preserved for lower-
income families.   
If a municipality does not opt-out, the bill requires it to amend or 
adopt ADU zoning regulations by January 1, 2023, and specifies that 
those that do not must review ADU permit applications in accordance 
with the bill’s regulation requirements until the regulations are 
amended or adopted. A municipality may not use or impose 
additional standards beyond those set forth in the bill. The bill deems 
noncompliant regulations to be null and void.   
Opt-Out Process 
Until January 1, 2023, the bill allows municipalities, by a two-thirds 
vote of their zoning commission or combined planning and zoning 
commission, to opt out of the bill's as of right ADU provisions. To do 
so, the municipality's zoning or combined planning and zoning  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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commission must: 
1. first hold a public hearing on the proposed opt-out, subject to 
the standard notice and timeframes for such hearings; 
2. affirmatively decide to opt out within the statutory time limit 
(generally within 65 days of the hearing's completion); 
3. state in the record the reasons for its decision; and 
4. publish notice of the decision within 15 days in a newspaper 
that has substantial circulation in the municipality. 
The bill requires the opt-out to be confirmed by a two-thirds vote of 
the municipal legislative body (or if it is a town meeting, the board of 
selectmen). 
As of Right Permitting 
The bill requires regulations to establish an as of right permit 
application and review process for ADUs. The process must require 
the zoning or planning and zoning commission to decide within 65 
days after application unless an applicant approves an extension or 
extensions of up to 65 days total or withdraws the application.   
Under the bill, municipalities cannot condition ADU approval on 
the correction of a nonconforming use, structure, or lot or require fire 
sprinklers unless they are also required in the principal dwelling or by 
the fire code. 
Regulation Contents 
Under the bill, the ADU zoning regulations must: 
1. allow attached and detached ADUs and ADUs contained within 
the principal dwelling unit; 
2. set a maximum net floor area for ADUs that is the lesser of (a) at 
least 30% of the principal dwelling’s net floor area or (b) 1,000 
square feet (but regulations may allow a larger net floor area for 
ADUs);  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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3. require setbacks, lot size, and building frontage less than or 
equal to that which is required for the principal dwelling; 
4. require lot coverage greater than or equal to that which is 
required for the principal dwelling; and  
5. provide for height, landscaping, and architectural design 
standards that do not exceed standards applied to single-family 
dwellings in the municipality. 
Regulations cannot require: 
1. a passageway between the ADU and principal dwelling; 
2. an exterior door for an ADU, except as required by the 
applicable building or fire code;  
3. more than one parking space for the ADU or fees in lieu of 
parking;  
4. a familial, marital, or employment relationship between the 
principal dwelling unit’s occupants and the ADU’s occupants; 
5. a minimum age for ADU occupants;  
6. separate billing of utilities otherwise connected to, or used by, 
the principal dwelling unit; or  
7. periodic ADU permit renewal. 
The bill further specifies that it does not supersede applicable 
building code requirements or other requirements where a well or 
private sewerage system is being used, so long as approval for any 
such accessory apartment shall not be unreasonably withheld.   
Additionally, the bill prohibits municipalities, special districts, and 
sewer or water authorities from (1) considering an ADU to be a new 
residential use for the purposes of calculating connection fees or 
capacity charges for utilities, including water and sewer service, unless 
the ADU was constructed with a new single-family dwelling on the  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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same lot or (2) requiring the installation of a new or separate utility 
connection directly to an ADU or imposing a related connection fee or 
capacity charge.  
Under current law, a community sewer system is generally a sewer 
system service for at least two residences in separate structures that is 
not connected to a municipal sewer system. The bill specifies that a 
“community sewerage system” does not include a system serving only 
a principal dwelling and ADU located on the same lot. 
The bill does not prevent municipalities from prohibiting or limiting 
the use of ADUs for short-term rentals or vacation stays. 
Housing Stock Calculation Under CGS § 8-30g 
By law, the Department of Housing (DOH) must promulgate 
annually a list identifying the housing stock in each municipality that 
qualifies as affordable housing under the Affordable Housing Land 
Use Appeals Procedure (see BACKGROUND). The list, based on 
Census data, provides this information as a percentage of the total 
housing stock in the municipality (CGS §§ 8 -30g(k) & 8-
37qqq(a)(2)(D)). The bill specifies that ADUs built or permitted after 
January 1, 2022, but are not subject to deed restrictions that qualify 
them as affordable housing, will not increase a municipality’s base 
(market-rate) housing stock calculation. Thus, as of right ADUs will 
not increase the amount of affordable housing that a municipality 
must have to obtain or maintain an exemption or moratorium from the 
procedure. (Presumably, municipalities will provide DOH with 
information on ADUs to be excluded from the base housing stock 
calculation.) 
The bill also aligns the definition of “accessory apartment” under 
the appeals procedure with bill’s definition of ADU.   
EFFECTIVE DATE:  January 1, 2022 for the main ADU provisions (§ 
6) and October 1, 2021, for the conforming changes (§§ 1, 7 & 10). 
§ 2 — APPLICATION AND TECH NICAL CONSULTANT FEE S  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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Limits municipal authority to charge disproportionality higher land use application fees 
for larger residential projects; authorizes municipalities to charge technical consultant fees  
Current law allows municipalities to set by ordinance reasonable 
fees for processing applications submitted to the planning, zoning, or 
planning and zoning commission; the zoning board of appeals; or 
inland wetlands commission. The bill prohibits adopting a fee 
schedule that imposes higher fees on developments built following an 
appeal brought under the Affordable Housing Land Use Appeals 
Procedure (CGS § 8-30g). It also prohibits using a fee schedule 
charging more because a residential building has more than four units, 
including higher fees per unit, per square footage, or per unit of 
construction cost.   
The bill additionally allows municipalities to adopt regulations 
establishing reasonable technical consultant fees for applications made 
to the abovementioned boards and commissions. The fees must be 
used to pay consultants who have expertise in land use to review 
particular technical aspects of an application (e.g., traffic or 
stormwater) for the benefit of the commission or board. 
The fees must be accounted for separately and may only be used for 
technical review costs. The fees cannot be used to pay a consultant 
who is a salaried employee of the municipality, commission, or board. 
Leftover amounts, including any interest accrued, must be returned to 
the applicant within 45 days after the review is complete.   
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
§§ 3 & 4 — CGS § 8-2: REORGANIZATION AND MINOR CHANGES  
Reorganizes the Zoning Enabling Act (CGS § 8-2, which applies to municipalities 
exercising zoning powers under the statutes) and makes minor, technical, and conforming 
changes 
The bill makes various minor, technical, and conforming changes to 
the Zoning Enabling Act, which applies to municipalities that exercise 
zoning powers under the statutes (as opposed to a special act).   
Among these, the bill specifies that when a municipality is 
contiguous to, or on a navigable waterway that drains to, Long Island  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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Sound, its regulations must consider a proposed development’s 
environmental impact on Long Island Sound’s “coastal resources” (as 
defined in the Coastal Management Act), rather than impacts on Long 
Island Sound generally. By law, “coastal resources” means coastal 
waters and their natural resources, related marine and wildlife habitat, 
and adjacent shorelands (CGS § 22a-93).  
The bill specifically authorizes municipalities to use a vehicle’s 
miles traveled and vehicle trips generated standard instead of, or in 
addition to, a “level of service” traffic calculation when assessing (1) a 
proposed development’s anticipated traffic impact and (2) potential 
mitigation strategies such as reducing the amount of required parking 
for a development or requiring public sidewalks, crosswalks, bicycle 
paths, bicycle racks, or bus shelters (including off-site). 
The bill specifies that regulations may provide for floating zones, 
overlay zones, and planned development districts. (Connecticut courts 
have held that CGS § 8-2 implicitly grants municipalities the power to 
use these techniques.) 
The bill also makes technical and conforming changes to the 
temporary health care structure law (§ 3). 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
§ 4 — CGS § 8-2: REQUIRED GOALS AND CONSIDERATIONS  
Eliminates a requirement that zoning regulations be (1) designed to prevent overcrowding 
and undue population concentration and (2) made with reasonable consideration as to the 
“character” of a district; requires regulations provide for varied housing opportunities and 
affirmatively further the purposes of the federal Fair Housing Act; requires regulations to 
be designed to protect historic, tribal, cultural, and environmental resources  
Required Goals 
The bill eliminates the requirement that zoning regulations be 
designed to prevent the overcrowding of land and avoid undue 
concentration of population. 
The bill requires that regulations be designed to do the following: 
1. protect the state’s historic, tribal, cultural, and environmental  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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resources; 
2. consider the impact of permitted land uses on contiguous 
municipalities and the planning region;  
3. address significant disparities in housing needs and access to 
educational, occupational, and other opportunities;  
4. affirmatively further the purposes of the federal Fair Housing 
Act; and 
5. promote efficient review of proposals and applications. 
Consideration of Character  
Current law requires that zoning regulations be made with (1) 
reasonable consideration as to the character of the district and its 
peculiar suitability for particular uses and (2) a view toward 
conserving the buildings’ value and encouraging the most appropriate 
use of land throughout a municipality. The bill instead requires that 
regulations be drafted with reasonable consideration as to the physical 
site characteristics of the district with a view toward encouraging the 
most appropriate use of land throughout a municipality. 
The bill also specifies that regulations cannot be applied to deny a 
land use application (including site plans, special permits or 
exceptions, or other zoning approval) based upon: 
1. a district’s character unless the character is expressly articulated 
in regulations with clear and explicit physical standards for site 
work and structures or  
2. the immutable characteristics, source of income, or income level 
of an applicant or end user (other than age or disability, in the 
case of age-restricted or disability-restricted housing). 
Providing Housing Opportunities  
In addition to the housing-related provisions above, the bill requires 
zoning regulations to provide for, rather than encourage, the 
development of housing opportunities for all residents of the  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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municipality and local planning region, including opportunities for 
multifamily dwellings, consistent with soil types, terrain, and 
infrastructure capacity.   
The bill requires zoning regulations to expressly allow, rather than 
encourage, housing that meets the needs identified in the state’s 
Consolidated Plan for Housing and Community Development and 
Plan of Conservation and Development. 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
§§ 4 & 5 — CGS § 8-2: PROHIBITED PROVISIONS  
Prohibits regulations from (1) prohibiting cottage food operations in a residential zone or 
(2) establishing minimum floor area requirements for buildings; limits local authority to 
(1) require the provision of parking spaces or (2) place a cap on the number of dwellings in 
multifamily, middle, or mixed-use developments  
The bill prohibits zoning regulations from: 
1. prohibiting cottage food operations (i.e., operations in which 
food products are prepared in a private residential dwelling’s 
home kitchen and for sale directly to the consumer) in a 
residential zone; 
2. establishing minimum floor area requirements for buildings 
that are greater than those required under applicable building, 
housing, or other code; or 
3. placing a fixed numerical or percentage cap on the number of 
dwelling units permitted in multifamily housing over four 
units, middle housing, or mixed-use developments.  
Under the bill, “middle housing” refers to duplexes, triplexes, 
quadplexes, cottage clusters, and townhouses. A “cottage cluster” is a 
grouping of at least four detached housing units or live work units, per 
acre, that are located around a common open area. (The bill does not 
define live work unit.)  A “mixed-use development” is a development 
containing residential and nonresidential uses in a single building. A 
“townhouse” is a residential building constructed in a grouping of 
three or more attached units, each of which shares at least one  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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common wall with an adjacent unit and has exterior walls on at least 
two sides.  
The bill also prohibits regulations from requiring more than one 
parking space for each studio or one-bedroom dwelling unit or more 
than two parking spaces for each dwelling unit with two or more 
bedrooms unless the municipality opts out. 
The bill allows municipalities, by a two-thirds vote of their zoning 
commission or combined planning and zoning commission, to opt out 
of the bill's parking provision. To do so, the municipality's zoning or 
combined planning and zoning commission must: 
1. first hold a public hearing on the proposed opt-out, subject to 
the standard notice and timeframes for such hearings; 
2. affirmatively decide to opt out within the statutory time limit 
(generally within 65 days of the hearing's completion); 
3. state in the record the reasons for its decision; and 
4. publish notice of the decision within 15 days in a newspaper 
that has substantial circulation in the municipality. 
The bill requires the opt-out to be confirmed by a two-thirds vote of 
the municipal legislative body (or, if it is a town meeting, the board of 
selectmen). 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
§ 4 — CGS § 8-2: OPTIONS FOR PROMO TING CONSERVATION  
Expands the energy conservation tools and renewable energy types a municipality can 
require or promote  
Current law allows zoning regulations to encourage the use of 
certain energy conservation tools, including solar. The bill instead 
allows the regulations to require or promote these and expands them 
to include distributed generation or freestanding wind and combined 
heat and power.    2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill also expands the conservation tools that municipalities can 
incentivize developers’ use of to include any solar and other renewable 
forms of energy; combined heat and power; water conservation, 
including demand offsets; and other energy conservation techniques. 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
§ 4 — CGS § 8-2: REGULATING MOBILE MANUFACTURED 
HOMES 
Prohibits regulations from imposing on mobile manufactured homes and associated lots 
conditions that are substantially different from those imposed on other residential 
developments 
The bill prohibits zoning regulations adopted pursuant to CGS § 8-2 
from imposing on manufactured homes, including mobile homes, built 
to federal standards and with a narrowest dimension of 22 feet or 
more, and associated lots and parks, conditions that are substantially 
different from those imposed on (1) single-family dwellings and 
associated lots; (2) multifamily dwellings; or (3) lots with multifamily 
dwellings, cluster developments, or planned unit developments. 
Under current law, manufactured homes and lots cannot be treated 
substantially differently from single-family dwellings and lots with 
single-family dwellings. Additionally, manufactured home 
developments cannot be treated substantially differently from 
multifamily dwellings or lots with multifamily dwellings, cluster 
developments, or planned unit developments. The bill removes 
references to manufactured home developments. 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
§ 8 — ZONING ENFORCEMENT O FFICER CERTIFICATION  
Beginning January 1, 2023, requires all appointed ZEOs to obtain and maintain 
certification from the state’s professional ZEO association  
Beginning January 1, 2023, and annually thereafter, the bill requires 
zoning enforcement officers (ZEOs) to obtain certification from the 
Connecticut Association of ZEOs. The requirement applies to existing 
employees and to newly appointed ZEOs working in municipalities 
that exercise zoning authority under the statutes. The bill requires 
ZEOs to maintain certification for the duration of their employment as  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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ZEOs. (It appears that the bill authorizes un-certified ZEOs to be 
appointed, but it requires them to obtain certification as soon as 
practicable. In practice, the Connecticut Association of ZEOs requires 
an individual to have at least two years’ experience before it grants 
certification, among other requirements.)  
By law, each municipality decides how its zoning regulations are 
enforced. In practice, the zoning or combined planning and zoning 
commission may reserve the enforcement power to itself, or it may be 
delegated to a ZEO. ZEOs may be responsible for (1) investigating 
zoning violations and issuing cease and desist orders and (2) 
reviewing and providing an advisory opinion on applications for 
special permits, site plans, subdivisions, and variances. 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
§ 9 — BIENNIAL TRAINING FOR CERTAIN LAND USE OFFICIALS 
Requires local planning and zoning officials to complete at least four hours of training 
biennially 
Beginning January 1, 2023, the bill requires each member of a local 
planning commission, zoning commission, planning and zoning 
commission, or zoning board of appeals, to complete at least four 
hours of training biennially. 
Members serving on a board or commission as of January 1, 2023, 
must complete their initial training by January 1, 2024.  Members not 
serving on January 1, 2023, must complete the training within one year 
after being elected or appointed to the board or commission.    
The initial and subsequent training must include at least one hour 
on affordable and fair housing. Training may also cover: 
1. process and procedural matters, including the conduct of 
effective meetings and public hearings and the Freedom of 
Information Act;  
2. the interpretation of site plans, surveys, maps, and architectural 
conventions; and   2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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3. the impact of zoning on the environment, agriculture, and 
historic resources. 
By January 1, 2022, the bill requires the Office of Policy and 
Management secretary to establish guidelines for the training in 
collaboration with land use training providers, including the 
Connecticut Association of Zoning Enforcement Officials, the 
Connecticut Conference of Municipalities, the Connecticut Chapter of 
the American Planning Association, the Land Use Academy at 
UConn’s Center for Land Use Education and Research, the 
Connecticut Bar Association, regional councils of governments, and 
other nonprofit or educational institutions that provide land use 
training. If the secretary fails to establish the guidelines, then land use 
training providers may create and administer appropriate training. 
The bill requires each board or commission, starting by March 1, 
2024, to annually submit to its municipal legislative body (or board of 
selectmen, if a town meeting) a statement affirming its members’ 
compliance with the bill’s training requirement.  
EFFECTIVE DATE:  Upon passage 
§ 11 — WATER POLLUTION CONT ROL PLANS 
Allows WPCAs to add information about sewer system capacity for certain areas to 
municipal water pollution control plans  
The bill allows municipal water pollution control authorities 
(WPCAs) to delineate in the water pollution control plans they create 
the specific capacity allocations to serve developable areas for 
residential or mixed-use buildings with at least four dwelling units.  
By law, these plans delineate areas such as those (1) served by the 
municipal sewerage system, (2) where sewerage facilities are planned, 
and (3) where sewers should be avoided. The plans also describe 
municipal programs to avoid pollution problems and manage 
subsurface sewage disposal. 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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§ 12 — AFFORDABLE HOUSING P LANNING REQUIREMENT 
Specifies that municipalities must prepare and adopt their first plans by June 1, 2022; 
requires plans to be submitted to OPM 
Existing law requires every municipality, at least once every five 
years, to prepare or amend and adopt an affordable housing plan 
specifying how the municipality will increase the number of affordable 
housing developments in its jurisdiction. The bill specifies that 
municipalities must prepare and adopt their first plans by June 1, 2022. 
The bill also requires municipalities to post their draft plan or updates 
online, even if they do not hold a public hearing on the draft plan or 
updates.  It eliminates a requirement that the draft plan or amendment 
be filed with the town clerk. 
The bill requires municipalities to submit their plans to OPM for 
posting on its website. Under current law, if a municipality does not 
comply with plan amendment deadlines, it must submit a letter to the 
housing commissioner explaining why. The bill instead requires them 
to submit the letter to OPM and, in providing this explanation, specify 
a date by which the plan will be amended.    
The bill also authorizes municipalities to submit their affordable 
housing plans as part of their local plan of conservation and 
development (POCD). Those doing so may submit their affordable 
housing plan early in order to coincide with a POCD submission, so 
long as their next submission is five years later. (POCDs are due only 
every 10 years.) 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  Upon passage 
§ 13 — COMMISSION ON CONNEC TICUT’S DEVELOPMENT AND 
FUTURE 
Establishes a commission within the Legislative Department to evaluate policies related to 
land use, conservation, housing affordability, and infrastructure 
The bill establishes a Commission on Connecticut's Development 
and Future within the Legislative Department to evaluate policies 
related to land use, conservation, housing affordability, and 
infrastructure.   2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill specifies the commission may accept administrative support 
and technical and research assistance from outside organizations and 
employees of the Joint Committee on Legislative Management. The co-
chairpersons may establish working groups consisting of commission 
members and nonmembers and may designate a chairperson of each 
working group.  
Membership 
The commission consists of the following members: 
1. two appointed by the House speaker, one who is a legislator 
and one who is a representative of a municipal advocacy 
organization; 
2. two appointed by the Senate president pro tempore, one who is 
a legislator and one who has expertise in state or local planning; 
3. two appointed by the House majority leader, one who has 
expertise in state affordable housing policy and one who 
represents a town with a population over 30,000 but less than 
75,000; 
4. two appointed by the Senate majority leader, one who has 
expertise in zoning policy and one with expertise in community 
development policy; 
5. two appointed by the House minority leader, one who has 
expertise in environmental policy and one who represents a 
municipal advocacy organization; 
6. two appointed by the Senate minority leader, one who 
represents the Connecticut Association of Councils of 
Governments and one with expertise in homebuilding; 
7. two appointed by the governor, one who is an attorney with 
expertise in planning and zoning and one who has expertise in 
fair housing; 
8. the chairs and ranking members of the Planning and  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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Development, Environment, Housing, and Transportation 
committees; 
9. the administrative services, economic and community 
development, energy and environmental protection, housing, 
and transportation commissioners, or their designees; and 
10. the OPM secretary.  
The House speaker and Senate president pro tempore cannot 
appoint as their legislative appointees a chair or ranking member of 
the Planning and Development, Environment, Housing, or 
Transportation committee.  The bill requires appointing authorities, in 
cooperation with one another, to make a good faith effort to ensure 
that, to the extent possible, the commission’s membership closely 
reflects Connecticut’s gender and racial diversity.  
Members serve without compensation, except for necessary 
expenses incurred in the performance of their duties. Appointing 
authorities must fill any vacancy. 
The House speaker and Senate president pro tempore must jointly 
select one of their legislative appointments to serve as one of the 
chairpersons. The OPM secretary serves as the other chairperson. The 
chairpersons are responsible for scheduling the first commission 
meeting. 
Responsibilities  
By January 1, 2022, and again by January 1, 2023, the commission 
must submit a report to the planning and development, environment, 
housing, and transportation committees and to the OPM secretary 
regarding: 
1. recommendations for statutory changes concerning the process 
for developing, adopting, and implementing the state plan of 
conservation and development and state’s consolidated plan for 
housing and community development;   2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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2. recommendations for guidelines and incentives for compliance 
with the law’s (a) affordable housing planning requirement (see 
above, § 11) and (b) requirement under the Zoning Enabling Act 
that zoning regulations provide opportunities for developing 
varied housing opportunities, promote housing choice and 
economic diversity in housing, and expressly allow for housing 
to be developed that meets the needs identified in the state's 
consolidated plan for housing and community development 
and plan of conservation and development; 
3. recommendations as to how such compliance should be 
determined, as well as the form and manner in which evidence 
of such compliance should be demonstrated;  
4. (a) existing categories of discharge that constitute alternative 
on-site sewage treatment systems, subsurface community 
sewerage systems, and decentralized systems; (b) current 
administrative jurisdiction to issue or deny permits and 
approvals for such systems (with reference to daily capacities of 
such systems); and (c) the potential impacts of increasing the 
daily capacities of such systems, including changes in 
administrative jurisdiction over such systems and the timeframe 
for adopting regulations to implement these changes; and  
5. development of (a) model design guidelines for both buildings 
and context-appropriate streets that municipalities may adopt, 
in whole or in part, as part of their zoning or subdivision 
regulations as described below and (b) and implementation by 
the regional councils of governments of an education and 
training program for delivering the model design guidelines. 
Under the bill, the report on model design guidelines must provide 
guidelines that: 
1. identify common architectural and site design features of 
building types used throughout Connecticut;  
2. create a catalogue of common building types, particularly those  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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typically associated with housing;  
3. establish reasonable and cost-effective design review standards 
for approval of common building types, accounting for 
topography, geology, climate change, and infrastructure 
capacity;  
4. establish procedures for expediting the approval of buildings or 
streets that satisfy these design review standards, whether for 
zoning or subdivision regulations; and   
5. create a design manual for context-appropriate streets that 
complements common building types. 
The bill specifies that the provision requiring the commission to 
provide recommendations for ensuring compliance with the state’s 
affordable housing planning requirement should not be construed to 
change municipalities’ obligation to adopt or amend their plans on-
time. 
If the commission is unable to meet the first reporting deadline 
(January 1, 2022), the co-chairpersons must request an extension from 
the House speaker and Senate president pro tempore and shall submit 
an interim report.  The commission terminates when it submits its final 
report, or January 1, 2023, whichever is later.   
EFFECTIVE DATE:  Upon passage 
BACKGROUND 
Information on the Affordable Housing Land Use Appeals Procedure and related bills  
Affordable Housing Land Use Appeals Procedure (CGS § 8-30g) 
The procedure requires municipal planning and zoning agencies 
(“municipalities”) to defend their decisions to reject affordable housing 
development applications or approve them with costly conditions. In 
traditional land use appeals, the developer must convince the court 
that the municipality acted illegally, arbitrarily, or abused its 
discretion. The procedure instead places the burden of proof on 
municipalities.  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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With limited exceptions, developers can use the appeals procedure 
to contest a municipality’s decision on an affordable housing 
development application submitted to a municipality if (1) fewer than 
10% of the municipality’s housing units are affordable, based on 
certain statutory criteria, and (2) the municipality has not qualified for 
a moratorium (i.e., a temporary suspension of procedure following a 
relatively rapid increase in affordable housing stock). 
By law, DOH annually publishes a list of housing stock in each 
municipality that qualifies as affordable housing.   
Related Bills 
sSB 87 (File 181), favorably reported by the Housing Committee, 
makes many of the same technical changes to the  Zoning Enabling Act 
and also prohibits regulations from (1) treating licensed group child 
care homes located in a residence differently than single or multifamily 
properties and (2) requiring a special permit or exception to operate 
either a family or group child care home located in a residence within a 
residential zone. 
sSB 961 (File 558), favorably reported by the Planning and 
Development Committee, shifts, from DEEP to DPH, regulatory 
authority over (1) alternative on-site sewage treatment systems with 
daily capacities of between 5,000 and 7,500 gallons and (2) small 
community sewage systems with daily capacities of up to 10,000 
gallons. 
sSB 1024 (File 560), favorably reported by the Planning and 
Development Committee, makes many of the same changes to the 
Zoning Enabling Act, but it makes other changes as well (e.g., allowing 
for the amortization of nonconforming uses). 
sSB 1026 (File 561), favorably reported by the Planning and 
Development Committee, requires each member of a local planning 
commission, zoning commission, planning and zoning commission, or 
zoning board of appeals to complete at least five hours of training 
within one year after being elected or appointed to the board or  2021HB-06107-R010716-BA.DOCX 
 
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commission. 
sHB 6570 (File 414), favorably reported by the Transportation 
Committee, similarly requires municipalities to adopt their first 
affordable housing plan by July 1, 2022, but also requires their plans to 
identify all parcels in the municipality that are state- or municipally-
owned and are located within a half-mile radius of a passenger rail or 
bus rapid transit station. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Planning and Development Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 17 Nay 9 (03/31/2021)