Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06385 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/25/2021

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 6385  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING ENHANCEMENTS TO CERTAIN 
AGRICULTURAL PROGRAMS.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes changes to various agricultural laws and programs. 
Specifically, the bill does the following: 
1. allows participants of the Connecticut farmers’ market nutrition 
programs for women, infants, and children (WIC) and seniors to 
redeem program vouchers for chicken eggs; 
2. increases the value of the farmers’ market nutrition programs’ 
vouchers to at least $20 (currently they are $15 for WIC and $18 
for seniors); 
3. allows farmers to advertise products grown or produced in 
Connecticut as “CT-Grown,” revises sign requirements for these 
products at farmers’ markets, and restricts who must furnish 
the state with proof of a farm product’s point of origin; 
4. revises the penalties for violating produce safety and seed 
requirements; 
5. allows participants of the Connecticut farmers’ market WIC 
nutrition program to have a proxy pick up and redeem program 
vouchers, revises voucher signature requirements, and extends 
the duration of a market vendor certification from one to three 
years; 
6. expands the purposes of the farm viability matching grant 
program to include the development of urban and 
nontraditional farming practices; and 
7. repeals the Connecticut Market Authority since ownership of  2021HB-06385-R000134-BA.DOCX 
 
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the Hartford regional market transferred to the Capital Region 
Development Authority in 2019. 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  Upon passage, except the increase in farmers’ 
market voucher value is effective July 1, 2021, and the provisions on 
adding chicken eggs to the farmers’ market nutrition programs, 
changes to the Connecticut-grown program, and revisions to penalties 
for violating produce safety and seed laws are effective October 1, 
2021. 
§§ 1, 2 & 6 — CONNECTICUT FARMERS’ MARKET NUTRITION 
PROGRAMS 
The bill adds chicken eggs to the definition of “fresh produce” for 
purposes of the Connecticut farmers’ market WIC and senior nutrition 
programs. Under current law, fresh produce includes unprocessed 
fruits and vegetables. The programs, which the Department of 
Agriculture (DoAg) administers, provide eligible participants vouchers 
redeemable for fresh produce at designated farmers’ markets. 
The bill also requires the program vouchers that DoAg issues to 
have a value of at least $20. Currently, WIC and senior participants 
receive $15 and $18 in vouchers, respectively. 
§ 3 — CONNECTICUT-GROWN PROGRAM CHANGE S 
The bill allows farm products grown or produced in Connecticut to 
be marketed as “CT-Grown” as well as “Connecticut-Grown.” By law, 
if farm products are grown or produced in the state or within a 10-mile 
radius of the point of sale, they may be labeled as “native,” “native-
grown,” “local,” or “locally-grown.” 
The bill restricts who has to furnish proof of a farm product’s point 
of origin within 10 days of sale to the DoAg commissioner or his 
designee upon request. Under current law, anyone who advertises 
farm products with any of the above terms must furnish this proof. 
The bill eliminates this requirement for producers using the terms 
“native,” “native-grown,” “local,” or “locally-grown.” It also extends 
the requirement of furnishing proof to anyone labeling, as well as 
advertising, farm products with the terms “Connecticut-Grown” or  2021HB-06385-R000134-BA.DOCX 
 
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“CT-Grown.” A person who violates these provisions is fined up to 
$100 for each product label in violation. 
By law, when a person sells a farm product at a farmers’ market as 
“Connecticut-Grown,” he or she must place a sign in the immediate 
proximity of the product. The bill also requires a sign if selling a 
product as “CT-Grown” and revises the sign’s content. Instead of 
including the business’s address, the sign must include the town for 
the farm of origin. A person who violates this requirement receives a 
warning for the first violation and a $100 fine for subsequent 
violations. 
§ 4 — PRODUCE SAFETY LAW V IOLATIONS 
The bill revises the penalties for violating the state’s produce safety 
laws and applies them to violations of the federal Food Safety 
Modernization Act’s produce safety rule. Currently, the law sets a 
range of fines as penalties (i.e., from $25 to $50 for a first offense and 
from $100 to $200 for a subsequent offense). The bill instead sets 
specific dollar fines as follows: $50 for a first offense and $200 for a 
subsequent offense. 
By law, in addition to fines, the DoAg commissioner may deny, 
suspend, or revoke any license issued under the produce safety laws 
for violations. The bill also allows him to deny, suspend, or revoke any 
permit certificate or registration issued under the laws. The bill 
specifically requires the commissioner to take any such action in 
accordance with the state’s Uniform Administrative Procedure Act. 
The bill also eliminates as a violation obstruction or hindrance of the 
Department of Consumer Protection (DCP) commissioner’s actions 
under the produce safety rules. By law, DoAg enforces the rules, not 
DCP. 
§ 5 — SEED LAW VIOLATIONS 
The bill reduces the penalty for violating Connecticut’s seed law 
(e.g., labeling, sales, and record keeping requirements). Currently the 
penalty is a class D misdemeanor with a specified fine of $100 for a  2021HB-06385-R000134-BA.DOCX 
 
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first offense and $200 for a subsequent offense. A class D misdemeanor 
is punishable by up to 30 days’ imprisonment, a fine, or both. The bill 
removes the class D misdemeanor penalty, leaving the specified 
monetary fines in place. 
§§ 7-9 — FARMERS’ MARKET WIC NUTRITION PROGRAM 
PROXIES AND VENDORS 
The bill allows for a Connecticut farmers’ market WIC nutrition 
program participant to use a proxy to pick up and redeem program 
vouchers, revises voucher signature requirements, and extends the 
duration of a market vendor certification.  
By law, a WIC participant must sign the voucher in the presence of 
DoAg staff when the vouchers are distributed. The bill allows a 
participant’s proxy to acknowledge receipt of the vouchers by the 
participant’s or proxy’s written, electronic, or verbal communication. 
Under current law, a proxy is not allowed, except for a parent or 
guardian acting on behalf of a child or a husband acting on behalf of 
his wife. Under the bill, any adult may act as a proxy for a WIC 
participant as long as the participant designates the adult as his or her 
proxy in writing. 
Currently, a WIC participant must countersign a program voucher 
in the presence of a farmers’ market certified vendor when redeeming 
it. The bill instead requires the participant to countersign the voucher 
before using it. 
Under the WIC nutrition program, vendors cannot accept vouchers 
from participants unless DoAg certifies the vendors to do so. 
Currently, vendor certification expires at the end of each year. Under 
the bill, certification instead remains valid for three years. 
§ 10 — FARM VIABILITY MATCHING GRANT PROGRAM 
The bill expands the purposes of DoAg’s farm viability matching 
grant program to include “the development of urban and 
nontraditional farming practices.”  2021HB-06385-R000134-BA.DOCX 
 
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Under existing law, the grants may be used to (1) fund capital 
projects fostering agricultural viability (e.g., farmers’ markets and 
processing facilities); (2) develop and implement land use regulations 
and farmland protection strategies that sustain and promote local 
agriculture; (3) develop new marketing programs and venues for 
products grown in the state; and (4) develop and implement programs 
and services to promote farm and farmland access and farm transfers. 
Farm viability grants are available to nonprofit agricultural 
organizations, municipalities, groups of municipalities, and regional 
councils of government. 
§§ 11-13 — CONNECTICUT MARKETIN G AUTHORITY REPEAL 
The bill eliminates the Connecticut Marketing Authority from 
within DoAg and related statutes. The authority was primarily 
responsible for the Connecticut regional market in Hartford, but 
ownership of the market transferred to the Capital Region 
Development Authority in January 2019 under PA 18-154. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Environment Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 31 Nay 1 (02/26/2021)